Online Encyclopedia

WILLIAM BLACKWOOD (1776-1834)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 27 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WILLIAM BLACKWOOD (1776-1834)  , Scottish publisher, founder of the
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firm of William Blackwood & Sons, was born of humble parents at
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Edinburgh on the 20th of November 1776 . At the age of fourteen he was apprenticed to a firm of booksellers in Edinburgh, and he followed his calling also in
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Glasgow and
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London for several years . Returning to Edinburgh in 1804, he opened a
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shop in South
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Bridge Street for the sale of old, rare and curious books . He undertook the Scottish agency for John Murray and other London publishers, and gradually drifted into
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publishing on his own account, removing in 1816 to Princes Street . On the 1st of
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April 1817 was issued the first number of the Edinburgh Monthly
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Magazine, which on its seventh number,
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bore the name of Blackwood's as the leading
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part of the title . " Maga," as this magazine soon came to be called, was the
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organ of the Scottish Tory party, and round it gathered a
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host of able writers . William Blackwood died on the 16th of September 1834, and was succeeded by his two sons, Alexander and Robert,who added a London branch to the firm . In 1845 Alexander Blackwood died, and shortly afterwards Robert . A younger
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brother, John Blackwood (1818-1879), succeeded to the business; four years later he was joined by Major William Blackwood, who continued in the firm until his
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death in 1861 . In 1862 the major's elder son, William Blackwood (b . 1836), was taken into partnership . John Blackwood. was a man of strong personality and
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great business discernment; it was in the pages of his magazine that George Eliot's first stories, Scenes of Clerical
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Life, appeared .

He also inaugurated the "

Ancient
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Classics for
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English readers " series . On his death Mr William Blackwood was
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left in
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sole control of the business .. With him were associated his nephews, George William and J . H . Black-wood, sons of Major George Blackwood, who was killed at
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Maiwand in 1880 . See Annals of a Publishing House; William Blackwood and his Sons (1897-1898), the first two volumes of which were Written by Mrs Oliphant; the third, dealing with John Blackwood, by his daughter, Mrs Gerald Porter .

End of Article: WILLIAM BLACKWOOD (1776-1834)
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