Religion, sport, travel, children's books, education, general
Seeley, Service was a British publishing firm. It was established in 1744[1] and ceased business over two centuries later, in 1979. During most of the twentieth century the "well established"[1] Seeley, Service was second only to Longman as Britain's oldest active publishing firm. In 1886 it was described by The Publishers' Circular as having a reputation for "taste and elegance".[2]
In 1744 Benton Seeley, a bookseller in Stowe, Buckinghamshire published the first Seeley book: the Description of the Gardens of Lord Viscount Cobham, at Stow in Buckinghamshire.[3] The gardens, now known as Stowe Gardens, were "much visited and publicized" and had "enormous influence on garden design, especially after experiments there in 'natural' gardening in the 1730s".[4] The Seeley guide book went through several editions until a final edition of 1827 and did much to "spread the influence of Stowe as a model for the English landscape garden".[verification needed][4]
In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries the firm published books in various fields including travel and religion (particularly on ProtestantChristianity).[5]
In the final decades of the nineteenth century Agnes Giberne's books of popular science were published by Seeley, Jackson, and Halliday and later by Seeley & Co., including Sun, Moon and Stars: Astronomy for Beginners (1879) which had sold 26,000 copies by 1903.[8]
In 1911 the firm's offerings were described as "high-class works of art, religious, educational, and general".[9]
In 1970 Seeley, Service merged with Leo Cooper Ltd., a firm which specialised in publishing "regimental histories, escape stories and war memoirs", to form Seeley, Service & Cooper,[1] which then went into receivership in 1979 and was acquired by Frederick Warne.[10]
In the 1790s the firm published under the moniker of "T. N. Longman, L. B. Seeley" and in the first two decades of the nineteenth century as "L. B. Seeley and J. Hatchard" or as "J. Seeley". In the 1840s the firm was publishing as "Seeley, Burnside, Seeley" and from the 1840s until the 1880s as "Seeley, Jackson & Halliday".[11] From the 1890s the firm published as "Seeley and Co.". From around 1912 the firm published under the name of "Seeley, Service & Co. Limited".
In 1849 the firm's office was located at Fleet Street, and Hanover Street, London. In the 1880s and 1890s the office was in Essex Street, Strand, from 1910 at 12 Russell Street, and in 1927 at 126 Shaftsbury Avenue, London.[12]
A letter to the editor of Nature on 12 February 1920 argued: "Some thirty or more years ago a little jeu d'esprit was written by Dr. Edwin Abbott entitled Flatland. At the time of its publication it did not attract as much attention as it deserved."[14] In recent years a number of adaptations and parodies of Flatland have appeared in film and in literature, including Flatland (2007 film) (2007) and Flatland: The Movie (2007).
The Lonsdale Library of Sports, Games and Pastimes was series of sports books launched in 1929 under the editorship of the English peer and sportsman the 5th Earl of Lonsdale, and which featured "many notable contributors from their respective fields".[15]Sir Theodore Cook helped plan the series before he died in 1928.[16] Books in this series received high praise, such as The Game of Cricket which The Field predicted would be the "standard work on cricket for some years to come"[17]
^ abcdefghPublisher's advertisement in final pages of: William Henry Collison, In the Wake of the War Canoe..., London: Seeley, Service & Co., 1915. Retrieved 20 November 2020.
Cassell's Directory of Publishing in Great Britain, the Commonwealth and Ireland, London: Cassell, 1960.
The History of Seeleys, Seeley, Service & Co. Limited, n.d.
Ian Norrie, Mumby's Publishing and Bookselling in the Twentieth Century, London: Bell & Hyman, 1982, 6th edition. (Earlier editions written by Frank Arthur Mumby.)