1517 Media

1517 Media, formerly Augsburg Fortress Press, is the official publishing house of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), also publishing for the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada (ELCIC) as Augsburg Fortress Canada. Headquartered on South Fifth Street in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in the former headquarters of the American Lutheran Church, Augsburg Fortress publishes Living Lutheran (founded 1831, named The Lutheran until 2016), the Lutheran Book of Worship (1978), the Lutheran Study Bible, and Evangelical Lutheran Worship (2006), as well as a range of academic, reference and educational books. Tim Blevins has served as the CEO of 1517 Media since August, 2018. Beth Lewis served as the CEO of Augsburg Fortress since September 3, 2002.[4]

1517 Media
Parent companyEvangelical Lutheran Church in America
Founded1988
Country of originUnited States
Headquarters locationMinneapolis, Minnesota
DistributionPBD (US fulfillment)[1]
NBN International (UK)[2]
multiple distributors (Asia and the Pacific)[3]
Publication typesBooks, Magazines, Sheet Music
ImprintsAugsburg Fortress, Fortress Press, Broadleaf Books, Beaming Books, Sparkhouse
Official websitewww.1517.media

History

Augsburg Fortress was formed in 1988 when the Fortress Press of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Augsburg Publishing House of Minneapolis, Minnesota, merged as their parent denominations, the Lutheran Church in America (LCA) and the American Lutheran Church (ALC) merged to form the ELCA, with headquarters at the Lutheran Center on West Higgins Road in suburban Chicago, Illinois.[5]

Augsburg Publishing House was affiliated with The American Lutheran Church. It had been founded in 1891 at Augsburg Seminary in Minneapolis [6] Both the publishing house and seminary were part of the United Norwegian Lutheran Church of America (UNLC). The publishing house left the seminary campus in 1894, relocating to the downtown area in 1908. By 1960 it had become the publishing house of the Evangelical Lutheran Church. With the 1960 merger of Lutheran denominations that formed the "new" American Lutheran Church, Augsburg was designated that church's publishing arm. It absorbed the publishing houses of the other denominations that participated in the merger, including Wartburg Press (established 1881) of the "old" American Lutheran Church in Columbus, Ohio; and the Danish Lutheran Publishing House (established 1893) of the United Evangelical Lutheran Church in Blair, Nebraska. When the Lutheran Free Church joined the ALC in 1963, its publishing house, Messenger Press (established 1922), was also added.

Augsburg, and Wartburg before it, had published the old ALC denominational magazine The Lutheran Standard, which had ancestry back to the 1840s in the Evangelical Lutheran Joint Synod of Ohio.

Fortress Press was the publishing arm of the Lutheran Church in America, headquartered in northwest Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in the Muhlenberg Building, a unique U-shaped brick Georgian architecture style structure named for Henry Melchoir Muhlenberg and other members of the Muhlenberg family who were important in American Lutheranism. Henry is considered the "Patriarch of American Lutheranism" and the prime organizer of the first Lutheran synod in America, the Pennsylvania Ministerium in 1746.

The LCA came into existence in 1962 with the merger of several smaller Lutheran denominations. The largest forerunner of the Fortress Press was the Muhlenberg Press of the United Lutheran Church in America, the largest partner in the LCA merger. The oldest ancestor was the Henkel Press, started by the son of Paul Henkel, a famous late 18th - early 19th century Lutheran pastor, missionary, and evangelist in the Appalachian Mountains region.[7][8]

Fortress published The Lutheran, the monthly magazine of the LCA and also of the earlier United Lutheran Church in America. The magazine had its beginnings in 1831 in publications of the General Synod.

In July 2016, the company re-branded as 1517 Media. They continue to use Augsburg Fortress as an imprint for church resources and Fortress Press as an imprint for academic and reference titles. Other imprints include Beaming Books, Broadleaf Books, and Sparkhouse.

gollark: > i'd support banning it straight through, independent of any mechanisms, as peer-reviewed research has showed it's shitIf you go around banning it, though, *there is clearly a way your government can ban that stuff*, hence meaning there's a mechanism for and/or support for it. And that's bad.
gollark: If there was a mechanism in place to stop people doing that sort of only-self-harming-maybe stuff, which there is now, it *would* (and *has*) been affected by political pressure.
gollark: Thing is, this mechanism for banning things would be controlled by a *government* or something, which means that when a sufficient mass of people complain that something is Clearly Immoral™ (see: homosexuality, drugs, whatever else) it would be banned.
gollark: Too bad!
gollark: Maybe require a warning or something, at most?

See also

References

  1. "Distribution Transition: Important Information for our Customers". Augsburg Fortress | One Mission Blog. Archived from the original on 2018-02-11. Retrieved 2018-02-10.
  2. "Distribution: NBN Picks Up Augsburg Fortress". Retrieved 2018-02-10.
  3. International Orders
  4. "Beth Lewis Elected to Lead Augsburg Fortress Publishers". Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. August 20, 2002. Retrieved February 2, 2018.
  5. "Company History". Augsburg Fortress. 1970-01-01. Archived from the original on 2014-05-14. Retrieved 2014-05-14.
  6. Scandinavian Review, Volume 9, American-Scandinavian Foundation., 1921, Page 145
  7. Michael L. Sherer. "When a Lutheran isn't a Lutheran". Metro Lutheran. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
  8. "The Henkel Press". Virginia Historical Society. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
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