P. F. Volland Company
P. F. Volland Company of Chicago, Illinois published poetry books, greeting cards,[1] music, children's books, calendars, cookbooks, and children's occupational games,[1] between 1908[2] and 1959. The press was noted for using new printing processes, including off-set printing techniques,[2] and color illustrations. The P. F. Volland Company is also known for the many significant artists and writers whose work it published.
Status | Defunct |
---|---|
Founded | 1908 |
Founder | Paul Frederick Volland |
Successor | Shaw Barton Company |
Country of origin | United States |
Headquarters location | Chicago, Illinois |
Publication types | books, greeting cards, music, calendars, games |
Founder
The company was founded by Paul Frederick Volland.[3] He was shot and killed by Vera Trepagnier in a business dispute on May 5, 1919 in the Volland offices.[4][5][6]
Volland Ideal
The Volland Ideal was used to market P. F. Volland's lines of children's books. The Volland Ideal was "that books should make children happy and build character unconsciously and should contain nothing to cause fright, suggest fear, glorify mischief, excuse malice or condone cruelty."[7][8]
History
Christmas cards were added as a product line in 1909.[9]
After 1912, the firm had offices in the Monroe Building (across the street from the Art Institute), which were designed by the well-known architect Walter Burley Griffin.[10] Griffin also had offices in the Monroe Building[11] and his wife, architect Marion Mahony Griffin, provided illustrations for some of P. F. Volland's greeting cards.[12][13]
In 1916, the firm moved to a new space in the Garland Building, 58 East Washington Street, Chicago, Illinois.[14][15]
In 1917, the company was incorporated in Delaware.[16]
In 1919, the firm participated in the Victory Loan drive organized by the Liberty Loan Committee for the Publishing, Printing, Advertising, and Allied Interests.[17]
Frederick J. Clampitt, who had been a silent partner and an executive member of the firm since 1916, became president of P. F. Volland after Paul Volland’s death in 1919.[2][18] Other officers of the company in 1919 were W. R. Anderson, vice president; H. S. Adams, secretary; Edwin J. Clampitt, assistant treasurer; James R. Offield, member of board of directors; Maurice Berkson, member of board of directors. J. P. McEvoy headed up the editorial department.[18]
The New York representative of the firm was Francis H. Evans.[19] In 1929, the New York representative of the firm was Harry A. Moore.[20]
The P. F. Volland Company merged with the Gerlach Barlow Company in 1924[21] and moved some of its offices to the Gerlach Barlow Building in Joliet, Illinois.[3] The Volland brand name continued to be used for Volland products.[2] The Volland offices at 58 E. Washington in Chicago, Illinois were retained and sold both the Volland and Gerlach Barlow lines.[2]
After World War II, Volland produced greeting cards for the emerging African American market.[22]
By 1935, the book titles published by Volland were acquired by other publishers, including Wise Book Company and M.A. Donahue.[2][6]
The Shaw Barton Company, a competitor of the Gerlach Barlow Company, purchased the company in 1959[3] and closed down the Joliet operation.[21]
Authors and illustrators of the P.F. Volland Co.
Volland hired many significant early 20th century artists and writers.[2] Many worked as freelancers.[23]
- Sarah Addington
- Ottillie Amend
- Alice Cooper Bailey
- Henry Turner Bailey
- Temple Bailey
- Maginel Wright Barney
- Eleanore Barte
- Mary R. Bassett
- Clara Doty Bates
- L. Frank Baum
- Betty Baxter
- Frances Beem
- Erick Berry
- John Gabbert Bowman
- Claire A. Briggs
- Philip Broughton
- Carmen L. Browne
- Thornton W. Burgess
- Edgar Rice Burroughs
- Bonibel Butler
- George Frank Butler
- Ve Elizabeth Cadie
- Eleanor Campbell
- Lang Campbell
- Ruth Campbell
- Lewis Carroll
- William Herbert Carruth
- Russell Gordon Carter
- Gertrud Caspari
- Madison Cawein
- Ethel Clere Chamberlin
- Padraic Colum
- Nancy Cox McCormack
- Elizabeth T. Corbett
- Frank Crane
- Pauline Croll
- Gladys Signey Crouch
- Alice Ross Culver
- Gertrude K. Day
- Katherine Sturges Dodge
- Carrie Dudley
- Mary Ellsworth
- Rachel Robinson Elmer
- Georgene Faulkner
- Eveline Foland
- James W. Foley
- Marion Foster
- Fontaine Fox
- Frances Margaret Fox
- Ellery Friend
- John Archer Gee
- Elisa Leypold Good
- Elizabeth Gordon
- Douglas Grant
- Marion Mahony Griffin
- Edwin Osgood Grover
- Eulalie Osgood Grover
- Johnny Gruelle
- Justin C. Gruelle
- Mercer Gruelle
- Molly Anderson Haley
- Maude McGehee Hankins
- Muriel E. Halstead
- Julia Dyar Hardy
- Ruby Hart
- Dick Hartley
- Louise Marshall Haynes
- John Held, Jr.
- Helen West Heller
- Arthur Henderson
- D. Henderson
- Charlotte B. Herr
- Alice Higgins
- Elizabeth O. Hiller
- Caroline Hofman
- Holling C. Holling
- Lucille Webster Holling
- R. S. Hubbell
- Eleanore Mineah Hubbard
- Carrie Jacobs-Bond
- Norman Jacobsen
- May Justus
- Ilona de Karekjarto
- Gertrude Alice Kay
- Alexander Key
- L. Kirby-Parrish
- Edith Brown Kirkwood
- S. E. Kiser
- Clayton Knight
- C. L. Kohler
- Tom Lamb
- W. T. Larned
- Ring W. Lardner
- Jeanette Lawrence
- Ella Dolbear Lee
- Michael Lipman
- Albert Edgar Lownes
- William Briggs MacHarg
- Douglas Malloch
- George C. Mason
- J. P. McEvoy
- Jo McMahon
- John L. Mee
- Edna Merritt
- Mildred Plew Merryman
- Ervine Metzl
- Nellie Burget Miller
- Olive Beaupre Miller
- Edith Mitchell
- George William Mitchell
- Lebbus Mitchell
- Muriel Moscrip Mitchell
- P. Moscheowitz
- Gladys Nelson Muter
- Marie Honre Myers
- Wilbur D. Nesbit
- David McCheyne Newell
- June Norris
- Joseph Pierre Nuytenns
- Jane Ort
- Margerita Osborne
- John Edward Perkins
- M. C. Potter
- Edward Poucher
- Jane Priest
- Nina Wilcox Putnam
- John Rae
- Fletcher C. Ransom
- Margaret Thomsen Raymond
- Sybill Rebman
- Earl H. Reed
- Sidney Reid
- Frederick Richardson
- M. T. Ross
- Herman Rosse
- Ethel Rundquist
- Frederic L. Ryder
- Tony Sarg
- Anna M. Scott
- Janet Laura Scott
- Wilhelmina Seegmiller
- Charles Livingston Snell
- Fairmont Snyder
- Johanna Spyri
- Beatrice Stevens
- Robert Louis Stevenson
- Wilhelmina Stitch
- Charles H. Sylvester
- Kate S. Teetshorn
- Gustaf Tenggren
- Mabel Dunham Thayer
- Ruth Plumly Thompsen
- Pamela Mori Tigher
- Lew Tower
- Helen Van Valkenburgh
- Helen Vanderveer
- Dugald Stewart Walker
- Satella Sharps Waterstone
- Mary L. Watson
- Jessie Penniman White
- Lois Willoughby
- Dixie Willson
- Edward Arthur Wilson
- Isa L. Wright
- Annette Wynne
Book series published by P.F. Volland
- Classics series
- Friendship series
- Golden Youth series
- Good Cheer series
- Happy Children series
- Hug Me Toy Books
- Jolly Jingle series
- Jolly Kid series
- Punky Dunk
- Philadelphia Ledger Newspaper Books
- Read Me A Story series
- Sunny Book series
- Volland "Fairy Children" series
- Volland Inglenook series
References
- The American Stationer and Office Outfitter, Volume 90, page 8.
- "P.F. Volland Company Records".
- Smith, Timothy J; Smith, Michelle Y (2009). Joliet's Gerlach Barklow Calendar Company. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. p. 61. ISBN 9780738577265.
- Shank, Barry (2004). A Token of My Affection: Greeting Cards and American Business Culture. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 145–146. ISBN 0231118783.
- The American Stationer, Volume 84, May 10, 1919, p. 14.
- Dzwonkoski, Peter (1986). American Literary Publishing Houses, 1900-1980: Trade and Paperback. Detroit, MI: Gale Research Company. p. 371. ISBN 0810317249.
- Wynne, Annette. Treasure Things. New York: P.F. Volland Co, 1922, advertisement at rear of title. OCLC 18523682
- Dzwonkoski, Peter (1986). American Literary Publishing Houses 1900-1980: Trade and Paperback. Detroit, MI: Gale Research Company. p. 370. ISBN 0810317249.
- Shank, Barry (2004). A Token of My Affection: Greeting Cards and American Business Culture. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 134. ISBN 0231118783.
- Cahan, Richard; Williams, Michael (2014). The Monroe Building: a Chicago Masterpiece Rediscovered. Chicago. p. 76. ISBN 0692258965.
- Cahan, Richard; Williams, Michael (2014). The Monroe Building: a Chicago Masterpiece Rediscovered. Chicago. pp. 14, 66. ISBN 0692258965.
- Griffin, Marion Mahony. Pedestal for Flower Basket, Plan of Basket. Eric Milton Nicholls Collection. 1912.OCLC 225001896
- Griffin, Marion Mahony. Workman with Pottery. Eric Milton Nicholls Collection. 1912. OCLC 225001999
- The American Stationer, Volume 79, June 10, 1916, p. 5-6.
- Emporis GmbH. "Garland Building".
- "P. F. Volland Art Publisher, Shot in Office". The American Stationer and Office Outfitter. 84: 14. Retrieved 13 February 2019.
- Publishers' Weekly, May 3, 1919, p. 1219.
- Publishers' Weekly, June 14, 1919, p. 1637.
- The Bookseller, Newsdealer and Stationer, New York: Excelsior Pub. House, Volume 52, (June 1, 1920),p. 610.
- "[Directory]". Publishers' Weekly. 115: 523. 1929. Retrieved 27 November 2018.
- Smith, Timothy J; Smith, Michelle Y (2009). Joliet's Gerlach Barklow Calendar Company. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. p. 8. ISBN 9780738577265.
- Shank, Barry (2004). A Token of My Affection: Greeting Cards and American Business Culture. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 196. ISBN 0231118783.
- Shank, p.145.
Bibliography
- Cahan, Richard; Williams, Michael (2014). The Monroe Building: a Chicago Masterpiece Rediscovered. Chicago. ISBN 0692258965.
- Dzwonkoski, Peter (1986). American Literary Publishing Houses 1900-1980: Trade and Paperback. Detroit, MI: Gale Research Company. ISBN 0810317249.
- Smith, Timothy J; Smith, Michelle Y (2009). Joliet's Gerlach Barklow Calendar Company. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9780738577265.
- Shank, Barry (2004). A Token of My Affection: Greeting Cards and American Business Culture. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0231118783.