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Chapman noticed Mary
Whiting (c.1814-1875), the daughter of his uncle's neighbour in her garden. He fell in love with her, but coming from a strict Quaker family she was forbidden to communicate with him. Chapman therefore drilled a hole through a wall into the neighbours' spare bedroom through which
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Born in 1804, Edward
Chapman was one of nine children in a family of six sons and three daughters of Thomas Chapman (1771–1833), a Richmond solicitor and his wife, Sophia (née Barrett, c.1776-1852). While his brothers followed careers in the Law, medicine, surveying, and engineering, Edward Chapman
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Although it has often been stated that Edward
Chapman retired from Chapman & Hall in 1864, there are two letters indicating he remained an active partner until early 1866. In a 19 January 1866 letter to Frederic Ouvry, Charles Dickens wrote: “I saw Edward Chapman, the retiring partner this
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he passed notes and talked to her. Returning his feelings and refusing to submit to her parents' authority Mary
Whiting left her home and went to her brother Thomas Whiting's house in Leeds, where she and Chapman were married on 22 September 1841. In 1842 they moved into a house on the
291:, ed. M. House, G. Storey, et al. (Oxford, 1965–2002) 11, 142). On 5 February 1866 Forster wrote to Robert Bulwer Lytton that “Fredric Chapman ... is about to buy out the elder Chapman, and to conduct the business alone” (ms with Lord Cobbold, Knebworth, England. On deposit at
85:. Chapman is thought to have had the literary skills to be able to spot a saleable book while Hall had the business acumen to sell it. According to Robert L. Patten by 1835 they were publishing illustrated fiction and magazines issued weekly or monthly.
121:. However, Dickens, then only 22, was not the first choice as writer. Charles Whitehead, the senior editor in the publishing house, did not have time to complete the work so recommended Dickens on the basis of his recently published and successful
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where they had three children: Margaret “Meta” Sophia (afterwards
Simpson, later Gaye, 1842–1933), Florence (afterwards Roeder, b. 1845), and Reginald Forster (b. 1849). Also in 1841 he hired his 18-year-old cousin
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Chapman's daughter Meta recalled in her eighty-eighth year that she ‘used to wonder what he did at the office as when ever Mama took me to 193 Piccadilly, Papa was standing with his back to the fire’.
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began his progress through the ranks of the company and eventually becoming a partner in 1858 and sole proprietor on Edward
Chapman's retirement from
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was selling over 40,000 copies a month and
Dickens received a further £2,000 bonus with Chapman & Hall making about £14,000 from the publication.
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sold over 20,000 copies and Hall sent
Dickens a cheque for £500 as a bonus above the agreed payment. By the end of its monthly publications
81:(1800-1847) he founded a bookselling and publishing business at 186 Strand, London in 1830, having bought out a small journal called
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Robert
Browning letter to Frederick Locker, 20 February 1874, ms at Armstrong Browning Library, Baylor University, Waco, Texas
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England & Wales, National
Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations), 1858-1966, 1973-1995 for Edward Chapman
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in 1866. He spent the next decade travelling throughout Europe before his poor health forced him to return to his home at
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Edward Chapman died at Elm Lodge in Hitchin in 1880 and is buried with his wife and brother-in-law Thomas Whiting in
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morning. ... I pointed out to him the objections that I had to his cousin’s remaining in the business alone” (
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had “a taste for books, and a meditative, studious mind, and with books he chose to make his life”. With
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West Yorkshire, England, Church of England Marriages and Banns, 1813-1935 for Mary Whiting
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A Hundred Years of Publishing: Being the Story of Chapman & Hall, Ltd.
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32:(13 January 1804 – 20 February 1880) was a British publisher who, with
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179:(1823–95) as a clerk. Edward Chapman's relationship with
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When visiting his uncle Michael Chapman in Cork Street in
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Edward Chapman on The Brownings' Correspondence website
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On the death of Edward Hall in 1847 Chapman's cousin
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Chapman, Edward (1804–1880), bookseller and publisher
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Squib Annual of Poetry, Politics, and Personalities
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157:Chapman died at Elm Lodge in Hitchin in 1880
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355:The Longman Companion to Victorian Fiction
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379:Edward Chapman on Spartacus Educational
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477:19th-century English businesspeople
259:portrays Chapman in the 2017 film,
109:In 1835 Chapman and Hall published
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492:English book publishers (people)
487:Book publishing company founders
289:The Letters of Charles Dickens
262:The Man Who Invented Christmas
233:before moving to Elm Lodge in
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137:and his friends. In May 1837
101:Chapman & Hall published
507:People from Richmond, London
391:Delphi Dickensiana Volume I
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185:Elizabeth Barrett Browning
54:Elizabeth Barrett Browning
394:, Delphi Classics (2012)
187:began in 1848 when, like
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105:for much of his career
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193:Edward Bulwer-Lytton
502:People from Hitchin
497:English booksellers
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130:The Pickwick Papers
113:by the illustrator
357:, Routledge (2013)
252:In popular culture
227:Chapman & Hall
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62:Eadweard Muybridge
38:Chapman & Hall
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353:John Sutherland,
268:A Christmas Carol
172:Old Brompton Road
46:William Thackeray
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433:Waugh, p. 4
295:, Hertford)
257:Ian McNeice
461:Categories
302:References
72:Early life
149:Marriage
143:Pickwick
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275:Notes
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