Charles Carroll Soule

Charles Carroll Soule (June 25, 1842 – January 7, 1913) was an American bookman with a side specialty in the architecture of libraries. Born in Boston to Richard Soule, Jr. (18121877) and Harriet Winsor (18161905)[1] he attended the Boston Latin School and Harvard College (1862), and fought in the Civil War (44th and 55th Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantries).[2] After the war he engaged in public speaking about post-slavery reconciliation in Orangeburg County, South Carolina.[3]

Soule in 1903

In the 1870s he worked in St. Louis in the publishing firm of Soule, Thomas & Winsor. [4][5] In the 1880s he ran a business selling law books from offices in Pemberton Square, Boston,[6] and in 1886 opened a bookshop in a former church on Beacon Street, near the Boston Athenaeum.[7] He established the Boston Book Company in 1889, and established The Green Bag, a legal news magazine with Horace Williams Fuller as editor. He belonged to the American Library Association.[8]

He married Louisa Charless Farwell in 1878 and had 4 children.[1] Towards the end of his life he resided in Brookline.

See also

References

  1. "Sprague Project". Richard E. Weber. Retrieved October 8, 2014.
  2. "10 June 1863". Civil War Day by Day. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Retrieved October 8, 2014.
  3. Julie Saville (1996). The Work of Reconstruction: From Slave to Wage Laborer in South Carolina 1860-1870. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-56625-4.
  4. Publishers Weekly, June 25, 1881
  5. Roberta S. Trites (2009). Twain, Alcott, and the Birth of the Adolescent Reform Novel. University of Iowa Press. ISBN 978-1-58729-770-0.
  6. "Booksellers and Publishers". Boston Almanac and Business Directory. 1885.
  7. "Obituary", Publishers Weekly, January 11, 1913
  8. "Charles Carroll Soule", Public Libraries, Chicago: Library Bureau, 18, February 1913, hdl:2027/uc1.$b776645

Further reading

By Soule
About Soule


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