Whitman Publishing is an American book publishing company which started as a subsidiary of the Western Printing & Lithographing Company of Racine, Wisconsin. In about 1915, Western began printing and binding a line of juvenile books for the Hamming-Whitman Publishing Company of Chicago. A few years later Hamming-Whitman went bankrupt, and Western took over the company, found success in selling the inventory of low-cost juvenile books, and formed the Whitman Publishing Company.[1]
Whitman now primarily produces coin and stamp collecting books and materials. The company is owned by Anderson Press.[2]
One of Whitman's most popular mystery series was Trixie Belden. In 1977 they launched the Trixie Belden Fan Club, and issued a lower-priced paperback book format of the series. At the time some booksellers stated that the Trixie Belden books were more popular than Nancy Drew and The Hardy Boys books.[6] Other children's book series were Meg Duncan and Power BoysAdventure.[1]
Whitman published the Big Little Books and Better Little Books. The early Big Little Books had print runs of 250,000 to 350,000 for each title, with no reprints.[4]
By the mid-1930s Whitman began a line of “coin boards” that helped popularize the coin collecting hobby. Whitman’s Handbook of United States Coins was first published in 1942. The first edition of Whitman’s Guide Book of United States Coins (the “Red Book”) was published in 1946.[8]
This started an expanding line of books aimed at numismatists. The line continued as Western was sold to Mattel in 1982, then was spun off and renamed Golden Books Family Entertainment. The new company sold Whitman Coin Products and other adult lines to St. Martin's Press. St. Martin's, in turn, sold Whitman Coin Products to the H.E. Harris company, another publisher that specialized in coin and postage stamp collecting materials. H.E. Harris was then renamed Whitman Publishing, which continues to produce primarily coin and postage stamp collecting books materials.[9]
Whitman operates the websites Coin Update, Mint News Blog and World Mint News Blog.[10] Today, Whitman Publishing is owned by Anderson Press.[2] As of 2017, Whitman was also publishing books on other topics in addition to the coin and postage stamp collecting materials and books.[11][12]
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References
^ abBrown, David & Virginia, Whitman Juvenile Books Reference & Value Guide, page 5, Collector Books, 1997