Tag Archives: chapbooks

Chapbooks: Short Books with Long History

Scholars debate over the etymology of the term “chapbook.” Some argue that “chap” is derived from “cheap,” surely an accurate description of chapbooks, since they were indeed cheap little publications. But the more widely accepted explanation is that “chap” comes from the Old English “céap,” meaning “barter” or “deal.” Peddlers came to be known as chaps, and they were the primary purveyors of chapbooks. Whatever the origin of their name, chapbooks became a vital tool for dissemination of information and promotion of literacy. As publishing and readers’ tastes evolved, chapbooks also provided an ideal means of addressing an increased demand for children’s literature.

Since the Middle Ages, traveling peddlers provided many necessary wares to rural communities–and that included the news. They would often regale their customers with the latest in politics, entertainment, and gossip. Then in 1693, England repealed the Act of 1662, which had limited the number of Master Printers allowed in the country. The number of printers exploded. Meanwhile, charity schools emerged, making education and literacy more accessible to the poor. The demand for cheaply printed reading materials drastically increased as a result, and all the new printers were happy to supply their needs.

By 1700, chapmen regularly carried small books–usually about the size of a waistcoat pocket–on virtually every topic imaginable. The books were generally coverless, and their illustrations were made of recycled (and irrelevant) woodcuts from other publications. In the absence of copyright laws, printers would steal illustrations or even large chunks of text from other chapbooks and reproduce them in their own editions. Early chapbooks weren’t even cut; the purchaser would cut apart the pages and either pin or stitch the book together to read.

Dr Watts-Divine SongsChapbooks grew into an incredibly powerful tool for disseminating new ideas. When Thomas Paine published The Rights of Man, he suggested that the second edition be made available in chapbook form. The book went on to sell over two million copies, an incredible feat in those days, when the average publishing run might be only a few hundred or thousand copies. Religious organizations used the form to publish religious tracts, nicknamed “godlinesses” or “Sunday schools.” There were even chapbooks for the chapmen themselves, containing information about different towns, dates for local fairs, and road maps.

The Industrial Revolution, however, brought a revolution in the printed word as well. People flocked to the cities, reducing chapbooks’ role in news delivery. Newspapers had also become cheaper to produce, so they were no longer relegated to the upper class. And chapbooks’ days seemed numbered when public solicitation was outlawed and peddlers could no longer distribute them. Meanwhile people’s tastes were changing. As the decades of the 1800’s passed, the novel was emerging as a new, preferred form, and in terms of “cheap” literature, chapbooks eventually gave way to “penny dreadfuls,” the dime novel, and other such low-brow forms.

But changing reading habits and higher literacy rates also meant an increased demand for children’s literature. From around 1780, most booksellers offered a variety of children’s chapbooks, which included ABC’s, jokes, riddles, stories, and religious materials like prayers and catechism. Thanks to improved printing techniques, this generation of chapbooks was printed with relevant illustrations and attached colored paper or card wrappers.

Juvenile-Pastimes-Baseball-Chapbook

Though we think of chapbooks as a distinctly British form, they emerged in various forms around the world. Harry B. Weiss writes in A Book about Chapbooks, “The contents of chapbooks, the world over, fall readily into certain classes and many were the borrowings, with of course, adaptations and changes to suit particular countries.” And despite their variant forms and culturally specific content, chapbooks consistently served as a democratizing force in the dissemination of ideas.

Collectors may build entire collections around chapbooks, or they may find that certain chapbooks fit in well with their collections. For example, the 1849 edition of Juvenile Pastimes includes a rare early pictorial depiction of baseball, making it an ideal addition to a collection of baseball books. Collectors of erotica may enjoy Dumb Dora: Rod Gets Taken Again, an adult chapbook with suggestive, but not pornographic, illustrations. The variety of chapbooks means there’s a little book for everyone!

This month’s select acquisitions are a short list of delightful chapbooks. Please peruse them and contact us if you have any inquiries. As cataloguing chapbooks is quite the endeavor, we’ve also put together an article about the resources used to catalogue the items on the list, which includes our bibliographic sources at the end.

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Chapbooks: A [Short] List for September

Chapbooks.

A meanly produced publishing phenomenon, Carter & Barker, in the 8th ABC, describe them thusly: “Small pamphlets of popular, sensational, juvenile, moral or educational character, originally distributed by chapmen or hawkers, not by booksellers.”

If one dips into Neuberg’s CHAPBOOK BIBLIOGRAPHY, we find this genre had “by 1700, [become] an important part of the [chapman’s] stock-in-trade … whose varied subject matter included devils, angels, scoundrels, heroes, love, hate, fairy tales, religion, fables, shipwreck, executions, prophecies and fortune telling. …  During the eighteenth century chapbooks formed the main reading matter for the poor.”  Though around for centuries, the chapbook, as a viable publishing genre, had mostly expired towards the end of the 19th C, except as Carter noted, “as a conscious archaism.”

Despite oft being an object of acquisition by collectors, one can still find these little volumes floating about, and offered at [comparatively] modest prices such that building a pleasing & extensive collection of these modest works is not beyond the means of the ‘average’ person [however such a term may be defined].

Here then is Tavistock Books’ list for September.  A small cache of 30 chapbooks, primarily for children, primarly American, primarily 19th Century.  Prices range from a modest $45 to a decidely robust $2000, for one that will be found in David Block’s ground breaking work, BASEBALL BEFORE WE KNEW IT.  Many titles offered are the only copy on the market; one or two not found on OCLC.

Should you have queries regarding any of this material, or other listings you may find on our site, please contact us.  We thank you for your attention, and we hope you find something of interest while browsing these offerings.

REFERENCES CITED

Cataloguing chapbooks is a task both challenging and engaging, as evidenced by the list of sources used to catalogue this month’s list of select acquisitions.

American Imprints AMERICAN BIBLIOGRAPHY. A Preliminary Checklist. 1801 – 1846.  NY [et al]: Scarecrow Pres, 1958-1997.

Arndt & Eck The FIRST CENTURY Of GERMAN LANGUAGE PRINTING In The UNITED STATES Of AMERICA.  Göttingen: 1989.

BAL.  Blanck, Jacob [et al].  BIBLIOGRAPHY Of AMERICAN LITERATURE.  New Haven: 1955 – 1991.

Block, David.  BASEBALL BEFORE WE KNEW IT.  A Search for the Roots of the Game.  Lincoln: (2005).

Cappon & Brown NEW MARKET, VIRGINIA, IMPRINTS 1806 – 1876.  A Check-list.  Charlottesville: 1942.

Church.  Cole, George Watson – Compiler.  A CATALOGUE Of BOOKS Relating to The Discovery and Early History of North and South America Forming a Part of the Library of E. D. Church.  NY: Peter Smith, 1951.

Cropper, Percy J.  The NOTTINGHAMSHIRE PRINTED CHAP-BOOKS, with Notices of Their Printers and Vendors. 1892. 

Davis, Roger.  KENDREW Of YORK and His Chapbooks for Children.  Elmete Press, 1988.

ESTC ENGLISH SHORT TITLE CATALOGUE.  http://estc.bl.uk

Gumuchian Les LIVRES De L’ENFANCE du XVe au XIXe Siècle.  London: Holland Press, 1985.

Hamilton, Sinclair.  EARLY AMERICAN BOOK ILLUSTRATORS And WOOD ENGRAVERS. 1670-1870.  Princeton: 1968.

Heartman, Charles F.  The NEW ENGLAND PRIMER Issued Prior to 1830.  1922.

[-].  AMERICAN PRIMERS. INDIAN PRIMERS. ROYAL PRIMERS.  And Thirty-Seven Other Types of non-New-England Primers Issued Prior to 1830.  Highland Park: 1935.

NCBEL The NEW CAMBRIDGE BIBLIOGRAPHY Of ENGLISH LITERATURE.  Cambridge: 1969 – 1977.

NUC NATIONAL UNION CATALOGUE.  Pre-1956 Imprints.

Opie, Iona & Peter.  The OXFORD DICTIONARY Of NURSERY RHYMES.  Oxford: (1951).

Osborne.  The OSBORNE COLLECTION Of EARLY CHILDREN’S BOOKS 1566-1910.  Toronto: TPL, 1975.

Rosenbach, A.S.W.  EARLY AMERICAN CHILDREN’S BOOKS.  NY: Dover, 1971.

Spencer A CATALOGUE Of The SPENCER COLLECTION Of EARLY CHILDREN’S BOOK And CHAPBOOKS.  Preston: 1967.

Weiss, Harry B.  SAMUEL WOOD & SONS. Early New York Publishers of Children’s Books.  NY: 1942.

Welch, d’Alté A.  A BIBLIOGRAPHY Of AMERICAN CHILDREN’S BOOKS Printed Prior to 1821.  Worcester: AAS, 1972.

Wust.  THREE HUNDRED YEARS Of GERMAN IMMIGRANTS In NORTH AMERICA 1683-1983  1983.

 

 

 

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