Portrait of L.C. Page, ca.1910sL.C. Page & Company logo, ca.1909
Louis Coues Page (1869 – 1956) was a publisher in Boston, Massachusetts. Born in Zurich to American parents, he attended Harvard College and worked for Boston publishers Estes & Lauriat, 1891–1892.[1] In 1896 he bought the Joseph Knight Company and renamed it L.C. Page & Company;[2][3][4] around 1914 it became The Page Company.[5] It issued works of "art, travel, music, belles lettres" and fiction for adults and children.[6] It operated from offices on Beacon Street in Beacon Hill.[7] Authors published by the firm included Bliss Carman, Julia Caroline Dorr, Lucy Maud Montgomery,[8] and Eleanor H. Porter. In 1914 the Page Company acquired Dana Estes & Co.[9]
Around the 1910s Louis and his brother George A. Page were co-owners of the Boston Braves baseball team.[10]
Page married Kate Stearns in 1895.[11]
Farrar, Straus & Cudahy acquired L.C. Page & Co. in 1957; the imprint continued until 1980.[12]
^"Boston Record is Sold". The Fourth Estate. NY. February 23, 1918.
^"Firms Out of Business". University of Texas Harry Ransom Center and University of Reading Library. Retrieved April 2, 2013.
^1001 places to sell manuscripts, Ridgewood, NJ: The Editor Company, 1915, OL 13988344M, Page Company, 53 Beacon Street, Boston
^No. 53 Beacon Street, adjacent to Headquarters House (Boston, Massachusetts). (cf. Boston Register and Business Directory: 1922. Boston, Mass.: Sampson & Murdock Co. 1922.)
^Mary Rubio (2008), Lucy Maud Montgomery: the gift of wings, Toronto: Doubleday Canada, ISBN 978-0-385-65983-3
LouisCouesPage (1869 – 1956) was a publisher in Boston, Massachusetts. Born in Zurich to American parents, he attended Harvard College and worked for...
lawsuits with LouisCouesPage, owner of the publishing house L.C. Page & Company, that continued until she finally won in 1928. Page had a well-deserved...
Harris November 15, 1910 – December 17, 1910 William Hepburn Russell & LouisCouesPage December 17, 1910 – November 21, 1911 Estate of William Hepburn Russell...
suggested that Louis meet his uncle Elliott Coues, who was also keenly interested in birds. This meeting was a turning point, as Coues recognized Fuertes'...
p.14. ISBN 0313316619 Coues, Lewis, Clark, Jefferson 1893, Vol. 2 pp. 557–58 Lewis, Clark Floyd, Whitehouse, 1905 p. 93 Coues, Lewis, Clark, Jefferson...
Elliott Coues sent to him over many decades form one of the cornerstones of the history of American ornithology. Allen famously memorialized Coues in the...
4rd ed. Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston, Massachusetts. xiii, 494 pp. (see pages 443-445) ISBN 978-0-544-12997-9 Sistrurus tergeminus at the Reptarium.cz...
Vajroli mudra, a hatha yoga practice that inspired Craddock Mary Emily Bates Coues Chappell, Vere. "Ida Craddock: Sexual Mystic and Martyr for Freedom". Retrieved...
ego-strengthening which eventually became known as La méthode Coué. According to Charles Baudouin, Coué founded what became known as the New Nancy School, a loose...
Court of Maryland. (Class of 1979). Elliott Coues (1842-1899), physician, ornithologist, mammalogist. Coues white tail deer is named for him. B. Alvin...
Pierre Louis Victor Lemoine (October 21, 1823 in Delme, Moselle - December 11, 1911) was a celebrated and prolific French flower breeder who, among other...
2015. Graves of Upstate New York Pike, Zebulon Montgomery (1965). Elliott Coues (ed.). The expeditions of Zebulon Montgomery Pike to headwaters of the Mississippi...
(Алекса́ндр Миха́йлович Бу́тлеров; 1828–1886), Russian occultist Mary Emily Bates Coues (1835–1906), secretary, Woman's National Liberal Union Ida C. Craddock (1857–1902)...
1877). "Part II., Chapter 4. Domestication of the Buffalo". In Elliott Coues, Secretary of the Survey (ed.). History of the American Bison: bison americanus...
the Lewis and Clark Expedition, first printed in 1893, the editor Elliott Coues expressed doubt about Thomas Jefferson's conclusion that Lewis committed...
Bird-life in Plain English for Beginners, a collaboration with Elliott Coues, appeared. Adler helped organize the Connecticut Audubon Society, and became...
competed in the 1968 Summer Olympics Émile Coué (1857–1926), pharmacist, hypnotist and creator of La méthode Coué ("Every day, in every way, I'm getting better...
(1565–1590) then bishop-count of Beauvais (1569–1575) and peer of France. Louis de Lorraine, Cardinal of Guise, archbishop of Reims. René de Birague, Chancellor...
Forum, 1924. Émile Coué, Lausanne, La Concorde, 1927. Carl Spitteler, Bruxelles, Les Cahiers du journal de poètes, 1938. Jean-Louis Claparède, Neuchâtel-Paris...
Alvord, musician Signor Antonio Barili, Col. I. Edwards Clarke, Elliott Coues, Col. Edward H. Cummins, Chief Justice of the Court of Claims Charles Daniel...
publications in 1880 and 1881, while Elliott Coues published a competing checklist in 1882. Ridgway and Coues, along with Joel Asaph Allen, William Brewster...
Equy (21 May 2017). "Pour les législatives, LR lance sa campagne-méthode Coué". Libération. Archived from the original on 27 May 2017. Retrieved 5 June...
hibernation became so well established that even as late as in 1878, Elliott Coues could list as many as 182 contemporary publications dealing with the hibernation...
article based on information provided by an ex-member of the Society, Elliott Coues. Blavatsky sued the newspaper for libel, and they publicly retracted their...