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| Neale Publishing Company | The Neale Company was founded in Washington, D.C. in 1894 by Walter Neale. In 1901 it became the Neale Publishing Company. Walter Neale died in 1933 and the firm went out of existence. See 'Dictionary of Literary Biography' 49 (1986), pp. 332-334. | 2009 |
| NES Arnold | In 1989 most of the firm of E. J. Arnold & Son Ltd was acquired by Nottingham Group plc and merged with Nottingham Educational Supplies to form NES Arnold. NES Arnold became part of the Novara group and in 2001 was purchased by Findel plc. See www.findel-education.co.uk and www.nesarnold.co.uk. | 2008 |
| New American Library | The publishing firm known as New American Library was founded in 1948 by Kurt Enoch and Victor Weybright. In 1986 New American Library was purchased by Penguin Group USA, which still uses the NAL imprint. See the NAL page of www.us.penguingroup.com. | 2013 |
| New Century Publishing | New Century Publishing was a division of Appleton-Century-Crofts after its purchase by Meredith Publishing Company in 1960. The principal parts of the firm were later sold by Meredith. See the FOB entry for Appleton-Century-Crofts. The New Century division was sold in 1974 to Charles Walther. New Century Publishing was then purchased in 1990 by Frank Gil, who changed its name to New Win Publishing. New Win Publishing was purchased by the Academic Learning Company in 2003. See www.academiclearningcompany.com. | 2008 |
| New Departures | New Departures was a literary periodical founded by beat poet and jazz musician Michael Horovitz and fellow Oxford student Peter Brown in 1959. While the magazine’s initial run appears to have stopped in 1984, Horovitz continued to edit other iterations of it, including “Live New Departures” events and Poetry Olympics anthologies, until his death in 2021. A collection of incoming letters and manuscripts to the magazine as well as proofs for early issues of the magazine and some business correspondence is housed at the Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas at Austin. | 2025 |
| New English Library | The publishing firm known as New English Library was purchased by Hodder & Stoughton from the Times Mirror Company in April 1981. Hodder & Stoughton is now part of the Hachette group. See www.hodderheadline.co.uk. | 2008 |
| New Win Publishing | See the FOB entry for New Century Publishing, which was formerly a part of Appleton-Century-Crofts. New Century Publishing was purchased in 1990 by Frank Gil, who changed its name to New Win Publishing. New Win Publishing was purchased by the Academic Learning Company in 2003. See www.academiclearningcompany.com. | 2008 |
| New York Publishing Company | New York Publishing Company appears to have come into existence and gone out of existence in the 1890s. Publications in 1895 are recorded at sdrc.lib.uiowa.edu/lucile. | 2009 |
| New York Variety Publishing Company | The publishing list of the New York Variety Publishing Company was purchased by M. Witmark & Sons in 1886. See the FOB entry for M. Witmark & Sons, which indicates that the firm is now part of Warner/Chappell Music, Inc. See the history pages of www.warnerchappell.com. | 2008 |
| Newspaper Enterprise Association | See: https://www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/222_nea.html The NEA archives was bought by CORBIS, which controlled the copying of NEA images physically housed in its archives in New York City. In 2016, CORBIS was, in turn, sold to Visual China Group (VCG), which arranged to have Getty Images be the exclusive distributor of CORBIS images outside of China. Neither VCG nor Getty Images controls the copying of NEA images housed in the Library of Congress. However, any copyright held by NEA that is still current would now be owned by VCG, administered by Getty Images. Getty Images can be contacted at: http://www.gettyimages.com/customer-support | 2021 |
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