Samuel Hale Parker
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Samuel Hale Parker (1781–1864) was a publisher and bookseller in 19th-century
Boston Boston (), officially the City of Boston, is the state capital and most populous city of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, as well as the cultural and financial center of the New England region of the United States. It is the 24th- mo ...
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Massachusetts Massachusetts (Massachusett language, Massachusett: ''Muhsachuweesut assachusett writing systems, məhswatʃəwiːsət'' English: , ), officially the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, is the most populous U.S. state, state in the New England ...
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United States The United States of America (U.S.A. or USA), commonly known as the United States (U.S. or US) or America, is a country primarily located in North America. It consists of 50 states, a federal district, five major unincorporated territorie ...
. He published musical scores as well as novels, sermons, and other titles. He operated the Boston Circulating Library, and was among the founders of the
Handel and Haydn Society The Handel and Haydn Society is an American chorus and period instrument orchestra based in Boston, Massachusetts. Known colloquially as 'H+H', the organization has been in continual performance since its founding in 1815, the longest-serving suc ...
.H. Earle Johnson. Musical Interludes in Boston 1795–1830. New York: Columbia University Press, 1943.


Biography

Samuel H. Parker was born in 1781 in
Wolfeboro, New Hampshire Wolfeboro is a town in Carroll County, New Hampshire, United States. The population was 6,416 at the 2020 census. A resort area situated beside Lake Winnipesaukee, Wolfeboro includes the village of Wolfeboro Falls. History The town was granted ...
to Matthew Stanley Gibson Parker and Ann Rust. His son
James Cutler Dunn Parker James Cutler Dunn Parker (June 2, 1828 – November 27, 1916) was an American organist, educator and composer. Biography James Cutler Dunn Parker was born in Boston on June 2, 1828, the son of Samuel Hale Parker. He graduated from Harvard in 1 ...
(1828–1916) was a teacher and superintendent of examinations at the New England Conservatory of Music. Parker worked as a bookbinder in Boston, 1802–1811. In 1811 Parker bought the Boston Book Store from
William Blagrove William Blagrove was a bookseller, publisher and librarian in Boston, Massachusetts, in the early 19th century. He ran the Union Circulating Library, a subscription library on School Street, from 1804 through 1811. As a publisher, he issued "a cha ...
.William Arms Fisher. Notes on music in old Boston. Oliver Ditson company, 1918. The store sold books, as one might expect, including "several hundred books of vocal and instrumental music, and some sheet music for the piano, ... pianos and other musical wares, mending glues, concert and theater tickets, new sheet music, and works of fiction." Around 1809–1816 he and booksellers Edmund Munroe and David Francis ran a joint publishing firm: Munroe, Francis and Parker. Parker also published titles under his own imprint, utilizing Munroe & Francis as printers. In 1815 Parker and others founded Boston's
Handel and Haydn Society The Handel and Haydn Society is an American chorus and period instrument orchestra based in Boston, Massachusetts. Known colloquially as 'H+H', the organization has been in continual performance since its founding in 1815, the longest-serving suc ...
. In addition to publishing, he ran a library with both circulating and non-circulating collections. As of 1815, "Parker's reading-room is opened from 9 in the morning till 9 at night, and contains all the Boston papers, some of the principal Southern papers and magazines, English reviews, &c. A large collection of music, and some beautiful drawings, are kept for loan: to be increased every opportunity." By 1818 Parker's circulating collection, known as the Boston Union Circulating Library or the Boston Circulating Library held some 7,000 volumes, the largest of its kind in town. As proprietor of the bookshop and library, Parker benefitted from the efforts of his forebears who had built the enterprise over decades—William Martin, Benjamin Guild, William P. Blake, William Pelham, William Blagrove. Through the years Parker conducted his business activities from several successive addresses in Boston: 3 School Street (1811); 4 Cornhill (1815); 1 Water Street (ca.1817); 12 Cornhill (1818); 164 Washington Street (1825–1832); 10 School Street, 141 Washington Street, then 107 Washington Street (all in 1834); 135 Washington Street (1838). A fire in 1833 caused his move to new premises on School Street.
Oliver Ditson Oliver Ditson (October 20, 1811 – December 21, 1888) was an American businessman and founder of Oliver Ditson and Company, one of the major music publishing houses of the late 19th century. Early life and career Oliver Ditson was born in Bos ...
and Parker established the publishing firm of Parker and Ditson in 1836. The partnership ended in 1842, when Ditson bought Parker's interest in the firm.Obituary: Oliver Ditson. New York Times, Dec 22, 1888. p.2. He belonged to the Trinity Church congregation, where his relative Samuel Parker ministered. He also sang in the Trinity Church choir.


Images

Image:1815 Boston Union Circulating Library.png, Library catalog, 1815 Image:1825 Parker Boston.png, Advertisement, 1825 Image:QuickStep BPL 2492722430 e8a8815a3a o.jpg, Parker & Ditson publication, 1837 Image:RainerFamily SheetMusic BPL 2492712712 a767e2573c o.jpg, Parker & Ditson publication, 1841


Selected titles published by Parker


Munroe, Francis & Parker

;Works * Madame Cottin. Elizabeth, or, The exiles of Siberia: a tale, founded upon facts. 1809. * Ezra Sargeant. Universal biography. 1809. ;Catalogs * Catalogue of the Boston Union Circulating Library, and Reading Room. 1815.


S.H. Parker

;Textual works * Edward Bickersteth. A Scripture help: designed to assist in reading the Bible profitably. Boston. 1817. * Walter Scott. The antiquary: A romance. 1821. * Walter Scott. Tales of my landlord. Second series. 1821. * Walter Scott. The monastery: A romance. 1822. * Walter Scott. Rob Roy: A romance. 1822. * John Leycester Adolphus. Letters to Richard Heber, Esq.: containing critical remarks on the series of novels beginning with "Waverley," and an attempt to ascertain their author. 1822. * Mary Grafton. Spiritual gleanings; or, Select essays with Scripture mottos. 1824. * Elizabeth Hamilton. Letters on the elementary principles of education. 1825. * Analysis of the game of chess. 1826. * Philander Chase. A plea for the West. 1827. * George Washington Doane. The missionary argument: a sermon preached by appointment, before the Board of Directors of the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society of the Protestant Episcopal Church, in the U.S. of America, in St. Andrews Church, Philadelphia; on Tuesday evening, May 11, 1830. 1830. * George Washington Doane. The voice of the departed: a sermon preached in Trinity Church, Boston, on Sunday, September 12, 1830; on occasion of the death of the late Rector, the Reverend John Sylvester John Gardiner, D.D. 1830. * John Henry Hopkins. Religion the only safeguard of national prosperity: A sermon preached in Trinity Church, Boston, December 1, 1831; Being the day of annual thanksgiving. 1831. * Manton Eastburn. The voice of God in the recent national bereavement a sermon delivered in Trinity Church, Boston, on the morning of Sunday, October 31, 1852, being the Sunday after the interment of the Hon. Daniel Webster. 1852. * Waverly Novels. 1853. ;Musical scores * Joseph Mazzinghi. Ye shepherds tell me. 1816. * Henry R Bishop. Tho' 'tis all but a dream a French air. 1824. ;Catalogs * Catalogue of the Boston Union Circulating Library, no. 3. 1812. * Catalogue of the Boston Union Circulating Library, no. 12. 1820.


Parker & Ditson

* John Barnett. A harper sat by a tranquil stream: from Lays of Woodstock, an old English legend of romance. 1835. * George Kingsley; Thomas Moore. The time worn lute. 1836. * William Smith. Free Bridge quick step and waltz: composed and arranged for the piano forte. 1836. * Simon Knaebel. Quick step from Robert le diable. 1836. *
Charles Zeuner Grave in Paris ( Cimetière de Montmartre). Charles Zeuner (20 September 1795 Eisleben, Saxony - 7 November 1857 Philadelphia) was an American organist and composer originally active in Germany, then in Boston and Philadelphia in the United States. ...
. Congress waltz: composed for the piano forte. 1836. * A F Knight. Paine's quick step: respectfully dedicated to Capt. Chas. C. Paine, as performed by the
Boston Brigade Band The Boston Brigade Band (1821 – c. 1863) was a brass and reed band that performed in Boston, Massachusetts, and elsewhere in New England. Some of the musical pieces played by the band were subsequently published as sheet music, including "The Mamm ...
at the encampment of the Rifle Rangers. 1836. * Bartholomew Brown. The archers' song: as sung at the anniversary of the Robin-Hood Archers, October 1, 1836. * T Comer. Ode: sung at the second centennial celebration of Harvard University, Cambridge, on the 8th of September 1836. * Simon Knaebel. Jackson's grand march: as played at the Boston Democratic Celebration July 4, 1836 by the Boston Brass Band and then respectfully dedicated with permission to Gen. Andrew Jackson, President of the United States. 1836. * A F Knight. Sutton's quick step : respectfully dedicated to Capt. William Sutton, and the officers and members of the Salem Independent Cadets by the Boston Brigade Band. 1837. * Here's a health to all good lasses. 1837. * Charles Zeuner. Herz's quick step: as played by the Boston Brigade Band : arranged for the piano forte. 1837. * Charles Zeuner. Overture to the opera of La Norma. 1837. * Henry Russell. My heart's in the highlands: a favourite song sung at the principal concerts by Mr. H. Russell. 1837. * E B Bohuszewicz. Boston grand march: for the pianoforte. 1837. * Geo O Farmer. The dying mariner's request. 1837. * A U Hayter;
Maria Caterina Rosalbina Caradori-Allan Maria Caterina Rosalbina Caradori-Allan (née de Munck; 1800–1865) was a French operatic soprano. Life Caradori-Allan was born at the Casa Palatina, Milan, in 1800. Her father, Baron de Munck, was an Alsatian, who served in the French army, w ...
. The Piper O'Dundee: Jacobite relic. 1838. * David Claypoole Johnson. The Schoolmaster : a very popular glee. 1838. * George Frideric Handel. Recitative, Deeper and deeper still; Aria, Waft her, Angels, through the skies : as sung by Mr. Braham. ca.1838–1842. * Joseph Philip Knight; Jonas B Phillips. The gipsy's invitation: a cavatina. 1840. * William Hayden. The National Whig song. 1840. * George Hews. The Whig waltz. 1840. * Joseph Haydn. Piercing eyes. ca.1840. * Grand march by the Rainer Family, arranged for the piano forte. 1841. * Ralph Loomis. The song my mother used to sing: a ballad. 1841.


Selected writings by Parker

* Review of the life and fragments of Miss Elizabeth Smith. Boston: Samuel H. Parker, 1810.


See also

*
List of booksellers in Boston This is a partial list of booksellers in Boston, Massachusetts. Booksellers in Boston 17th century * John Allen * William Avery * Joseph Brunning (a.k.a. Joseph Browning), Court St. * Nicholas Buttolph * Duncan Campbell * James Cowse * John D ...


References


External links

* WorldCat
Parker, Samuel Hale 1781–1864
* Open Library
Publisher: Samuel H. Parker


published by Parker {{DEFAULTSORT:Parker, Samuel Hale American music publishers (people) 19th-century American businesspeople Businesspeople from Boston 1781 births 1864 deaths