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Sampson R. Urbino

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Emblem of S.R. Urbino, publisher, Boston, 1870

Sampson R. Urbino (1818–1896), also known as S.R. Urbino, was a book dealer, publisher, and library owner in Boston, Massachusetts, in the 19th century. He focused on books in languages other than English.

Prior to bookselling, Urbino worked as a teacher in Boston.[1] In the mid-1850s he bought "Miss Elizabeth P. Peabody's circulating library and book-store on West Street. He developed the library and also added German, French, and books in other foreign languages to his stock. He then ... began publishing the well-known series of Ahn's and Ollendorf's readers and grammars, and other text-books."[2][3] The business operated from an office on Summer Street (ca.1856)[4] Winter Street (ca.1857-1861)[5] School Street (ca.1864-1865)[6] and Bromfield Street (ca.1870).

Advertisement for S.R. Urbino, School Street, Boston, 1864

Urbino sold part of his textbook enterprise "to Henry Holt & Co. shortly before retiring from business in 1865. He sold his business to De Vries, Ibarra & Co., to whom he also transferred the services of Mr. Carl Schoenhof and Miss Fanny Moeller."[7]

He supported the Free Soil Party;[8] the 20th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry during the Civil War;[9] and the National Liberal League.[10] He belonged to the American Association for the Promotion of Social Science.[11] In 1889 "S.R. Urbino and 30 others" presented a petition to the Massachusetts House of Representatives asking for "legislation providing that one-third of the members of school committees in cities and towns shall be women."[12]

Urbino lived in Roxbury and Newton, Massachusetts, and was married to Levina Buoncuore Urbino, a writer and translator.[13][14]

See also

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Published by S.R. Urbino

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  • L. Boncoeur [i.e. Levina Buoncuore Urbino]. L'instructeur de l'enfrance: (A first book for children), 2nd ed. 1864
  • Goethe. Faust, Eine Tragoedie von Goethe: Erster Theil. With English notes. 1864.
  • Goethe, E.C.F. Krauss. Iphigenie auf Tauris. With English notes. 1865.
  • Goethe, E.C.F. Krauss. Hermann und Dorothea. With English notes. 1866.
  • Explanatory text to S.R. Urbino's charts of the animal kingdom. 1869. "Revised and corrected by Samuel Kneeland" Google books
  • L.B. Cuore [i.e. Levina Buoncuore Urbino]. Italian conversation-grammar, 5th ed. 1870 Google books
  • Emil Otto. German conversation-grammar, 21st ed. 1870.
  • M. Lamé Fleury; translated by Susan M. Lane. Ancient history told to children. 1870 Google books
  • Eugénie Foa. Le petit Robinson de Paris, 4th ed. 1870

References

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  1. ^ Boston Directory. 1852
  2. ^ Publishers Weekly, April 4, 1896 Google books
  3. ^ For context, see: List of libraries in 19th-century Boston, Massachusetts
  4. ^ Boston Almanac. 1856
  5. ^ Boston Almanac, 1857, 1859; Boston Directory, 1861; Boston commercial directory for 1871
  6. ^ Boston Directory, 1864; Boston Almanac, 1865
  7. ^ Publishers Weekly, April 4, 1896
  8. ^ Reunion of the Free soilers of 1848-1852, at the Parker House, Boston, Massachusetts, June 28, 1888. Cambridge: Wilson, 1888
  9. ^ Richard F. Miller. Harvard's Civil War: a history of the Twentieth Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry. UPNE, 2005
  10. ^ Equal rights in religion: Report of the Centennial Congress of Liberals, and organization of the National Liberal League, at Philadelphia, on the fourth of July, 1876. Boston: National Liberal League, 1876
  11. ^ Constitution, address, and list of members of the American Association for the Promotion of Social Science, with the questions proposed for discussion: to which are added minutes of the transactions of the association. Boston: Wright & Potter. 1866. Retrieved 2010-09-14.
  12. ^ Journal of the House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Jan. 24, 1889
  13. ^ William Cushing. Initials and pseudonyms: a dictionary of literary disguises, Volume 1. NY: T. Y. Crowell & Co., 1885
  14. ^ Directory of the town of Newton. 1871