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Parent company | Kendall Hunt |
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Predecessor | Benzinger, RCL - Resources for Christian Living |
Founded | 1792 |
Founder | Joseph Charles Benziger |
Country of origin | United States |
Headquarters location | Cincinnati,Ohio |
Publication types | Books |
Nonfiction topics | Catholicism |
Official website | www |
RCL Benziger is aRoman Catholic book-publishing house founded in 1792 byJoseph Charles Benziger inEinsiedeln,Switzerland.[1] It is currently based inCincinnati,Ohio, and operates as a subsidiary ofKendall Hunt Publishing.
The company started as a Catholic religious publisher founded by Joseph Charles Benzinger in 1792. In 1833, Benziger's sons, Charles and Nicholas, succeeded their father under the company name of Charles and Nicholas Benziger Brothers. Two years later, in addition to their book-publishing business, the brothers beganlithographing religious pictures, as well as coloring them by hand, before the introduction ofchromolithography.[1]
Charles Benziger (b. 1799, d. 1873), a man with a good classical education, devoted himself especially to the literary end of the business. In 1840, the firstEinsiedler Kalender volume was produced.The Pilgrim, a popularCatholic periodical established at the same time, lasted only ten years. Charles also took an active part in public life, and served as president of the Swisscanton of Schwyz.[1]
Nicholas Benziger (b. 1808, d. 1864), who took charge of the technical part of the business, proved himself a pioneer, introducing to the mountain village of Einsiedeln a series of improved trade methods from the great mercantile centers of Europe and the United States. Under his guidance, the work ofbookbinding, which was formerly undertaken by the family at home, was systematized. In 1844, the old hand press was superseded by the first power press.Stereotyping was introduced in 1846, steel andcopper printing in 1856 andelectrotyping in 1858.[1]
Upon the retirement of Charles and Nicholas Benziger in 1860, the business was continued by three of Charles' sons (Charles, Martin andJ.N. Adelrich) and three of Nicholas' sons (Nicholas, Adelrich and Louis). Under this third generation, the different branches of the house were further developed, with chromolithography and other modern printing methods added. In 1867, theAlte und Neue Welt, the first illustrated popular Catholic German magazine on a large scale, was begun. A number of illustrated Catholic family books and a series of schoolbooks were produced, including a Bible history in 12 languages, together with prayer books by well-known authors. Between 1880 and 1895, a fourth generation took control of the business, and the firm name was changed to Benziger and Company.[1]
Although Benziger Brothers had established offices inNew York City in 1853, the company's development as a publishing house did not begin until 1860 whenJ.N. Adelrich Benziger and Louis Benziger took charge. In 1860, offices were opened inCincinnati and in 1887, one inChicago. The publishing of English Catholic books was vigorously undertaken, and the company's catalog covered the field of devotional, educational and juvenile literature, as well as works of a theological theme. Benziger was not only a publishing house but a liturgical-supply factory.[2][3] The American firm of Benziger Brothers is now independent of the Swiss house. TheHoly See conferred on the firm the title "Printers to the Holy Apostolic See" in 1867.[1]
In 1968, Benziger's American business was acquired byCrowell-Collier Macmillan (later to becomeMacmillan, Inc.), and the following year, its headquarters were moved toCalifornia. In 1971, it was merged with three other companies: Bruce Publishing, founded inMilwaukee in the 1890s, P. J. Kenedy & Sons of New York (excluding theOfficial Catholic Directory) and Glencoe Press, which began inBeverly Hills in 1966.[4] In July 2007, the Benziger name and product line were purchased fromMcGraw-Hill (which had acquired Macmillan's educational division) byCFM Publishing and merged with Texas-based Catholic publisher RCL (Resources for Christian Living), founded in 1964 by Richard C. Leach, to form RCL Benziger.[5] The new company is now headquartered inCincinnati as it was in the 19th century. In 2016, RCL Benziger was sold toKendall Hunt Publishing.[6]
Benziger's Swiss operation was also growing at the end of the 19th century. At the peak of its expansion in the 1890s, Benziger published books and magazines in 20 languages[7] and had more than 1,000 employees in Switzerland alone, making it one of the largest Swiss companies at the time.[8]
The company opened locations inCologne in 1884 andStrasbourg in 1912. A bookstore inWaldshut was added as early as 1887, but was sold in 1936[9] and was closed in 2019.[10] TheFirst World War brought major setbacks, as the company was separated from its main sales areas. The Benziger family withdrew from the active publishing business. Later, the rise ofNational Socialism had a lasting effect on sales of the traditionally Catholic-oriented program.
After theSecond World War, the theological program was supplemented by a wide range of books for children and young people.[7] Some of the best-known authors included:
In 1986, the publishing house was sold to the Rheinpfalz Group inLudwigshafen,[11] and the children's book division was bought by Arena Publishing inWürzburg.[12] After a creeping decline, Benziger's Swiss operation was taken over by Patmos Publishing in 1994. In 2003, publishing activities under the Benziger name were discontinued. In 1985, Benziger spun off its publishing distribution. Since 2015, it has been operating under the name Balmer Bücherdienst AG and is the second-largest intermediate book-trade company in Switzerland.[13] In 1986, the printing house in Einsiedeln was separated from the publishing house to become an independent stock corporation like the publishing house. However, without the publishing house, the company could no longer bring in sufficient revenue and was discontinued in 1995.[14] The Einsiedeln bookstore founded in 1802 was sold in 1987, but it still exists under its old name.[15]