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Authority record

Funk & Wagnalls

  • https://lccn.loc.gov/n82061415
  • Corporate body
  • 1877-1965

Funk & Wagnalls was an American publishing company. In 1875, Isaac Kaufmann Funk (1839-1912) founded the business as I.K. Funk & Company. In 1877, Adam Willis Wagnalls (1843-1924), Funk's classmate at Wittenberg College, Ohio, joined the firm as a partner and the name of the firm changed to Funk & Wagnalls Company. During its early years, the company published religious books. The publication of The Literary Digest in 1890 marked a shift to the publishing of general reference dictionaries and encyclopedias. In 1965, Funk & Wagnalls Co. was sold to Reader's Digest. In 1971, the company, now Funk and Wagnalls, Inc., was sold to Dun & Bradstreet. In 1984, Dun & Bradstreet sold Funk & Wagnalls, Inc., to a group of Funk & Wagnalls executives, who sold it to Field Corporation in 1988. In 1991, the company was sold to K-III Holdings, Inc., and in 1993, Funk & Wagnalls Corporation acquired the World Almanac. In 1998, as part of the Information division of Primedia Inc. (the renamed K-III), the encyclopedia content appeared on the Web site "funkandwagnalls.com" but was shut down in 2001. Ripplewood Holdings bought Primedia's education division in 1999, which became part of Reader's Digest Association in 2007. In 2009, Funk & Wagnalls was acquired by World Book Encyclopedia.

Furness, Lucie Touren, 1887-1971

  • Person
  • 1887-1971

Born in France, Lucie Touren Furness came to McGill in 1918 as a lecturer in the French Department. She served as the assistant director of the French Summer School from 1939-1954 and in 1956 was named as an Emeritus Professor of Romance Languages.

Futcher family

  • Family

Marjorie Howard Futcher, 1882-1969, was the third child of Dr. Robert Palmer Howard, Dean of McGill's Medical Faculty from 1883-1889, and his second wife Emily Severs Howard. Dr. Howard was one of William Osler's most admired professors and when the three children of his second marriage were orphaned in 1892, William and Grace Osler took a special interest in the children. In 1909, Marjorie married Thomas B. Futcher (d. 1938) who had been Osler's chief medical resident at Johns Hopkins Hospital, and practiced medicine in Baltimore.

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