Charles Coffin Little
Template:Short description Template:Infobox person Charles Coffin Little (July 25, 1799 – August 11, 1869) was an American publisher. He is best known for co-founding Little, Brown and Company with James Brown.
Early life
Charles Coffin Little was born on July 25, 1799, in Kennebunk, Maine.
Career
Little arrived in Boston early in life.<ref name=appletons>Template:Cite Appletons'</ref> He entered a shipping house,<ref name=appletons/> and around 1826–27 worked with booksellers Hilliard, Gray, Little & Wilkins in Boston, along with William Hilliard, Harrison Gray, and John H. Wilkins.<ref>Boston News-Letter, September 23, 1826.</ref><ref>King's Handbook of Boston, 1881, p. 291.</ref> He worked there until 1837, when he formed his partnership with James Brown under the style of Charles C. Little and Company. Little and Brown had previously been clerks, and were later partners, in a bookstore in Boston founded in 1784 by Ebenezer Battelle. The name of Little and Brown's firm was subsequently changed, due to the admission of other partners, to Little, Brown, and Co.<ref name=appletons/> Little was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1855.<ref>American Antiquarian Society Members Directory</ref>
Personal life
Little's daughter, Sarah Ellen Little, married Richard Aldrich McCurdy.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Death
Little died on August 11, 1869, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, aged 70.
References
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