Cupples & Leon

US publisher
title: "Cupples & Leon" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["defunct-book-publishing-companies-of-the-united-states", "book-publishing-companies-based-in-new-york-(state)", "defunct-companies-based-in-new-york-city", "publishing-companies-established-in-1902", "publishing-companies-disestablished-in-1956", "1902-establishments-in-new-york-city", "1956-disestablishments-in-new-york-(state)"] description: "US publisher" topic_path: "geography/united-states" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cupples_&_Leon" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary US publisher ::
::data[format=table title="Infobox publisher"]
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Cupples & Leon |
| founded | 1902 |
| founder | Victor I. Cupples and Arthur T. Leon |
| successor | Platt & Munk |
| country | United States |
| headquarters | New York City |
| publications | Books |
| genre | juvenile fiction and children's books |
| :: |
| name = Cupples & Leon | image = | caption = | parent = | status = | traded_as = | predecessor = | founded = 1902 | founder = Victor I. Cupples and Arthur T. Leon | successor = Platt & Munk | country = United States | headquarters = New York City | distribution = | keypeople = | publications = Books | topics = | genre = juvenile fiction and children's books | imprints = | revenue = | owner = | numemployees = | website =
Cupples & Leon was an American publishing company founded in 1902 by Victor I. Cupples (1864–1941) and Arthur T. Leon (1867–1943). They published juvenile fiction and children's books but are mainly remembered today as the major publisher of books collecting comic strips during the early decades of the 20th century.
In Manhattan, the company was initially located in the Presbyterian building at 156 Fifth Avenue and, during the 1920s, at 449 Fourth Avenue.
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b5/Johnny_Gruelle_illustration_-Rapunzel-_Project_Gutenberg_etext_11027.jpg" caption="[[Rapunzel]], from the 1914 Cupples & Leon edition of ''[[Grimm's Fairy Tales]]'', illustrated by [[Johnny Gruelle]]."] ::
Juvenile adventure books
Victor Cupples had previously worked with the publisher Houghton Mifflin, and Arthur Leon had been with Laird & Lee Publishers. In 1902, Cupples and Leon ran the New York agency for the George W. Ogilvie Company and other Chicago firms. They also were the advertising managers for Jamieson-Higgins' Four O'Clock magazine. The duo saw that Grosset & Dunlap and A. L. Burt (New York), Donohue (Chicago) and Altemus (Philadelphia) were selling juveniles at varying prices from $1.25 to 25 cents. After talks with Edward Stratemeyer, the two men published a juvenile that sold for 50 cents but appeared to be worth more. Cupples & Leon published the American editions of the UK children's weekly story paper Chatterbox, founded by John Erskine Clarke, prompting a UK researcher of Chatterbox to comment: :The adolescent public at once decided that here was the place to get your money's worth. It did not take the other publishers long to follow Cupples' lead. Burt and Grosset, who had popular writers on their lists, rose merrily with them to opulence. Doubters like Donohue and Altemus slipped slowly but surely from the juvenile field... Cupples compiled a colossal list of children's names. Included on the jacket of each of its books was a coupon which, when filled out with the names and addresses of ten friends, entitles the whole group to Cupples illustrated catalogue. The catalogue was an insidious narcotic with the habit-forming properties of opium. In it were printed fetching bits from the more popular series. Cupples estimates that all in all 500,000 names have been on that list.
In 1913, they were publishing Roy Rockwood's Dave Dashaway series and other aviation juveniles. Scouting was another focus of their serial novels, along with their Motor Boys series. In 1914, they published Grimm's Fairy Tales, illustrated by Johnny Gruelle.
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/39/Muttjeff17.jpg" caption="Bud Fisher's ''Mutt and Jeff'' #17 (Cupples & Leon, 1934)"] ::
Comic strips
In 1903,{{cite book |last=Newbold |first=Jamie |author-link= |date=2018 |title=The Forensic Comicologist |url= |location=Jefferson, North Carolina |publisher=McFarland & Company |page= 126 |isbn=978-1-4766-7267-0
To reprint comic strips, the company offered, for 25 cents, a square-bound paperback format of 52 pages of black-and-white strips. The flexible, cardboard covers were printed in black and red. Between 1906 and 1934, Cupples & Leon published more than 100 titles in that format.{{cite book |last=Goulart |first=Ron |author-link=Ron Goulart |date=2016 |title=Comic Books: The Origin Story |url= |location=Morton Grove, Illinois |publisher=Publications International, Ltd |pages= 7–8 |isbn=978-1-68022-508-2
They also published two larger hardcover editions, Mutt and Jeff Big Book (1926) and Mutt and Jeff Big Book No. 2 (1929). They left the comic strip reprint field in 1934, concentrating on their juvenile lines, just as the modern day comic book was introduced that same year with Famous Funnies. Leon estimated the company sold more than 35,000,000 copies of its comics reprints. ::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6d/Tillietoilerbook.jpg" caption="''[[Tillie the Toiler]]'' (Cupples & Leon, 1925)"] ::
Death of founders and sale
Victor Cupples died in Mount Vernon, New York in July 1941. Arthur Leon, who lived in New Rochelle, New York, died in December 1943, and his wife, Louise Heroy Leon, died five years later in February 1948.
The Platt & Munk publishing firm acquired Cupples & Leon in 1956.
References
References
- [http://www.ampneycrucis.f9.co.uk/Chatterbox/CupplesLeon.htm Children's Annuals: ''Chatterbox''] {{webarchive. link. (2011-05-16)
- [https://books.google.com/books?id=J1t8g_yX1wcC&dq=%22cupples+%26+leon%22&pg=PA6 Gabilliet, Jean-Paul; translated by Bart Beaty. ''Of Comics and Men: A Cultural History of American Comic Books''. University Press of Mississippi, 2009.]
- Arthur T. Leon, Publisher of Comics in Book Form, ''New York Herald Tribune'', 17 December 1943, p. 18A
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