Harper's Hand-Book for Travellers

Harper's Hand-Book for Travellers in Europe and the East, 1862

Harper's Hand-Book for Travellers (est.1862) was a series of travel guide books published by Harper & Brothers of New York. Each annual edition contained information for tourists in Europe and parts of the Middle East. The "indefatigable" William Pembroke Fetridge[1] wrote most of the guides from 1862 until at least 1885.[2] In its day the Harper's Hand-Book competed with popular guides such as Baedeker, Bradshaw's, and Murray's.[3] In 1867 critic William Dean Howells found Harper's Hand-Book "chatty and sociable."[3] Readers included Lucy Baird, daughter of Spencer F. Baird.[4]

References

  1. Jeffrey Steinbrink (1983). "Why the Innocents Went Abroad: Mark Twain and American Tourism in the Late Nineteenth Century". American Literary Realism, 1870-1910. 16. JSTOR 27746104.
  2. "Handbook for Travellers and Europe and the East", New York Times, November 13, 1865
  3. 1 2 William Dean Howells (March 1867), "Reviews and Literary Notices: Harper's Hand-Book for Travellers in Europe and the East. Fifth Year", Atlantic Monthly, 19, pp. 380–383
  4. Martin R. Kalfatovic (2004). "Guides and Handbooks". Nile Notes of a Howadji: American Travelers in Egypt. Washington DC: Smithsonian Libraries. Retrieved August 24, 2013.

Further reading

External links

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