Samuel Leigh (c.1780 – 11 August 1831)[1] was a bookseller and publisher in 19th century London. His office stood on the Strand. From around 1806 to 1814 he conducted business with James Mathews in the partnership of "Mathews and Leigh."[2][3] He also married Mathews' daughter.[4] Leigh died by his own hand in 1831.[5]

Leigh's travel guides

In the 1820s–1830s Leigh issued a series of eponymous travel guide books to Europe. He also published travel writing by authors such as Edmund Boyce,[6] Johann Gottfried Ebel, Edward Planta,[7] Heinrich August Ottokar Reichard, and Mariano Vasi.[8][9]

See also

Further reading

  • Reichard (1816), An Itinerary of France and Belgium, London: Samuel Leigh, Translated from the French
  • New Picture of Brussels, and its Environs, or, Stranger's Guide to the Curiosities of that Interesting City, London: Samuel Leigh, 1820, OCLC 63579821
  • Edmund Boyce (1823). Belgian Traveller (4th ed.). + index

Leigh's travel guides

References

  1. "Died". The Times. 13 August 1831. Retrieved 6 November 2023.
  2. "James Mathews", The London book trades 1775–1800: a preliminary checklist of members, Exeter Working Papers in British Book Trade History, retrieved 28 August 2013
  3. Edward Planta (1815), "Books Published by Samuel Leigh, 18 Strand (Late Mathews and Leigh)", New Picture of Paris, London: Samuel Leigh
  4. "Case of Mrs. Leigh", The Athenaeum, 6 November 1841
  5. "Dreadful suicide". Jackson's Oxford Journal. 20 August 1831. Retrieved 6 November 2023.
  6. "Edmund Boyce". WorldCat.
  7. "Edward Planta". WorldCat.
  8. "Mariano Vasi". WorldCat.
  9. "Guides for Travellers on the Continent", Leigh's New Pocket Road-Book of England and Wales (7th ed.), London: Leigh and Son, 1839
  10. "James Mathews Leigh", Art Journal, 1 July 1860
  11. "Guide Books: Continental Guide Books, Etc.", The Bookseller, London, 3 July 1872
  12. Herbert George Fordham (1914), Studies in Carto-Bibliography, British and French, Clarendon Press
  13. "Literary Criticism: Itineraries, Guide and Road Boks", Edinburgh Literary Journal, 5 September 1829
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