frowde in A Sentence

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    Frowde came from the book trade,

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    Frowde had no doubt that the Press's business

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    effectively succeeded Frowde in 1907.

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    to be Frowde's assistant.

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    Though Frowde was by no means an Oxford man

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    were styled'Henry Frowde', or'Humphrey Milford' with no mention of OUP,

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    Frowde dealt with most of the logistics for books carrying the OUP imprint,

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    Frowde came from the book trade, not the university, and remained an enigma to many.

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    Nevertheless, Frowde was especially careful to see that all commission books he published met with the Delegates' approval.

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    Nevertheless, he was able to do a lot in tandem with Frowde, and expanded the publishing programmes

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    Seven years later, as Publisher to the University, Frowde was using his own name as an imprint

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    Outflanking university politics and inertia, he made Frowde and the London office the financial engine for the whole business.

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    But Frowde's distance from the Press's decision-making meant he was incapable of influencing policy unless a Delegate spoke for him.

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    Frowde had no doubt that the Press's business in London could be very largely increased and was appointed on contract with a commission on sales.

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    15

    Charles Cannan, who had been instrumental in Gell's removal, succeeded Gell in 1898, and Humphrey S. Milford, his younger colleague, effectively succeeded Frowde in 1907.

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    Nevertheless, he was able to do a lot in tandem with Frowde, and expanded the publishing programmes and the reach of OUP until about 1898.

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    Milford became Publisher when Frowde retired in 1913, and ruled over the lucrative London business and the branch offices that reported to it until his own retirement in 1945.

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    Though Frowde was by no means an Oxford man and had no social pretensions of being one, he was a sound businessman who was able to strike the magic balance between caution and enterprise.

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    Though Frowde was by no means an Oxford man and had no social pretensions of being one, he was a sound businessman who was able to strike the magic balance between caution and enterprise.

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    Frowde dealt with most of the logistics for books carrying the OUP imprint, including handling authors, binding, dispatching, and advertising, and only editorial work and the printing itself were carried out at or supervised from Oxford.

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    Frowde's agency was set up just in time, for the Revised Version, published on 17 May 1881, sold a million copies before publication and at a breakneck rate thenceforth, though overproduction ultimately made a dent in the profits.

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    22

    Books that London issued on commission(paid for by their authors or by some learned body) were styled'Henry Frowde', or'Humphrey Milford' with no mention of OUP, as if the Publisher were issuing them himself, while books that the Publisher issued under the rubric of the university bore the imprint'Oxford University Press.

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