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McGraw-Hill
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McGraw-Hill
The New York-based McGraw-Hill
covers book and magazine publishing, minor broadcasting
interests and financial data services (notably Standard
& Poors). Revenue in 2000 was around US$4 billion.
The group is currently headed by a descendant of one of
the founders.
history
McGraw-Hill dates from 1909, with the merger of technical
and trade publications developed by James McGraw (for
example the American Journal of Railway Appliances)
and John Hill (Engineering News and Power).
McGraw-Hill acquired the Newton Falls Paper Company in
1920, established a presence in the UK and launched other
specialist publications such as Bus Transportation.
BusinessWeek - competing with Dow
Jones' Barrons and Time's
Fortune - was first published in 1929 and was notably
successful from the late thirties until the business magazine
wave of the late 1960s. McGraw-Hill instead concentrated
on its educational and professional publishing interests,
particularly secondary and tertiary textbooks and the
Platt petroleum industry newsletters, which originated
in 1909 as National Petroleum News, a "voice
for independent oil men against Big Oil". (In 2001
Platt bought the oil sector newsletter and data services
interests of the Pearson-controlled
FT group.) In 1947 it bought
the Gregg group - notable for publications about shorthand.
In 1966 the group acquired Standard & Poor's, competing
with Dow Jones' Dunn & Bradstreet. In 1970 it absorbed
Ryerson Press, a Canadian publisher dating from 1829.
Two years later, under threat of takeover (figures such
as Robert Maxwell periodically
sniffed around), it bought television stations in San
Diego, Bakersfield, Indianapolis and Denver. It survived
a further messy takeover attempt by American Express in
1979.
In 1989, in partnership with Eastman Kodak and Tribune
subsidiary R R Donnelly, McGraw-Hill developed a custom
textbook publishing system - Primis Custom Publishing
- for the US college market, gaining a market share of
around 20% in competition with Thomson
and Pearson units.
studies
The major study, albeit very dated and 'authorised',
is Roger Burlingame's Endless frontiers: the story
of McGraw-Hill (New York, McGraw-Hill 59). For
the early histry of Standard & Poors see Alfred Chandler's
supple Henry Varnum Poor, Business Editor, Analyst
and Reformer (Cambridge: Harvard Uni Press 56).
holdings
An indication of McGraw-Hill holdings is here.
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