Nehemiah Hawkins

Nehemiah Hawkins (1833 – January 15, 1928) was an American inventor, publisher and author (pen name Theodore Audel) born in Providence, Rhode Island. He started working with the G&C Merriam Company of Springfield, MA. In Chicago he established a magazine called Steam soon sold and incorporated into Power [1] then moved to New York. He was survived by a son and two daughters.[2]

He wrote (or commissioned and published under his own name) many of the popular Audel's Guides[3] popular with engineers and craftsmen and published by Theodore Audel & Company of New York.[4][5] He sometimes used the pseudonym William Rogers[6] (a likely reference to Roger Williams).[7]

The content of his books published prior to 1923 is now in the Public Domain.

Works in part or whole by N. Hawkins

(In order by year; years may not be first editions.)

See also

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Scans from 'New Catechism of the Steam Engine', 1904.
  1. Goodall, George (Nov 18, 2008). "Hawkins and Audel". Facetation. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  2. "Nehemiah Hawkins" (PDF). New York Sun. Jan 17, 1928.
    "Mr. Hawkins ... was seventh in descent from Roger Williams, founder of the Providence Plantation."
  3. wkinsler.com
  4. The History of Audel's. To be continued...
  5. Open Library bibliography
  6. Public Library of Brookline (1904). Bulletin, Vol. 11–13. Brookline, Mass.: The Library. p. 121. Retrieved April 30, 2011.
  7. E.g.,see title page
  8. Nehemiah Hawkins (1896). New catechism of electricity: a practical treatise. Theo. Audel & Co.
  9. New catechism of the steam engine. Retrieved 21 July 2014. Naval Marine Archive.
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