Frederick Roberts Rinehart
Frederick Roberts Rinehart was an American book publisher. Rinehart was a son of mystery writer Mary Roberts Rinehart, a brother of publisher Stanley Rinehart, Jr., and a brother of producer and playwright Alan Rinehart.
Early life, education, and career launch
Rinehart was born on 14 September 1902 in Allegheny, Pennsylvania, which has since merged with Pittsburgh. He graduated from the Morristown School in Morristown, NJ in 1920. Rinehart then completed his bachelor's degree at Harvard University in 1924. Rinehart began his career in publishing as a worker in the shipping room at George H. Doran. He later served as a book salesman for the company.Farrar and Rinehart
In 1929, Rinehart co-founded the publishing house Farrar & Rinehart with Stanley Rinehart and John C. Farrar. Rinehart then served as a vice president. In just a few weeks, Rinehart and his associates began announcing a slate of upcoming publications:- Myron Brinig's Singermann
- Paxton Hibben's The Peerless Leader: William Jennings Bryan
- Du Bose Heyward's Half-Print Flask
- Jacob Zeitlin and Homer Woodbridge's Life and Letters of Stuart P. Sherman
- Herbert Gorman's The Incredible Marquis: Alexandre Dumas
- Mary Roberts Rinehart's The Romantics
Rinehart & Co
After Farrar left to start Farrar & Straus, a photographic type composing machine invented by René Alphonse Higonnet and Louis Moyroud. The Photon machine, known as the Lumitype in France, used a photoengraving process to print text and images on paper, which made hotel metal typesetting obsolete.Seven years later, Rinehart & Company merged with Henry Holt and Company and John C. Winston Co. to form Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. Rinehart served as a vice president at the new company before retiring from publishing in 1963.