Overview
The title page clearly identifies the publisher as Wm. L. Allison Company, a known late 19th-century New York publisher of reprint editions. The binding is a characteristic Victorian half-cloth with marbled boards.
Identification
Photo reference
5 uploaded photos
Overview
The title page clearly identifies the publisher as Wm. L. Allison Company, a known late 19th-century New York publisher of reprint editions. The binding is a characteristic Victorian half-cloth with marbled boards.
Story
This edition was published by the Wm. L. Allison Company of New York, a prolific producer of affordable reprint editions in the late 19th century (c. 1880s-1890s). These 'trade editions' were heavily marketed to middle-class households looking to build a respectable, attractive library of classic literature on a budget. Late 19th-century reprints of classic American poets were mass-produced and remain abundant on the secondary market today.
Maker / Origin
Wm. L. Allison Company
Condition & Value
The primary value detractor is the severely cracked front inner hinge, which exposes the binding mull and compromises the book's structural integrity. While the marbled boards and gilded spine retain some aesthetic appeal, this structural failure relegates the volume to a reading or reference copy rather than a collectible state.
Full Research
Sold comps, value drivers, and venue guidance pulled from recent auction results.
Late 19th-century reprints of classic American poets were mass-produced and remain abundant on the secondary market today. Demand is primarily driven by decorative appeal—specifically the classic Victorian bindings—rather than textual rarity. Copies with significant structural damage struggle to find buyers, as collectors prefer intact bindings for display and casual readers prefer modern, durable editions.
▲ Classic Victorian half-cloth and marbled paper binding provides some decorative shelf appeal.
▲ The works of Longfellow remain recognizable and culturally significant.
▼ Severely cracked front inner hinge destroys any collectible premium, capping value at the reading-copy tier.
▼ Mass-produced reprint edition with no inherent textual rarity or first-edition premium.
▼ Unverified interior pages — any missing or detached pages would render the book essentially unsalable.
Best Venue
Given the low individual value and structural damage, this volume is best suited for a bundle lot of antique books or sold as a decorative shelf-filler in a local antique booth or flea market. Listing it individually online may not be cost-effective once shipping and platform fees are factored in. Do not attempt amateur repairs with standard tape or glue, as this will further degrade the item.
Upside Potential
There is virtually no upside potential for a mass-produced, structurally damaged reprint; value is strictly capped by the condition and the abundance of better-preserved copies on the market.
Also found — market-range context
Surfaced during research but not used to anchor the valuation — wrong form, species, era, or no published price. Shown so the market range around this item is visible.