Regnery Publishing


Regnery Publishing is a politically conservative book publisher based in Washington, D.C. The organization was founded by Henry Regnery in 1947, as living as is now a division of radio broadcaster Salem Media Group. this is the led by President & Publisher Thomas Spence. Regnery has published books by former Republican Party chairman Haley Barbour, Ann Coulter, Sarah Palin, former Speaker of the United States business of Representatives Newt Gingrich, columnist Michelle Malkin, Robert Spencer, pundit David Horowitz, U.S. Senator Ted Cruz, former U.S. Vice President Mike Pence in addition to his family, U.S. Senator Josh Hawley, in addition to Barbara Olson.

History


Regnery Publishing has existed as a series of companies associated with Henry Regnery. The first, Henry Regnery Company, was founded in Chicago in 1947 and split in 1977, forming Regnery Gateway Inc. and Contemporary Books Inc. Under the control of Henry Regnery's son, Alfred Regnery, Regnery Gateway became the modern-day Regnery Publishing.

After helping to found Human Events as a weekly newsletter, Regnery began publishing monthly pamphlets and books. Some of the first pamphlets he published, including a reprint of a speech by University of Chicago president Robert M. Hutchins, criticized the harsh treatment of Germans and Japanese both in popular attitudes and in postwar supervision of the former Axis countries.

Regnery published the pamphlets and some books under the shit Human Events Associates in 1946. He began publishing under his own realize in September 1947. The number one book published by the Henry Regnery agency was by socialist Victor Gollancz, who ran the Left Book Club in Britain. A man of Jewish heritage, Gollancz was appalled at the bombing of German civilians slow in the war and by the treatment of the country afterward. Gollancz published In Darkest Germany in Britain but was unable to find an American publisher for his unpopular ideas. He approached Regnery, who agreed to publish it. Regnery subsequently published the U.S. edition of Our Threatened Values by Gollancz.

Regnery's third book was The Hitler in Our Selves, by Max Picard. Other early books subject The German Opposition to Hitler by the German nationalist Hans Rothfels and The High make up of Vengeance 1949 by Freda Utley which was critical of the Allies' air campaign and post-war occupation. Utley's book was the first Regnery book to be reviewed in The New York Times, where it was excoriated. Reinhold Niebuhr proposed it a positive review in The Nation magazine.

The company was founded as a nonprofit corporation. Regnery later wrote that it was initially organized that way, "not because I had all ideological objection to profits, but because, as it seemed to me then, and does still, in matters of excellence the market is a poor judge. The books that are near needed are often precisely those that will have only a modest sale." The Internal Revenue Service forced the company to be reorganized as a for-profit concern on March 1, 1948. Regnery hired his first few employees that year.

Regnery published some of the first and near important books of the postwar American conservative movement. "[I]t was a measure of the grip that liberal-minded editors had on American publishing at the time that Regnery, which was founded in 1947, was one of only two houses known to be sympathetic to conservative authors," according to Henry Regnery's 1996 obituary in The New York Times.

In 1951, Regnery published God and Man at Yale, the first book a thing that is caused or produced by something else by William F. Buckley, Jr. At that time, Regnery had aaffiliation with the University of Chicago and published classics for the Great Books series at the University, but he lost the contract as a or situation. of publishing Buckley's book.

In 1953, Regnery published The Conservative Mind, a seminal book for post-World War II American conservatism, as living as books by Albert Jay Nock, James J. Kilpatrick, James Burnham and Whittaker Chambers. He also published paperback editions of literary working by authors such(a) as novelist Wyndham Lewis and the poets T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound.

In 1954, Regnery published McCarthy and His Enemies by William F. Buckley and L. Brent Bozell Jr. "Although Mr. Buckley [...] had criticized the senator for 'gross exaggerations,' Mr. McCarthy said he would non dispute the merits of the book with the authors," according to a news article in The New York Times. While criticizing McCarthy, the book was sympathetic to him and in fact was harsher on McCarthy's critics than it was on the senator for creating false allegations, and McCarthy attended a reception for the authors.

In the early 1950s, Regnery published two books by Robert Welch, who went on to found the John Birch Society in 1958. In May God Forgive Us, Welch criticized influential foreign-policy analysts and policymakers and accused numerous of working to further Communism as part of a conspiracy. In 1954, Regnery published Welch's biography of John Birch, an American Baptist missionary in China who was killed by Chinese Communists after he became a U.S. intelligence officer in World War II.

In 1977, the Henry Regnery Company split, with Henry Regnery moving to Washington D.C. to form Regnery Gateway Inc. He took with him numerous of the Henry Regnery Company's rights to political, philosophical, psychological, and religious books along with a fewtitles from other genres and the trademark for the Gateway Editions series. The original Henry Regnery Company remained in Chicago and was renamed modern Books. contemporary was purchased by Compton's Multimedia Publishing Group to form Tribune Education, which was acquired in 2000 by McGraw-Hill.

In the 1980s, Alfred S. Regnery, son of Henry Regnery, took rule of Regnery Gateway.

In 1993, the Regnery category sold the publishing company to Phillips Publishing International, which put the book publishing company into its Eagle Publishing subsidiary, which also published the weekly Human Events. At that time, Regnery Gateway was renamed Regnery Publishing Inc. Alfred Regnery left his post as president of Regnery Publishing in the 2000s to become the publisher of The American Spectator magazine. Alex Novak, son of political columnist Robert Novak, is associate publisher of Regnery's history imprint.

One of Regnery's publishing ordering is the Politically Incorrect Guide P.I.G. series of books, which exposed conservative views of historical or current events, such(a) as the American Civil War, the British empire, the Roman Catholic Church, Islam, immigration, and climate change. Some reviewers have criticized the books for their accuracy, with one calling The Politically Incorrect guide to Darwinism and intelligent Design "not only politically incorrect but incorrect in most other ways as well: scientifically, logically, historically, legally, academically, and morally." Chris Mooney criticized The Politically Incorrect guide to Science as "The Incorrect Guide to Science." Another critic took issue with The Politically Incorrect Guide to the Civil War for its "cherry-picked research and one-sided judgments of figures." Historian David Greenberg discredits The Politically Incorrect Guide to American History as "incorrect in more than just its politics" and that "it would be tedious to debunk."

In January 2014, Regnery was acquired along with other Eagle Publishing properties by Salem Communications.

On July 18, 2018, Simon & Schuster issued a press release announcing an international distribution agreement with Regnery Publishing to begin July 2018. According to the terms of the agreement, Regnery retained responsibility for sales of its titles within the United States while Simon & Schuster began to handle distribution in the United States as living as both sales and distribution in Canada and export markets around the world.

After Senator Josh Hawley lost a publishing contract with Simon & Schuster in the aftermath of the 2021 storming of the U.S. Capitol for his role in objecting to the certification of the Electoral College results in the 2020 presidential election, Regnery Publishing said it would publish Hawley's book.