Maggs Bros. Ltd. - the inner workings of an antiquarian bookseller
In October 2024, an ambitious project to catalogue the Maggs Bros. Ltd. archive began. Funded as part of the Unlocking Hidden Collections initiative, the goal is to re-house and catalogue the archive to file level for the first time.
This archive contains the business records of Maggs Bros. Ltd., an antiquarian bookseller founded in the 1850s. The contents of the collection span over half a century from 1914 to 1979. The extensive correspondence is a time capsule into the past offering a glimpse into the inner workings of rare books and manuscript sellers.
Letters from Maggs' Continental Correspondence files for 1921
Still operating today from locations in central London, Maggs’ business stretches globally, having built close relationships with other prominent antique booksellers and collectors over many years. Highlights of the correspondence include letters detailing Maggs’ negotiation on behalf of the British Museum with the Russian government to purchase the Codex Sinaiticus. The Sinaiticus is one of the earliest Bible manuscripts in the world dated from 350 AD. The British Museum paid £100,000 for the manuscript in 1932, half of which was funded by public donations. Arriving in London in 1933, it held the record for the most expensive book sale in recorded history, costing an equivalent of £6,000,000 in 2024. A digitised version of the Codex Sinaiticus manuscript can be seen here.
The Maggs archive was originally organised into four distinct categories and is catalogued to reflect and preserve this order.
- Correspondence (subdivided into English, American, Continental correspondence, carbon copies of outgoing letters and Correspondence 1932-1978)
- Financial Papers
- Paris House (relating to the business of Maggs Bros. branch in Paris, France)
- Miscellanea
Cash book for 1937, part of the Financial Papers
The correspondence series reveals the loyal customer base of private collectors and public institutions that conducted business with Maggs Bros. Maggs held the Royal warrant of King George V, King Edward VIII, and King Alfonso XIII of Spain. They also provided books, autographs and manuscripts to several other royal households, developing a particularly close relationship with King Manuel II of Portugal (1889-1932), whom Maggs aided in publishing a book written by the King about the various rare manuscripts and books that Maggs helped him collect. King Manuel II’s collection is now held at the Ducal Palace Library at Fundação da Casa de Bragança.
The Ducal Palace Library at Fundação da Casa de Bragança. Livros antigos portuguezes 1489-1600 da bibliotheca de Sua Majestade Fidelissima / descriptos por S.M. el-rei D. Manuel. p.42 Source: Wellcome Collection.
Other notable past clients encountered in the correspondence series are automobile magnate Henry Ford (1863-1947), escapologist and illusionist Harry Houdini (1874-1926), English conductor Sir Thomas Beecham (1879-1961) and historian and former chief spy for British Army Intelligence C.R. Boxer (1904-2000). The correspondence series also contains many letters to and from the forger and book collector and T.J. Wise (1859-1937), owner of the Ashley Library, whose books and manuscripts are now held at the British Library.
This blog post marks the project’s halfway point and the completion of cataloguing of the Continental Correspondence (1914-1832) and Carbon Copies files (1924-1932). Cataloguing of the correspondence for the period 1932-1978, of the financial papers, Paris house files and miscellanea remains ongoing.
Nathan Silver
Modern Archives and Manuscript Cataloguer
Further reading:
A catalogue of Maggs catalogues 1918-1968 (London: Maggs, 1969). [BL, 3079.400000]
Clara Macedo Cabral, The last King of Portugal and Maggs : an Anglo-Portuguese alliance (Caredigon: The Gormer Press, 2015). [BL, YC.2017.b.349]
Benjamin F. Maggs, The delinquent bibliophile. Thomas James Wise and the foundation of the Ashley Library (London: 1965). [BL, 2718.cc.62]