's
Westward Ho!|250px Frederick Warne & Co. was founded in
Covent Garden in July 1865 During the second half of the nineteenth century, the company built a reputation for publishing children's books, publishing illustrated books by well-known authors and artists as
Edward Lear,
Kate Greenaway and
Walter Crane. The company also published a 'Pictorial' series of books of collections of short essays and illustrations on many non-fiction topics. The following list may not be complete. Pictorial Cabinet of Marvels Pictorial Chronicles of the Mighty Deep Pictorial Museum of Sport and Adventure Pictorial Records of Remarkable Events Pictorial Stories of Heroism and Enterprise Pictorial Travels on Land and Sea Pictorial Treasury of Famous Men and Famous Deeds The Pictorial Tour of the World Another book series, the Warne's Star Series, was being published in the 1880s. Toward the end of the century, Frederick Warne had retired and left the firm to his three sons, Harold, Fruing and Norman. Warne was among the six publishers to whom
Beatrix Potter submitted her first book, the story of a rabbit called Peter. Like the other five firms, Warne turned the proposal down. But the people at the firm changed their minds when they saw the privately published copy in 1901. They said they would publish the book, as long as the illustrations were drawn in colour. The next year, Warne published
The Tale of Peter Rabbit, and by
Christmas it had sold 20,000 copies. This began a 40-year partnership that saw the publication of 22 additional little books. Beatrix Potter was engaged to marry Norman Warne, her editor and the youngest of the three Warne brothers. However, he died tragically in 1905, only a few weeks after their engagement. Harold, the eldest brother, took over as Potter's editor. She continued to produce one or two new Little Books each year for the next eight years until her marriage in 1913 to William Heelis. During the next few years, Potter turned her attention to her farm work, but when the company fell on hard times and Harold was imprisoned for embezzlement, she came to the rescue with another new title to support "the old firm." Potter, who had no children, left the rights to her works to Warne upon her death. The company continued to publish them; it also brought out several biographical works about its most renowned author. Over the years, Warne also expanded its nonfiction publishing, issuing among others the
Observer's Books. In 1983, Warne was bought by
Penguin Books. It began developing classic book-based children's character brands. The merchandising program was expanded from a base of thirty-five licenses to more than four hundred by the late 1990s. Over the years, Warne acquired a variety of other classic books. A film about the life of Beatrix Potter
Miss Potter, starring
Renée Zellweger as Beatrix Potter and
Ewan McGregor as Norman Warne was released in 2006. While the company no longer exists as an independent company, it continues to exist as an imprint of Penguin Group. The company collaborated with
Sony Pictures Animation and
Animal Logic to produce the
Peter Rabbit film, which was released in 2018. == Beatrix Potter books ==