Stokes graduated from
Yale Law School in 1879. He worked at
Dodd, Mead and Company for a year and in 1881 established White & Stokes, a partnership that became the Frederick A. Stokes Company in 1890. The Stokes businesses published more than 3,000 books in his 58 years, 1881 to 1939. Stokes was an opponent of the new Book Clubs of the 1920s, and of modern advertising methods such as billboards and radio ads. Stokes died in 1939, at age 82, in his home at 344 West 72nd Street, Manhattan. Many prominent people from the book industry attended his funeral service at the
Church of the Incarnation (Episcopal). He was buried at
Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn. Stokes left the publishing company to his sons Horace Winston and Frederick Brett, who were then the company treasurer and secretary.
J. B. Lippincott acquired it in 1943. ==Authors==