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American Baptist Publication Society

American Baptist Publication Society
Baptist Books Philly.jpg
American Baptist Publication Society building is located in Philadelphia
American Baptist Publication Society building
American Baptist Publication Society building is located in Pennsylvania
American Baptist Publication Society building
American Baptist Publication Society building is located in the US
American Baptist Publication Society building
Location 1420–1422 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Coordinates 39°57′3″N 75°9′55″W / 39.95083°N 75.16528°W / 39.95083; -75.16528Coordinates: 39°57′3″N 75°9′55″W / 39.95083°N 75.16528°W / 39.95083; -75.16528
Area 0.3 acres (0.12 ha)
Built 1896
Architect Frank Miles Day & Bro.; Payne, George W. & Bro.
Architectural style Renaissance, French Renaissance
NRHP Reference # 80003607
Added to NRHP June 27, 1980

The American Baptist Publication Society is a historic building at 1420–1422 Chestnut Street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

It was built in 1896 on the site of the former headquarters of the American Baptist Publication Society, which had been destroyed by fire on February 2, 1896. The society was founded in 1824 by preacher Luther Rice and others as the Baptist General Tract Society, which later became the American Baptist Publication Society and eventually the American Baptist Board of Educational Ministries. The society's goal was to use educational means "to disseminate evangelical truth and to articulate sound morals." Its work involved the printing of tracts and Bibles and publishing books and Sunday school curricula. Educational outreach was undertaken throughout many parts of the U.S. in the 19th century, including through colporters and chapel train cars.

The architect Frank Miles Day designed the building in the French Renaissance Revival style, in effect putting a French chateau at the then-top of Philadelphia's skyline. Together with Price and McLanahan's Jacob Reed's Sons Store to the immediate west and the Packard Building on 15th Street, the building set the standard for commercial buildings on fashionable Chestnut Street. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.


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