Tuttle Antiquarian Books Acquired by DeWolfe & Wood

- by Bruce E. McKinney

For Tuttle's the sun rises in the east.


By Bruce McKinney

Tuttle's, the Rutland Vermont antiquarian bookseller, has sold their stock and good name to DeWolfe & Wood of Alfred, Maine. Tuttle's last day of business was June 9th, 2006. In making the acquisition Frank Wood expressed appreciation for the opportunity. Tuttle's was, for most of the 20th century the equal of Goodspeed's of Boston and in fact was the purchaser of Goodspeed's genealogy and local history inventory in 1991.

The road to closure was for the current owners a difficult one. Jon Mayo, who started at Tuttle's in 1957, teamed with Jennifer Shannon, herself a twenty year Tuttle veteran, four years ago to purchase the business from Charles Tuttle's widow, Reiko, and they continued the business in the same location in the hope it would prosper. But according to Mr. Mayo several trends worked against them. "The internet devastated our genealogy business which had, for decades, been our strength. There are now more sources of this information and more sellers of the printed materials and we simply became less essential." The ongoing decline of open bookshops has also been a factor, a trend widely discussed in the rare book business today. "In the last year we had days when not even a single customer came into the shop." Mr. Mayo describes Rutland as a place few visit from late fall to June. "The summers are glorious but the company needed sales everyday." So the firm became increasingly dependent on internet sales where the number of copies in all categories has continued to increase and prices have been falling. At its close only 15% of its stock was online.

The firm opened in 1832 and was under its founder George A. Tuttle first a printer and then a shop offering an array of materials that in time included used and rare books. The emphasis became Americana, local history and genealogy and Tuttle catalogues essential to libraries and collectors. Charles E. Tuttle, Sr. took over the business around 1910 and gave the firm a stronger antiquarian focus. It was the golden era of rare book collecting and by the late 1920's Tuttle's inventory numbered 150,000 items not including a huge assortment of pamphlets that was boxed and set aside for future generations to consider. These pamphlets, estimated to number more than 100,000 items and understood to have an emphasis on black history are the great unknown in this transaction and a reason for palpable excitement in Alfred.

The Tuttle's we know today was shaped by Charles E. Tuttle, Jr. whose life spanned most of the 20th century: 1915-1993. He served in WWII and was assigned to General MacArther's staff in Japan where he remained after his discharge to build a business that in time included publishing and four bookshops. In the 1980s these Japanese activities were phased out and Mr. Tuttle returned to Vermont to oversee the family firm's natural emphasis on genealogy and local history.