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{{Short description|American publisher, historian and civic reformer (1825-1909)}} {{Use mdy dates|date=April 2021}} {{Infobox person |name = Henry Charles Lea |image = Henry Charles Lea 1870s.jpg |alt = |caption = Lea, {{Circa|1870}} |birth_date = {{Birth date|1825|9|19}} |birth_place = [[Philadelphia]], [[Pennsylvania]], U.S. |death_date = {{Death date and age|1909|10|24|1825|9|19}} |death_place = Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. | resting_place = [[Laurel Hill Cemetery]], Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. |spouse = {{marriage|Anna Caroline Jaudon|27 May 1850}} | relatives = [[Mathew Carey Lea]] (brother)<br/>[[Mathew Carey|Matthew Carey]] (grandfather)<br/>[[Henry Charles Carey]] (uncle){{sfn|Bradley|1931|p=5}} | father = [[Isaac Lea]] | mother = Frances Anne Carey | children = 4 |citizenship = |nationality = American |alma_mater = |known_for = Publisher, civic activist, philanthropist, historian |awards = |signature = Signature of Henry Charles Lea (1825–1909).png |footnotes = }} '''Henry Charles Lea''' (September 19, 1825 – October 24, 1909) was an American publisher, civic activist, philanthropist and historian from [[Philadelphia]], [[Pennsylvania]]. He took over the family publishing business from his father, [[Isaac Lea]], and implemented several medical and scientific publications. The business operated under various names including Lea Brothers & Co., [[Lippincott Williams & Wilkins|Lea & Febiger]] and Blanchard & Lea until his sons took over the business in 1880. He promoted health projects including the Lea Laboratory of Hygiene at the [[University of Pennsylvania]] and the Pennsylvania Epileptic Hospital and Colony Farm. He organized the Citizens' Municipal Reform Association of Philadelphia to fight corruption in city government. He was a founding member of the [[Union League of Philadelphia]] during the [[American Civil War]]. He managed publications and supported their efforts for recruitment of [[Union Army]] soldiers, including African-Americans. He helped found the National Republican League to prevent a third U.S. presidential term for [[Ulysses S. Grant]]. Lea wrote multiple books focused on church history, especially the [[Spanish Inquisition]]. He received honorary degrees from [[Harvard University]], [[Princeton University]], [[University of Giessen]], [[Moscow State University|University of Moscow]], and University of Pennsylvania. He was a member of multiple learned societies and served as president of the [[American Historical Association]] in 1903. ==Early life and education== Lea was born on September 19, 1825, in [[Philadelphia]], [[Pennsylvania]]<ref name=Robson>{{cite book |last1=Robson |first1=Charles |title=The Biographical Encyclopaedia of Pennsylvania of the Nineteenth Century |date=1874 |publisher=Galaxy Publishing Company |location=Philadelphia |page=13 |url=https://archive.org/details/biographicalency00robs/page/12 |access-date=19 September 2022}}</ref> to [[Isaac Lea]] and Frances Anne Carey.{{sfn|Bradley|1931|p=5}} His father was a publisher and amateur scientist.<ref name=encyclopedia>{{cite web |title=Henry Charles Lea |url=https://www.encyclopedia.com/people/history/historians-us-biographies/henry-charles-lea#2 |website=www.encyclopedia.com |publisher=encyclopedia.com |access-date=22 September 2022}}</ref> Through private tutors including the mathematician [[Eugenius Nulty]].<ref name=Robson/> Lea received a [[Classical education movement|classical education]]. It covered the [[trivium]] (grammar, logic and rhetoric), [[quadrivium]] (arithmetic, geometry, music and celestial navigation), classical languages and history. Nulty immersed Lea in a single subject for long periods with a view to mastery,{{sfn|Bradley|1931|p=43}} with advanced lessons. Lea also demonstrated a facility for languages and analytical thought.{{sfn|Bradley|1931|p=42}}<ref>Edward Peters [http://www.library.upenn.edu/exhibits/rbm/at250/history/ep.pdf "Henry Charles Lea and the Libraries within a Library"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304052900/http://www.library.upenn.edu/exhibits/rbm/at250/history/ep.pdf |date=March 4, 2016 }} 2 from the ''Penn Library Collections at 250'', page 35.</ref> In 1832, he studied for a brief time at a school in [[Paris]], France.{{sfn|Cheney|1911|p=15}} Lea worked too in the Booth & Boy chemical laboratory, and he published his first paper, at age 13, on [[manganese]] salts.<ref name=PennBio>{{cite web | url = http://www.library.upenn.edu/collections/rbm/mss/lea/leabio.html | title = Henry Charles Lea Papers - Biographical Sketch | access-date = 2010-12-01 | date = 2003-01-31 | work = Penn Special Collections | publisher = University of Pennsylvania:Rare Book & Manuscript Library | archive-date = September 10, 2006 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20060910204659/http://www.library.upenn.edu/collections/rbm/mss/lea/leabio.html | url-status = dead }}</ref> Lea received an [[Legum Doctorate|LLD]] from [[Harvard University]] and the [[University of Pennsylvania]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Henry Charles Lea Biography |url=https://www.historians.org/about-aha-and-membership/aha-history-and-archives/presidential-addresses/henry-charles-lea/henry-charles-lea-biography |website=www.historians.org |publisher=American Historical Association |access-date=22 September 2022}}</ref> Lea followed his father's interest in [[natural history]] and wrote several papers on descriptive [[conchology]].{{sfn|Bradley|1931|p=54}} He discovered and named 133 new species of mollusks and two new [[Genus|genera]].{{sfn|Bradley|1931|p=58}} He also displayed drawing talent and illustrated his own early articles about fossil shells that he had collected. His drawings were also used for the engravings illustrating his father's revision of the ''Synopsis of the Naiades'' in 1838. Lea developed an interest in poetry and at his mother's suggestion, translated Greek poets and composed original verse.{{sfn|Bradley|1931|p=58}} Later, he often wrote satirical parodies of popular songs about politics. ==Career== ===Publisher=== [[File:Henry Charles Lea, 1825-1909.jpg|thumb|Henry Charles Lea bookplate]] In 1843, Lea joined his father's publishing business as a clerk and became a junior partner in 1851.<ref name=Robson/> In 1847, after working in the family publishing firm for four years, Lea suffered a nervous breakdown{{sfn|Bradley|1931|pp=74-75}} and abandoned his intellectual and scientific work for eleven years.{{sfn|Bradley|1931|p=77}} [[Silas Weir Mitchell (physician)|Silas Weir Mitchell]] treated him, and became a family friend. During his convalescence, Lea began reading [[France|French]] memoirs of the medieval period. They kindled his interest in medieval history and changed his career course from scientist to historian.{{sfn|Lea|1910|pp=9-10}} Lea focused the firm on medical and scientific publications.{{sfn|Bradley|1931|p=82}} The company operated under several names including Lea Brothers & Co., Lea & Febinger and Blanchard & Lea in 1865. He continued to work with the firm until 1880 when his sons took over the business.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Majewicz |first1=Cary |title=Lea & Febinger Records |url=https://www.hsp.org/sites/default/files/legacy_files/migrated/findingaid227bleaandfebiger.pdf |website=www.hsp.org |publisher=The Historical Society of Pennsylvania |access-date=19 September 2022}}</ref>{{sfn|Bradley|1931|p=83}} ===Civic activism and philanthropy=== [[File:GENERAL VIEW, FROM SOUTHEAST; SOUTH (FRONT) ELEVATION - Henry Charles Lea House, 3903 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, PA HABS PA,51-PHILA,580-1.tif|thumb|Henry Charles Lea House at 3903 Spruce Street in [[Philadelphia]]]] In 1844, Lea stood guard with a musket for two days and two nights in front of a Catholic Church to prevent property damage during the [[Philadelphia nativist riots]].{{sfn|Bradley|1931|pp=75-76}} He was a member of the [[Union League of Philadelphia]] at its inception in 1862 and served on the Board of Directors, the Military Committee and the Committee of Publications. He wrote many of the pamphlets published by the organization.<ref name=Robson/> In 1863 Lea was appointed one of the Bounty Commissioners under the [[Enrollment Act]] and served until 1865, working closely with Provost Marshal General [[James Barnet Fry|James B. Fry]] accounting for the city's quotas of enlisted men. He was also involved with recruiting African American regiments to fight in the Union army.{{sfn|Bradley|1931|pp=97-99}} He served as president of the Philadelphia branch of the [[American Social Science Association]] and as a member of the Industrial League. In 1871, he organized the Citizens' Municipal Reform Association of Philadelphia which focused on fighting corruption in city government.<ref name=Robson/> He served on the board of directors for the Philadelphia Library.{{sfn|Cheney|1911|p=20}} Outspoken about public works and health projects in Philadelphia, Lea founded the Lea Laboratory of Hygiene at the [[University of Pennsylvania]].<ref name=encyclopedia/> He strongly opposed the building of City Hall at the Penn Square location at the intersection of [[Broad Street (Philadelphia)|Broad]] and [[Market Street (Philadelphia)|Market Streets]], then known as High Street, where it now stands, preferring instead that it be built in Washington Square, near [[Independence Hall]]. Lea believed that the project cost too much, and was angered by the political corruption involved in the awarding of contracts and purchase of building materials. Lea planned and held a large public meeting to recruit support for his alternative to the Penn Square project.{{sfn|Bradley|1931|pp=86-88}} He helped initiate the National Republican League to prevent [[Ulysses S. Grant]]'s third term as president of the United States.<ref name=encyclopedia/> The National Republican League chose Lea as its president in 1880 (the year he retired from his publishing business) and five years later, Lea served as president of the Association of Republicans and Independents. In 1891 he helped found "The Reform Political League of Pennsylvania", with [[Herbert Welsh]] as president, himself and Justus C. Strawbridge as vice-presidents, and Charles E. Richardson as secretary.<ref name=PennBio/> Lea joined with others in 1884 and filed a lawsuit to oppose building a large slaughterhouse on the [[Schuylkill River]] at 30th and Spruce Streets on land owned by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, citing the pollution of the river, the stench, and devaluation of properties near the plant. He also opposed the construction of the Market Street elevated train, over properties he owned on Market Street, as well as building the "boulevard" from City Hall northwest to [[Fairmount Park]], where the [[Philadelphia Museum of Art]] was later built.<ref name=PennBio/> In 1888, Lea doubled the size of the reading rooms and book shelves at the Philadelphia Library. In 1897, he built several buildings for the Pennsylvania Epileptic Hospital and Colony Farm in Oakbourne, Pennsylvania.{{sfn|Cheney|1911|p=22}} ===Historian=== [[File:Library of Henry Charles Lea.png|thumb|Library of Henry Charles Lea]] Lea focused on church history in the later [[Middle Ages]], and on institutional, legal, and ecclesiastical history, as well as magic and witchcraft.<ref name=UPenn/> He also did significant work on the history of the Italian city-states. His active writing career on historical subjects spanned more than fifty years, during which Lea published ten books and numerous articles. His literary reputation rests largely on those books. Highly disciplined work habits (and the ability to purchase manuscripts in Europe and Latin America and have them shipped to Philadelphia) led Lea to continue writing despite headaches and eye problems. His productivity increased during his final twenty-five years after he retired as a publisher and built an extension to his house at 2000 Walnut Street, for his extensive manuscript collection.<ref name=UPenn/> Lea became an authority on the [[Spanish Inquisition]], and his multi-volume work was considered groundbreaking, although opinionated, and some criticized him for [[anti-Catholic]] bias.<ref>Dewey, R. S. [https://archive.org/stream/americancatholic13philuoft#page/n413/mode/2up "The Last Historian of the Inquisition"], ''The American Catholic Quarterly Review'', Vol. XIII, N°. 51, July 1888.</ref> Lea received honorary degrees from universities including [[Harvard University|Harvard]], [[Princeton University|Princeton]] and the [[University of Pennsylvania]] in the United States, and overseas institutions such as the [[University of Giessen]] and the [[University of Moscow]].<ref>{{Cite EB1911|wstitle= Lea, Henry Charles | volume= 16 | page = 314 |short= 1}}</ref> His study of the Inquisition was also criticized for anti-Spanish bias, which [[Julián Juderías]] in 1914 termed the 'leyenda negra' (a/k/a [[Black legend]]). He was a member of multiple historical societies including the Royal Academy of Bavaria, the Comenius-Gesellschaft of Berlin, the Reale Accademia dei Lincei of Rome, the Societa Internazionale di Studi Francescani of Assisi, the Reale Societa Roman della Storia Patria, the Royal Society of Arts in London, the Royal Society of Antiquities in Scotland, the Jewish Historical Society of England and a corresponding fellow of the British Academy.{{sfn|Lea|1910|p=15}} Lea became a member of the newly formed ''[[American Historical Association]]'' in 1884, contributed several articles to its ''[[American Historical Review]]'', and was elected its president in 1903. He was elected a member of the [[American Antiquarian Society]] in 1888.<ref>[http://www.americanantiquarian.org/memberlistl American Antiquarian Society Members Directory]</ref> When the second annual meeting of the newly formed [[American Folklore Society]] was held in Philadelphia in 1889, Lea met with some of the founders, sent an article for publication in the Society's journal, and became the first life-member of the organization.<ref name=PennBio/> ==Personal life== [[File:Portrait of Henry Charles Lea.jpg|thumb|Portrait of Henry Charles Lea]] His father, [[Isaac Lea]] (1792–1886) was a distinguished [[Natural history|naturalist]] and member of the ''[[American Philosophical Society]]'', and [[publisher]]. Isaac Lea was descended from a Philadelphia [[Quaker]] family, and had been born in [[Wilmington, Delaware]]. On March 8, 1821, Isaac married Frances Anne Carey (1799–1873), daughter of [[Mathew Carey]],{{sfn|Bradley|1931|p=5}} the Philadelphia publisher whose business he ultimately took over. On May 27, 1850, Henry Charles Lea married his first cousin and orphan Anna Caroline Jaudon (1824–1912).<ref name=encyclopedia/> Her father, merchant William Latta Jaudon (1798–1832) of [[Bucks County, Pennsylvania]] had died in [[Cincinnati, Ohio]] when she was a child, followed four years later by her mother, Susan Gibson Lea Jaudon (1799–1836). The Jaudons were a wealthy [[Huguenot]] family from [[Soubise, Charente-Maritime|Soubise]], [[France]], and after the [[Edict of Nantes]] Peter Jaudon emigrated to Bucks County (and his family became Presbyterians), and Elie Jaudon emigrated to South Carolina. Perhaps the most noteworthy members were the teacher Daniel Jaudon (1767–1826, Anna Caroline's grandfather) and the financier [[Samuel Jaudon]]. Two years later Lea's brother Mathew Carey Lea married her sister Elizabeth (1827–1881), whose husband merchant William Bakewell had died in Cincinnati in 1850, leaving her with a young daughter.<ref>Edwin Jaquett Seller, [https://books.google.com/books?id=l6HRAAAAMAAJ&dq=jaudon+philadelphia&pg=PA10 ''The Jaubon family of Pennsylvania''], (Allen, Lane & Scott, Philadelphia, 1924) p. 19 available at from [[Bucks County, Pennsylvania]], also available at Hathi Trust</ref> In 1878, Lea became seriously ill and was almost blind.<ref name=encyclopedia/> He was invalid from 1880 to 1884 and used that time to revisit his literary interests.{{sfn|Cheney|1911|p=22}} ==Death and legacy== [[File:HC Lea grave LH Philly.jpg|thumb|Lea's tomb at [[Laurel Hill Cemetery]] is adorned with a sculpture of [[Clio]], the muse of history, by [[Alexander Stirling Calder]].]] Lea died of pneumonia{{sfn|Lea|1910|p=23}} on October 24, 1909,<ref name=encyclopedia/> in [[Philadelphia]] and was interred at [[Laurel Hill Cemetery]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Henry C Lea |url=https://remembermyjourney.com/memorials/henry-c-lea?id=kog2K8KX |website=remembermyjourney.com |publisher=webCemeteries |access-date=3 January 2025}}</ref> In 1914, the [[Henry C. Lea Elementary School]] in Philadelphia was named in his honor.<ref>{{cite web |title=History of Lea |url=https://lea.philasd.org/history-of-lea/ |website=www.lea.phiilasd.org |publisher=Henry C. Lea School |access-date=26 September 2022}}</ref> His personal collection of purchased manuscripts and [[incunabula]] as well as other early printed books was bequeathed to the [[University of Pennsylvania]].{{sfn|Cheney|1911|p=22}} In 1925, the university dedicated a library, which it named in his honor and which includes much of that personal collection of books and manuscripts. Since 1962, the collection has been located in the [[Van Pelt Library|Van Pelt-Dietrich Library]] Center which is now a part of the Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts.<ref name=UPenn>{{cite web |title=Henry Charles Lea Library Collection |url=https://www.library.upenn.edu/detail/collection/henry-charles-lea-library-collection |website=www.library.upenn.edu |publisher=Penn Libraries University of Pennsylvania |access-date=23 September 2022}}</ref> In 1933, Lea's son Arthur donated four Greek vases that belonged to his father to the [[University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology|Penn Museum]].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Dohan |first1=E. H. |title=FOUR VASES FROM THE HENRY C. LEA COLLECTION |url=https://www.penn.museum/sites/journal/9375/ |publisher=Penn Museum |access-date=26 September 2022}}</ref> ==Works== * [https://archive.org/stream/superstitionforc00leahrich#page/n5/mode/2up ''Superstition and Force: Essays on the Wager of Law, the Wager of Battle, the Ordeal, Torture''] Henry C. Lea, 1866. * [https://archive.org/stream/cu31924029343070#page/n5/mode/2up ''Historical Sketch of Sacerdotal Celibacy,''] J. B. Lippincott & Co., 1867. * [https://archive.org/stream/studiesinchurch01leagoog#page/n2/mode/2up ''Studies in Church History. The Rise of the Temporal Power - Benefit of clergy - Excommunication,''] Henry C. Lea, 1869. * [https://archive.org/stream/translationsand00leagoog#page/n13/mode/2up ''Translations and Other Rhymes,''] Privately Printed, 1882. * [https://archive.org/stream/historyofinquis01leah#page/n5/mode/2up ''A History of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages,''] [https://archive.org/stream/historyofinquis02leah#page/n7/mode/2up Vol. 2], [https://archive.org/stream/historyofinquis03leah#page/n7/mode/2up Vol. 3], The Macmillan Company, 1906 [1st Pub. New York, Harper & Brothers, 1887]. * [https://archive.org/stream/cu31924029394008#page/n7/mode/2up ''Chapters from the Religious History of Spain Connected with the Inquisition,''] Lea Brothers & Co., 1890. * [https://archive.org/stream/fromularyofpapal00leauoft#page/n9/mode/2up ''A Formulary of the Papal Penitentiary in the 17th Century,''] Lea Brothers & Co., 1892. * [https://archive.org/stream/cu31924080821154#page/n5/mode/2up ''The Absolution Formula of the Templars,''] The Knickerbocker Press, 1893. * [https://archive.org/stream/ahistoryofauricu01leauoft#page/n5/mode/2up ''A History of Auricular Confession and Indulgences in the Latin Church,''] [https://archive.org/details/historyconfess02leauoft Volume II], [https://archive.org/details/historyconfess03leauoft Volume III], Lea Brothers & Co., 1896. * [https://archive.org/stream/indianpolicyofsp00leahrich#page/n1/mode/2up ''The Indian Policy of Spain,''] n.p., 1899. * [https://archive.org/stream/MN41701ucmf_12#page/n5/mode/2up ''The Dead Hand; a Brief Sketch of the Relations between Church and State with Regard to Ecclesiastical Property and the Religious Orders,''] William J. Dornan, 1900. * [https://archive.org/stream/moriscosofspaint00leah#page/n5/mode/2up ''The Moriscos of Spain; their Conversion and Expulsion,''] Lea Brothers & Co., 1901. * [https://archive.org/stream/leotaxildianavau00leah#page/n7/mode/2up ''Léo Taxil, Diana Vaughan et l'Église Romaine: Histoire d'une mystification,''] Paris, France: Sociéte Nouvelle de Librairie et d'édition, 1901. * [https://archive.org/stream/ethicalvaluesinh00leah#page/n1/mode/2up ''Ethical Values in History,''] n.p., 1904. * [http://libro.uca.edu/lea1/1lea.htm ''A History of the Inquisition of Spain,''] [http://libro.uca.edu/lea2/lea2.htm Volume II], [http://libro.uca.edu/lea3/lea3.htm Volume III], [http://libro.uca.edu/lea4/lea4.htm Volume IV], 1906–1907. * [https://archive.org/stream/inquisitioninspa00leahrich#page/n7/mode/2up ''The Inquisition in the Spanish Dependencies,''] The Macmillan Company, 1922 [1st Pub. 1908]. * [http://hdl.handle.net/2027/nyp.33433082351432 ''Memoir,''] Privately printed, 1910. * [https://archive.org/details/sacerdotalcelibacylea ''History of Sacerdotal Celibacy in the Christian Church''] (fourth edition, 1932) * ''Materials Toward a History of Witchcraft,'' University of Pennsylvania Press, 1939. ==References== '''Citations''' {{Reflist}} '''Sources''' * {{cite book | last = Lea | year = 1910 | title = Henry Charles Lea, 1825-1909 | publisher = Privately printed | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=JO8uwfEQh0kC }} * {{cite book | last = Bradley | first = Edward Sculley | year = 1931 | title = Henry Charles Lea - A Biography | publisher = University of Pennsylvania Press | url = https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015030698529&view=1up&seq=9 }} * {{cite book | last = Cheney | first = Edward Potts | year = 1911 | title = Proceedings of the Joint Meeting of the American Philosophical Society, Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Library Company of Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania, Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Held January 20, 1911 - Presentation of Portraits of Henry Charles Lea and Isaac Lea | publisher = Historical Society of Pennsylvania | url = https://archive.org/details/cu31924029242991/page/n11/mode/2up?view=theater }} ==Further reading== * Baumgarten, Paul Maria (1909). [http://hdl.handle.net/2027/uc1.$b246595 ''Henry Charles Lea's Historical Writings: A Critical Inquiry Into Their Method and Merit.''] New York: J. F. Wagner. * Bouquillon, Thomas (1891). [http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044105191019;view=1up;seq=149 "Henry C. Lea as a Historian,"] ''The American Catholic Quarterly Review'', Vol. XVI, pp. 131–158. * Bussy, R. Kenneth (1985). ''[https://www.google.com/books/edition/%20/vENUdB7g2DoC Two Hundred Years of Publishing: A History of the Oldest Publishing Company in the United States, Lea & Febiger 1785–1985.]'' Lea & Febiger. * Coulton, G. G. (1937). ''Sectarian History.'' Barnicotts. * O'Brien, John M. (1967). "Henry Charles Lea: The Historian as Reformer," ''American Quarterly'', Vol. XIX, No. 1, pp. 104–113. * Peters, Edward (1987). "Henry Charles Lea and the `Abode of Monsters'." In: ''The Spanish Inquisition and the Inquisitorial Mind'', edited by Angel Alcal, Atlantic Research Publications. * Tollebeek, Jo (2004). ''Writing the Inquisition in Europe and America: The Correspondence Between Henry Charles Lea and Paul Fredericq.'' Palais des Académies. ==External links== {{Commons category}} {{Wikisource|A_History_of_the_Inquisition_of_the_Middle_Ages/Volume_I|History of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages, Vol. 1}} *[http://hdl.library.upenn.edu/1017/d/ead/upenn_rbml_MsColl111 Henry Charles Lea papers], Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts, University of Pennsylvania *{{Gutenberg author |id=40029| name=Henry Charles Lea}} *{{Internet Archive author |sname=Henry Charles Lea}} *{{Librivox author |id=744}} *{{HABS |survey=PA-1633 |id=pa0963 |title=Henry Charles Lea House, 3903 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, PA |photos=18 |cap=1}} {{American Historical Association presidents|state=uncollapsed}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Lea, Henry Charles}} [[Category:1825 births]] [[Category:1909 deaths]] [[Category:19th-century American historians]] [[Category:19th-century American male writers]] [[Category:19th-century American philanthropists]] [[Category:19th-century American poets]] [[Category:Academics and writers on the Spanish Inquisition]] [[Category:American company founders]] [[Category:American publishers (people)]] [[Category:Burials at Laurel Hill Cemetery (Philadelphia)]] [[Category:Corresponding fellows of the British Academy]] [[Category:Deaths from pneumonia in Pennsylvania]] [[Category:Harvard University alumni]] [[Category:Historians from Pennsylvania]] [[Category:Members of the American Philosophical Society]] [[Category:Moscow State University alumni]] [[Category:Presidents of the American Historical Association]] [[Category:University of Giessen alumni]] [[Category:University of Pennsylvania alumni]] [[Category:Writers from Philadelphia]]
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