The nation’s most innovative and most successful law-book-publishing company operated in downtown St. Paul from 1876 until 1992, when it moved to Eagan. In 1876, West Publishing Company began publishing Minnesota State Supreme Court opinions; by 1887, its “reporter” system covered the whole country. In 1908, West introduced an indexing system for all American law. In 1975, it introduced Westlaw, a computerized legal research system. The company was sold to Thomson Reuters in 1996.
John West (1852–1922) came to St. Paul in 1869, at age seventeen. The next year, he started in business as a salesman for a D. D. Merrill, a downtown St. Paul bookseller. In 1872, he went out on his own, selling law books to lawyers, mostly in Minnesota.
West observed that lawyers wanted prompt access to the decisions of the Minnesota Supreme Court, but no system existed to publish and distribute them. In 1876, he invented one. It was called, at first, The Syllabi. When he expanded it to add the opinions of the Wisconsin Supreme Court in 1877, it became the North Western Reporter. This proved so successful that by 1887, West Publishing Company’s regional reporter system covered the entire United States.
For reasons never revealed to the public, John West left the company in 1901. Control of the business passed to his older brother, Horatio West, and an early investor and executive, Charles W. Ames. Under their leadership, West expanded to publishing the opinions of all U.S. federal courts.
Early in the twentieth century, West Publishing introduced its second innovation: a uniform indexing system for all American law, consisting of 412 main topics and 66,000 sub-topics. The system enabled a lawyer anywhere in the country with access to West’s reporters and indexes to find up-to-date court decisions on every point of law for every state and the federal courts.
West’s offices and printing plant were built on the edge of the Mississippi River bluff in downtown St. Paul. They rose three stories above street level and descended six stories down, along the bluff side, to railroad tracks near the river’s edge. By the early twentieth century, West employed several hundred people in St. Paul as well as a nationwide sales staff.
The business had two poles: editorial and production. The editorial side did the writing, research, and editing. The production side turned that work into countless tons of books and shipped them all over the country by rail.
Though men dominated company leadership production, most employees were women. They did the clerical work, the proofreading, and the bookkeeping, and for most of West’s first century operated almost all the Linotype machines that made the printing plates. At the leadership level, West consistently promoted internally; every chief executive rose from within the company.
Though unions had been present in West’s print shops in the early years, from about 1905 forward West became and remained a non-union company. Starting in 1900, it offered employees recreation facilities and clubs and, later, insurance against illness, disability, and death. Selected employees also received stock options.
Over time, West Publishing expanded its array of titles to include state statutes and indexes, law school textbooks and treatises, and legal forms. By 1919, its catalog ran to 255 pages. Later, West became the official publisher of all United States statutes.
West grew steadily throughout the twentieth century and dominated the law-book-publishing business nationwide. Its greatest business challenge came with the introduction of LexisNexis, a computerized legal research tool, by Mead Data Central in 1973. West countered with Westlaw in 1976. By this time, it had over two thousand employees in downtown St. Paul and needed still more space.
In May 1974, West announced plans to build a new printing plant downtown, but it never did so. Instead, it began to acquire land in suburban Eagan. By 1990, those holdings had grown to 276 acres, and in July of that year West announced plans to move all of its St. Paul operations to Eagan. The move was completed in summer of 1992.
In February of 1996, the Canadian company Thomson Corporation, later Thomson Reuters, bought West for $3.43 billion. The former West operations remained in Eagan.
Nelson, Paul D. “The West Publishing Company Buildings and Ramsey County’s Adult Detention Center.” Ramsey County History (Winter 2016): 3–15.
Law Books by the Million. St. Paul: West Publishing, 1901.
General Catalog of Law Books. St. Paul: West Publishing, 1916.
The Making of Law Books. St. Paul: West Publishing, [192?].
The Romance of Law Reporting. St. Paul: West Publishing, 1934.
Marvin, William W. West Publishing Company: Origin, Growth and Leadership. St. Paul: West Publishing, 1969.
Woxland, Thomas A. ″Forever Associated with the Practice of Law: The Early Years of West Publishing Company.” Legal Reference Services Quarterly 5, no. 1 (Spring 1985): 115–124.
In 1877, West Publishing expands its annual opinions compilation, The Syllabi, to include the opinions of the Wisconsin Supreme Court. It renames the publication The North Western Reporter to reflect the change.
John West, age seventeen, moves to St. Paul with his family.
West takes a sales job with D. D. Merrill Booksellers of St. Paul.
West starts his own business selling law books to lawyers in Minnesota and Dakota Territory.
West takes his older brother, Horatio West, as a partner. West Publishing Company produces its first compilation of Minnesota Supreme Court opinions, The Syllabi.
West Publishing introduces its first regional reporter, The North Western Reporter.
West Publishing’s regional reporters cover every state in the United States. West dominates the U.S. law-book-publishing business.
John West leaves the company.
West Publishing’s “key number” indexing system debuts. It brings all American law under a single, uniform indexing system.
West’s catalog of legal publications fills 255 pages.
West begins to publish the official statutes of the United States as well as the opinions of all federal courts.
West employs two thousand people in downtown St. Paul.
West introduces its WestLaw computerized legal research system.
West announces its intention to move all of its St. Paul operations to Eagan.
In the summer, West completes its move to Eagan.
Thomson Corporation of Canada, later Thomson Reuters, buys West for $3.43 billion.