Editorial Haynes
Editorial Haynes building as seen in 1954 | |
| Status | Defunct |
|---|---|
| Founded | 1904 |
| Defunct | late 1960s |
| Country of origin | Argentina |
| Headquarters location | Buenos Aires |
| Distribution | Argentina |
| Publication types | Magazines, newspaper |
| Nonfiction topics | Society, sports, agriculture, humor, politics, science, film, radio |
| Imprints | List
|
| Owner(s) | Alberto Haynes |
Editorial Haynes was an Argentine publishing company founded by Alberto M. Haynes in 1904. The publisher released several magazines such as El Hogar, Mundo Deportivo, Mundo Argentino, Mundo Agrario, Mundo Infantil, and newspaper El Mundo, among other imprints.
Its building was located on Rio de Janeiro and Bogotá in Almagro, Buenos Aires. In 1948 the Grupo ALEA, managed by peronist official Carlos Aloe took over the control of Editorial Haynes after acquiring 51% of the company shares. When the coup d'etat named Revolución Libertadora ended the second presidential term of Juan Perón, Editorial Haynes' building and assets were expropriated by the Military Government. Some of its collaborators had to exiliate in Mexico.
Being one of the largest publishers in Latin America at its time, Editorial Haynes is regarded as one of the milestones of the Argentine publishing industry.