Louis Pierre Goullaud (23 November 1840 – 7 December 1919) published and sold music in Boston, Massachusetts, in the 19th century.[1][2] In the 1860s he worked for "Koppitz, Pruefer & Co."[3] With Asa Warren White (1826–1894) and his son, Edward Warren White (1849–1896) – as the firm "White & Goullaud" – he sold musical instruments and published sheet music (c. 1869 – 1875).[4][5][6] Under his own imprint he issued sheet music and Goullaud's Monthly Journal of Music.[7][8] He retired c. 1886,[9] and died in Braintree on December 7, 1919.[10]
^Rowell's American newspaper directory, 14th ed. NY: 1882
^Christine Merrick Ayars (1937), Contributions to the art of music in America by the music industries of Boston, 1640 to 1936, New York: The H.W. Wilson company, OCLC26107160, OL6349676M