Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland was published by Macmillan and Co.
From wikipedia
Macmillan was founded in 1843 by Daniel and Alexander Macmillan, two brothers from the Isle of Arran, Scotland. Daniel was the business brain, while Alexander laid the literary foundations, publishing such notable authors as Charles Kingsley (1855), Thomas Hughes (1859), Francis Turner Palgrave (1861), Christina Rossetti (1862), Matthew Arnold (1865) and Lewis Carroll (1865). Alfred Tennyson joined the list in 1884, Thomas Hardy in 1886 and Rudyard Kipling in 1890.[1]
Other major writers published by Macmillan included W. B. Yeats, Rabindranath Tagore, Nirad C. Chaudhuri, Seán O'Casey, John Maynard Keynes, Charles Morgan, Hugh Walpole, Margaret Mitchell, C. P. Snow, Rumer Godden and Ram Sharan Sharma.
Daniel and Alexander’s father was a crofter (a small landed farmer).
Daniel Macmillan’s grandson, Harold Macmillan, married Lady Dorothy Evelyn Macmillan, GBE (née Cavendish; 28 July 1900 – 21 May 1966) was a daughter of Victor Cavendish, 9th Duke of Devonshire and Evelyn Cavendish, Duchess of Devonshire. He became 1st Earl of Stockton and Prime Minister of the United Kingdom in 1957 and served until a month and couple of days before JFK was killed in Dallas in 1963.