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John Marshall (publisher)

John Marshall (1756–1824) was a London publisher who specialized in children's literature, chapbooks, educational games and teaching schemes. He called himself the "Children's Printer" and children his "young friends".[1] He was pre-eminent in England as a children's book publisher from about 1780 to 1800.[2] After 1795, he became the publisher of Hannah More's Cheap Repository Tracts, but a dispute with her led to him issuing a similar series of his own. About 1800 Marshall began publishing a series of miniature libraries, games and picture books for children. After his death in July 1824, his business was continued either by his widow or his unmarried daughter, both of whom were named Eleanor.

John Marshall (publisher)
Title page from Dorothy Kilner's Life and Perambulation of a Mouse, with one of Marshall's imprints
BornBaptized 28 November 1756,
DiedJuly 1824
London
Occupation(s)Publisher, printer, printseller
SpouseEleanor Marshall
ChildrenEleanor Elizabeth Marshall, John Marshall jnr.
Parent(s)Richard Marshall (printer, publisher, printseller) and Ellenor Marshall

Life edit

John Marshall was baptised 28 November 1756 in the parish church of St Mary Aldermary, London, the son of Richard Marshall (fl. 1752–1779) and his wife Ellenor.[3] His father was a junior partner, then full partner and finally owner of a successful chapbook and popular print business at No. 4, Aldermary Churchyard, off Watling Street, which had been founded in 1755 by William and Cluer Dicey. He was bound apprentice to the printer Edward Gilberd of Watling Street 3 September 1771, but transferred to his father's business a year later and became a freeman of the Stationers' Company on 6 October 1778.[4] He inherited his father's business the following year.

John married Eleanor Blashfield on 4 December 1788. Their two children were Eleanor Elizabeth, born 8 March 1790, and John, born 28 May 1792.[3] He died during the summer of 1824.[5]

History of the business edit

Richard Marshall left half his business to his son John, and a quarter each to his nephew James and his widow.[6] It continued as John Marshall and Co. until November 1789, when the partnership was voluntarily wound up and John continued in business on his own.[7] In October 1806 Marshall moved it to 140 Fleet Street,[8] where it remained until his death in 1824. Under his will made in 1813, the firm was bequeathed to his widow Eleanor Marshall, but probate was granted on 14 July 1824 to his unmarried daughter Eleanor Elizabeth Marshall.[9] One of these continued the business as "E. Marshall" until about 1829.

Street literature edit

Richard's firm was based on selling popular prints, maps, chapbooks, broadside ballads and other forms of street literature.[10] These continued to be prominent in its output until the mid-1790s. There are examples of all of these that contain John Marshall's imprint, but the extent of his involvement is difficult to ascertain, as many were undated and bore the imprint "Printed and sold in Aldermary Churchyard".

Children's literature edit

Richard had begun in the 1770s to publish children's books as a sideline; this side was greatly expanded by John and his partners after 1780. Marshall recruited several new female authors and published some of the most important children's literature of the time,[11] notably:

  • Mary Ann Kilner: The Adventures of a Pincushion, The Adventures of a Whipping-Top, Jemima Placid, Memoirs of a Peg-Top, William Sedley
  • Dorothy Kilner: Anecdotes of a Boarding-School, The Histories of More Children than One, The Life and Perambulation of a Mouse, The Rotchfords
  • Ellenor Fenn (Mrs Teachwell): Cobwebs to Catch Flies, Fables in Monosyllables, The Mother's Grammar, The Rational Dame, Rational Sports, School occurrences
  • Sarah Trimmer: Scripture Lessons, various prints of biblical and historical scenes, with accompanying descriptions, for use in Sunday and other schools
  • Lucy PeacockThe Life of a Bee, Emily; or, The Test of Sincerity

All of these went through several editions. Some remained in print well into the 19th century, such as Cobwebs to Catch Flies, and The Life and Perambulation of a Mouse, which was praised by Sarah Trimmer and by Mary Wollstonecraft.[12]

Marshall's catalogue of May 1793 listed 113 children's book titles, two children's magazines, and various teaching aids.[13]

Teaching aids edit

Marshall ventured into publishing teaching aids about 1785, with Mrs Teachwell's Set of Toys, for enabling Ladies to instill the Rudiments of Spelling, Reading, Grammar, and Arithmetic, under the Idea of Amusement, which was accompanied by an instruction manual, The Art of teaching in sport.[14] Other teaching aids listed in the 1793 catalogue were Miss Cowley's Pocket Sphere (for teaching geography), and Alphabetical Cards for enticing Children to acquire an early Knowledge of their Letters. A "dissected map of England", forerunner of modern Jigsaw puzzles, was also advertised between 1795 and 1801.

Retail bookselling edit

In 1787 the business opened a retail bookshop at 17 Queen Street, Cheapside (hitherto the Aldermary Churchyard premises had principally served as a wholesale supplier and printing office).[15] The shop seems to have closed about 1799, when the business appears to have suffered a financial setback after the break with Hannah More.

 
One of Hannah More's Cheap Repository Tracts printed and sold by Marshall, c.1796.

Children's periodicals edit

On four occasions in his career Marshall attempted to start periodicals for children. These were:

  • The Juvenile magazine; or, An instructive and entertaining miscellany for youth of both sexes edited by Lucy Peacock, 1788
  • The Family magazine; or, a Repository of religious instruction, and rational amusement edited by Sarah Trimmer, 1788–1789
  • The Children's magazine; or, Monthly repository of instruction and delight, 1799
  • The Picture magazine, or, monthly exhibition for young people, 1800–1801

Cheap Repository Tracts edit

Marshall was the London printer and publisher of Hannah More's Cheap Repository Tracts between 1795 and December 1797. After the dispute with More in 1797, Marshall published his own series of Cheap Repository Tracts until 1799.[16] After the formation of the Religious Tract Society in 1799, Marshall abandoned tract publishing and concentrated on further forms of publication for children.

Miniature libraries and cabinets edit

Marshall published a range of miniature libraries in wooden cases, after 1799, including "The Child's Latin Library", "The Doll's Library", "The Infant's Library", or "The Juvenile; or child's library".[17] Similarly, he published a range of "Cabinets" (wooden boxes containing sets of picture cards and miniature books), such as The Cabinet of Beasts, The Cabinet of Birds, The Cabinet of Fishes, The Infant's Alphabetical Cabinet, The Infant's Cabinet of the Cries of London and The Doll's Casket.

Picture books edit

 
The frontispiece and title page of Marshall's edition of Cinderella, 1819.

Marshall was an early innovator in coloured picture books for children, illustrated with hand-coloured etchings. During the early 19th century, he published editions of many traditional fairy tales such as Cinderella, Puss in Boots and Aladdin, along with accumulative rhymes and games such as "This Is the House That Jack Built", "The Barn that Tom built", and "The Gaping Wide-mouth'd Waddling Frog", with hand-coloured illustrations.[18] He was also noted for a range of books of humorous verses illustrated by the caricaturist Isaac Robert Cruikshank.[citation needed]

Other activities edit

Like other printers and publishers of the time, Marshall was involved in selling patent medicines, although in his case these were aimed specifically at children. He advertised "an improved preparation of Dr. Waite's Worm Medicine... impossible to distinguish it from the most agreeable Gingerbread Nut", from premises at 42, Long-lane, West Smithfield, in 1793.[19] He also appears to have supported the movement in Britain to abolish the slave trade. He printed a number of anti-slavery tracts, including a print showing "The cruel treatment of slaves in the West Indies" in 1793.[20]

Children's literature edit

After the death of John Newbery, the first publisher to make a profit publishing children's literature, many firms began to enter the business, but none ever had the monopoly Newbery did.[21] Marshall was one of the most successful and published "the most original books", popularizing fictional biography for juvenile readers.[21] In general, Marshall published books that were more serious than Newbery's, emphasizing the "instruction" part of "to instruct and delight", the imperative of 18th-century children's literature. His catalogue included this announcement:

Ladies, Gentlemen, and the Heads of Schools, are requested to observe, that the beforementioned Publications are original,, and not compiled: as also, that they were written to suit the various Ages for which they are offered; but on a more liberal Plan, and in a different Style from the Generality of Works designed for young People: being entirely divested of that prejudicial Nonsense (to young Minds) the Tales of Hobgoblins, Witches, Fairies, Love, Gallantry, etc. with which such little Performances heretofore abounded.[22]

However, although Marshall advocated more disciplined stories, he also published Newbery-inspired stories that "stressed amusement" and would sell well, including fairy tales.[23] By the mid-1780s, he was focusing almost exclusively on moral works with a strong Christian element. As Samuel Pickering, Jr., a scholar of 18th-century children's literature, explains, "He was a shrewd publisher and, reading the market well, he saw that instruction would sell. While keeping a selection of old-fashioned, amusing books in print... he established a reputation as a printer of moral works."[24] Mary Jackson describes his strategy in sharper terms, saying he engaged in "apparent duplicity and sharp tricks", claiming he was a reforming publisher but issuing tales that had little moral redemption in the eyes of Trimmer, Fenn, Kilner, and others.[25] In 1795, he became a printer for Hannah More's Cheap Repository Tracts.[24]

 
An illustration from a Marshall publication, Memoirs of a Peg-Top by Mary Ann Kilner, showing the imminent destruction of the top

Marshall learned from Anna Laetitia Barbauld's innovative children's literature and began to use large fonts and margins. He also took up graduated readers like her Lessons for Children. Ellenor Fenn wrote a series for him, which began with Cobwebs to Catch Flies.[26] He recognized the value of illustrations in children's books. Beginning in the mid-1780s, he and Sarah Trimmer published several sets of illustrated stories about the Bible and ancient history.[27]

Like most commercial publishers at the time, Marshall was driven by profit and paid his writers poorly. Mrs Fenn received no monetary payment for her works, merely printed copies of Marshall's works to give away as gifts to her friends and neighbours.[28] Mrs Trimmer's Description of a Set of Prints of Scripture History and Description of a Set of Prints of Ancient History, among others, went through many editions and no doubt made money for Marshall, but she did not see much of the profits. She complained that he treated her like "a mere bookseller's fag".[29] More described him as "selfish, tricking and disobliging from first to last" and resented his desire to make as much money as possible from the Cheap Repository Tracts. However, she saw their publication as a moral crusade, whereas he had grown up publishing such works as a business.[30]

Like Newbery, Marshall's authors advertised his books within their texts. For example, in Anecdotes of a Boarding School, a mother gives her daughter Marshall's Dialogues and Letters and Adventures of a Pincushion as she is going off to school. In Jemima Placid, the heroine reads books that could "be bought at Mr. Marshall's" and her father decides to buy many for his friends.[31]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Laws, Emma. "The Children's Printer". Miniature Libraries. Victoria and Albert Museum. Retrieved 5 April 2007.
  2. ^ Darton, p. 164.
  3. ^ a b Familysearch
  4. ^ McKenzie, p. 140.
  5. ^ Will – National Archives PROB 11/1688.
  6. ^ National Archives PCC wills, PROB 11/1057, July 1779.
  7. ^ London Gazette 30 March 1790, p. 201.
  8. ^ The Times, 16 October 1806; p. 1.
  9. ^ National Archives PROB 11/1688.
  10. ^ O'Connell, pp. 56–60; Shephard, pp 25–29, Simmons.
  11. ^ Darton, pp. 137–138 and 161–164.
  12. ^ Pickering, p. 92.
  13. ^ British Museum Dept of Prints and Drawings Heal, 17.97.
  14. ^ Stoker, pp. 827–832.
  15. ^ Pollard, p. 20.
  16. ^ Spinney
  17. ^ Alderson, 'Miniature libraries'
  18. ^ Alderson and de Marez Oyens, pp. 135–138.
  19. ^ The World, 11 November 1793.
  20. ^ O'Connell, p. 57.
  21. ^ a b Pickering, p. 91.
  22. ^ Quoted in Darnton, p. 161.
  23. ^ Pickering, p. 177.
  24. ^ a b Pickering, p. 180.
  25. ^ Jackson, pp. 124–126.
  26. ^ Pickering, pp. 188 and 192.
  27. ^ Pickering, p. 188.
  28. ^ Stoker, p. 836.
  29. ^ Jackson, p. 122.
  30. ^ Jackson, p. 124.
  31. ^ Pickering, p. 229.

External links edit

  • John Marshall's 1793 catalogue

References edit

  • Alderson, Brian, "Miniature libraries for the young", The Private Library, 3rd series 6. (1983), 3–38.
  • Alderson, Brian and de Marez Oyens, Felix, Be merry and wise: origins of children's book publishing in England 1650–1850, New York: Pierpont Morgan Library, 2006.
  • Darton, F. J. Harvey. Children's Books in England. 3rd ed. Rev. Brian Alderson. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982.
  • Jackson, Mary V. Engines of Instruction, Mischief, and Magic: Children's Literature in England from Its Beginnings to 1839. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1989.
  • Laws, Emma The Children's Printer', Miniature Libraries, London: Victoria and Albert Museum http://www.vam.ac.uk/vastatic/wid/exhibits/miniaturelibraries/childrensprinter.html
  • McKenzie, D. F. (ed.), Stationers' company apprentices 1701–1800, Oxford Bibliographical Society, 1978.
  • O'Connell, Sheila The popular print in England 1550–1850, London: British Museum, 1999.
  • Pollard, Graham (ed.), The Earliest Directory of the Book Trade by John Pendred (1785), London: the Bibliographical Society, 1955.
  • Pickering, Samuel F., Jr. John Locke and Children's Books in Eighteenth-Century England. Knoxville: The University of Tennessee Press, 1981.
  • Shepard, Leslie, John Pitts ballad printer of Seven Dials, London 1765–1844, London: Private Libraries Association, 1969.
  • Simmons, R. C. (ed.), The Dicey-Marshall Catalogue http://www.diceyandmarshall.bham.ac.uk/.
  • Spinney, G. H., "Cheap Repository Tracts; Hazard and Marshall edition", The Library, Vol. 20, Fourth Series, (1939–40), pp. 295–340.
  • Stoker, David. "Ellenor Fenn as 'Mrs Teachwell' and 'Mrs Lovechild': a pioneer late eighteenth century children's writer, educator and philanthropist". Princeton University Library Chronicle (2007). pp. 816–850.
  • Stoker, David. 'The Marshall Family's Print Publishing Business', Print Quarterly, volume XXXVIII, no.1, March 2021, pp.51-63.

john, marshall, publisher, john, marshall, 1756, 1824, london, publisher, specialized, children, literature, chapbooks, educational, games, teaching, schemes, called, himself, children, printer, children, young, friends, eminent, england, children, book, publi. John Marshall 1756 1824 was a London publisher who specialized in children s literature chapbooks educational games and teaching schemes He called himself the Children s Printer and children his young friends 1 He was pre eminent in England as a children s book publisher from about 1780 to 1800 2 After 1795 he became the publisher of Hannah More s Cheap Repository Tracts but a dispute with her led to him issuing a similar series of his own About 1800 Marshall began publishing a series of miniature libraries games and picture books for children After his death in July 1824 his business was continued either by his widow or his unmarried daughter both of whom were named Eleanor John Marshall publisher Title page from Dorothy Kilner s Life and Perambulation of a Mouse with one of Marshall s imprintsBornBaptized 28 November 1756 London St Mary AldermaryDiedJuly 1824LondonOccupation s Publisher printer printsellerSpouseEleanor MarshallChildrenEleanor Elizabeth Marshall John Marshall jnr Parent s Richard Marshall printer publisher printseller and Ellenor Marshall Contents 1 Life 2 History of the business 2 1 Street literature 2 2 Children s literature 2 3 Teaching aids 2 4 Retail bookselling 2 5 Children s periodicals 2 6 Cheap Repository Tracts 2 7 Miniature libraries and cabinets 2 8 Picture books 2 9 Other activities 3 Children s literature 4 Notes 5 External links 6 ReferencesLife editJohn Marshall was baptised 28 November 1756 in the parish church of St Mary Aldermary London the son of Richard Marshall fl 1752 1779 and his wife Ellenor 3 His father was a junior partner then full partner and finally owner of a successful chapbook and popular print business at No 4 Aldermary Churchyard off Watling Street which had been founded in 1755 by William and Cluer Dicey He was bound apprentice to the printer Edward Gilberd of Watling Street 3 September 1771 but transferred to his father s business a year later and became a freeman of the Stationers Company on 6 October 1778 4 He inherited his father s business the following year John married Eleanor Blashfield on 4 December 1788 Their two children were Eleanor Elizabeth born 8 March 1790 and John born 28 May 1792 3 He died during the summer of 1824 5 History of the business editRichard Marshall left half his business to his son John and a quarter each to his nephew James and his widow 6 It continued as John Marshall and Co until November 1789 when the partnership was voluntarily wound up and John continued in business on his own 7 In October 1806 Marshall moved it to 140 Fleet Street 8 where it remained until his death in 1824 Under his will made in 1813 the firm was bequeathed to his widow Eleanor Marshall but probate was granted on 14 July 1824 to his unmarried daughter Eleanor Elizabeth Marshall 9 One of these continued the business as E Marshall until about 1829 Street literature edit Richard s firm was based on selling popular prints maps chapbooks broadside ballads and other forms of street literature 10 These continued to be prominent in its output until the mid 1790s There are examples of all of these that contain John Marshall s imprint but the extent of his involvement is difficult to ascertain as many were undated and bore the imprint Printed and sold in Aldermary Churchyard Children s literature edit Richard had begun in the 1770s to publish children s books as a sideline this side was greatly expanded by John and his partners after 1780 Marshall recruited several new female authors and published some of the most important children s literature of the time 11 notably Mary Ann Kilner The Adventures of a Pincushion The Adventures of a Whipping Top Jemima Placid Memoirs of a Peg Top William Sedley Dorothy Kilner Anecdotes of a Boarding School The Histories of More Children than One The Life and Perambulation of a Mouse The Rotchfords Ellenor Fenn Mrs Teachwell Cobwebs to Catch Flies Fables in Monosyllables The Mother s Grammar The Rational Dame Rational Sports School occurrences Sarah Trimmer Scripture Lessons various prints of biblical and historical scenes with accompanying descriptions for use in Sunday and other schools Lucy Peacock The Life of a Bee Emily or The Test of Sincerity All of these went through several editions Some remained in print well into the 19th century such as Cobwebs to Catch Flies and The Life and Perambulation of a Mouse which was praised by Sarah Trimmer and by Mary Wollstonecraft 12 Marshall s catalogue of May 1793 listed 113 children s book titles two children s magazines and various teaching aids 13 Teaching aids edit Marshall ventured into publishing teaching aids about 1785 with Mrs Teachwell s Set of Toys for enabling Ladies to instill the Rudiments of Spelling Reading Grammar and Arithmetic under the Idea of Amusement which was accompanied by an instruction manual The Art of teaching in sport 14 Other teaching aids listed in the 1793 catalogue were Miss Cowley s Pocket Sphere for teaching geography and Alphabetical Cards for enticing Children to acquire an early Knowledge of their Letters A dissected map of England forerunner of modern Jigsaw puzzles was also advertised between 1795 and 1801 Retail bookselling edit In 1787 the business opened a retail bookshop at 17 Queen Street Cheapside hitherto the Aldermary Churchyard premises had principally served as a wholesale supplier and printing office 15 The shop seems to have closed about 1799 when the business appears to have suffered a financial setback after the break with Hannah More nbsp One of Hannah More s Cheap Repository Tracts printed and sold by Marshall c 1796 Children s periodicals edit On four occasions in his career Marshall attempted to start periodicals for children These were The Juvenile magazine or An instructive and entertaining miscellany for youth of both sexes edited by Lucy Peacock 1788 The Family magazine or a Repository of religious instruction and rational amusement edited by Sarah Trimmer 1788 1789 The Children s magazine or Monthly repository of instruction and delight 1799 The Picture magazine or monthly exhibition for young people 1800 1801 Cheap Repository Tracts edit Marshall was the London printer and publisher of Hannah More s Cheap Repository Tracts between 1795 and December 1797 After the dispute with More in 1797 Marshall published his own series of Cheap Repository Tracts until 1799 16 After the formation of the Religious Tract Society in 1799 Marshall abandoned tract publishing and concentrated on further forms of publication for children Miniature libraries and cabinets edit Marshall published a range of miniature libraries in wooden cases after 1799 including The Child s Latin Library The Doll s Library The Infant s Library or The Juvenile or child s library 17 Similarly he published a range of Cabinets wooden boxes containing sets of picture cards and miniature books such as The Cabinet of Beasts The Cabinet of Birds The Cabinet of Fishes The Infant s Alphabetical Cabinet The Infant s Cabinet of the Cries of London and The Doll s Casket Picture books edit nbsp The frontispiece and title page of Marshall s edition of Cinderella 1819 Marshall was an early innovator in coloured picture books for children illustrated with hand coloured etchings During the early 19th century he published editions of many traditional fairy tales such as Cinderella Puss in Boots and Aladdin along with accumulative rhymes and games such as This Is the House That Jack Built The Barn that Tom built and The Gaping Wide mouth d Waddling Frog with hand coloured illustrations 18 He was also noted for a range of books of humorous verses illustrated by the caricaturist Isaac Robert Cruikshank citation needed Other activities edit Like other printers and publishers of the time Marshall was involved in selling patent medicines although in his case these were aimed specifically at children He advertised an improved preparation of Dr Waite s Worm Medicine impossible to distinguish it from the most agreeable Gingerbread Nut from premises at 42 Long lane West Smithfield in 1793 19 He also appears to have supported the movement in Britain to abolish the slave trade He printed a number of anti slavery tracts including a print showing The cruel treatment of slaves in the West Indies in 1793 20 Children s literature editAfter the death of John Newbery the first publisher to make a profit publishing children s literature many firms began to enter the business but none ever had the monopoly Newbery did 21 Marshall was one of the most successful and published the most original books popularizing fictional biography for juvenile readers 21 In general Marshall published books that were more serious than Newbery s emphasizing the instruction part of to instruct and delight the imperative of 18th century children s literature His catalogue included this announcement Ladies Gentlemen and the Heads of Schools are requested to observe that the beforementioned Publications are original and not compiled as also that they were written to suit the various Ages for which they are offered but on a more liberal Plan and in a different Style from the Generality of Works designed for young People being entirely divested of that prejudicial Nonsense to young Minds the Tales of Hobgoblins Witches Fairies Love Gallantry etc with which such little Performances heretofore abounded 22 However although Marshall advocated more disciplined stories he also published Newbery inspired stories that stressed amusement and would sell well including fairy tales 23 By the mid 1780s he was focusing almost exclusively on moral works with a strong Christian element As Samuel Pickering Jr a scholar of 18th century children s literature explains He was a shrewd publisher and reading the market well he saw that instruction would sell While keeping a selection of old fashioned amusing books in print he established a reputation as a printer of moral works 24 Mary Jackson describes his strategy in sharper terms saying he engaged in apparent duplicity and sharp tricks claiming he was a reforming publisher but issuing tales that had little moral redemption in the eyes of Trimmer Fenn Kilner and others 25 In 1795 he became a printer for Hannah More s Cheap Repository Tracts 24 nbsp An illustration from a Marshall publication Memoirs of a Peg Top by Mary Ann Kilner showing the imminent destruction of the top Marshall learned from Anna Laetitia Barbauld s innovative children s literature and began to use large fonts and margins He also took up graduated readers like her Lessons for Children Ellenor Fenn wrote a series for him which began with Cobwebs to Catch Flies 26 He recognized the value of illustrations in children s books Beginning in the mid 1780s he and Sarah Trimmer published several sets of illustrated stories about the Bible and ancient history 27 Like most commercial publishers at the time Marshall was driven by profit and paid his writers poorly Mrs Fenn received no monetary payment for her works merely printed copies of Marshall s works to give away as gifts to her friends and neighbours 28 Mrs Trimmer s Description of a Set of Prints of Scripture History and Description of a Set of Prints of Ancient History among others went through many editions and no doubt made money for Marshall but she did not see much of the profits She complained that he treated her like a mere bookseller s fag 29 More described him as selfish tricking and disobliging from first to last and resented his desire to make as much money as possible from the Cheap Repository Tracts However she saw their publication as a moral crusade whereas he had grown up publishing such works as a business 30 Like Newbery Marshall s authors advertised his books within their texts For example in Anecdotes of a Boarding School a mother gives her daughter Marshall s Dialogues and Letters and Adventures of a Pincushion as she is going off to school In Jemima Placid the heroine reads books that could be bought at Mr Marshall s and her father decides to buy many for his friends 31 Notes edit Laws Emma The Children s Printer Miniature Libraries Victoria and Albert Museum Retrieved 5 April 2007 Darton p 164 a b Familysearch McKenzie p 140 Will National Archives PROB 11 1688 National Archives PCC wills PROB 11 1057 July 1779 London Gazette 30 March 1790 p 201 The Times 16 October 1806 p 1 National Archives PROB 11 1688 O Connell pp 56 60 Shephard pp 25 29 Simmons Darton pp 137 138 and 161 164 Pickering p 92 British Museum Dept of Prints and Drawings Heal 17 97 Stoker pp 827 832 Pollard p 20 Spinney Alderson Miniature libraries Alderson and de Marez Oyens pp 135 138 The World 11 November 1793 O Connell p 57 a b Pickering p 91 Quoted in Darnton p 161 Pickering p 177 a b Pickering p 180 Jackson pp 124 126 Pickering pp 188 and 192 Pickering p 188 Stoker p 836 Jackson p 122 Jackson p 124 Pickering p 229 External links editJohn Marshall s 1793 catalogueReferences editAlderson Brian Miniature libraries for the young The Private Library 3rd series 6 1983 3 38 Alderson Brian and de Marez Oyens Felix Be merry and wise origins of children s book publishing in England 1650 1850 New York Pierpont Morgan Library 2006 Darton F J Harvey Children s Books in England 3rd ed Rev Brian Alderson Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1982 Jackson Mary V Engines of Instruction Mischief and Magic Children s Literature in England from Its Beginnings to 1839 Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 1989 Laws Emma The Children s Printer Miniature Libraries London Victoria and Albert Museum http www vam ac uk vastatic wid exhibits miniaturelibraries childrensprinter html McKenzie D F ed Stationers company apprentices 1701 1800 Oxford Bibliographical Society 1978 O Connell Sheila The popular print in England 1550 1850 London British Museum 1999 Pollard Graham ed The Earliest Directory of the Book Trade by John Pendred 1785 London the Bibliographical Society 1955 Pickering Samuel F Jr John Locke and Children s Books in Eighteenth Century England Knoxville The University of Tennessee Press 1981 Shepard Leslie John Pitts ballad printer of Seven Dials London 1765 1844 London Private Libraries Association 1969 Simmons R C ed The Dicey Marshall Catalogue http www diceyandmarshall bham ac uk Spinney G H Cheap Repository Tracts Hazard and Marshall edition The Library Vol 20 Fourth Series 1939 40 pp 295 340 Stoker David Ellenor Fenn as Mrs Teachwell and Mrs Lovechild a pioneer late eighteenth century children s writer educator and philanthropist Princeton University Library Chronicle 2007 pp 816 850 Stoker David The Marshall Family s Print Publishing Business Print Quarterly volume XXXVIII no 1 March 2021 pp 51 63 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Marshall publisher amp oldid 1216344074, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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