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John Newbery

 
Biography: John Newbery
 

English publisher John Newbery (1713-1767) was the first person to create books specifically for children. His work reflected the changes in attitudes about children during the eighteenth century and aimed to present entertaining and educational materials designed for a child's reading level and interests.

The eighteenth-century publisher John Newbery was the first person to focus on the creation and marketing of books for children. The success of his work was due in part to the rise of the British middle class during this period and the increased amount of money and leisure time they were able to spend on their children. Another factor was a changing philosophy about the role and nature of children; rather than being looked upon as miniature adults, children were beginning to be recognized as having interests, energies, and attention spans that were greatly different from those of adults. Newbery's accomplishments in catering to these new trends in society and the foundations he laid for the ongoing practice of children's publishing are recognized today in the Newbery Awards - the annual honors bestowed upon outstanding works of children's literature by the American Library Association.

Newbery was born in 1713 in Waltham, Berkshire, England. He was the son of a farmer, Robert Newbery, but other members of his family were active in the publishing business. Newbery received a modest education in his home district, learning only the basics traditionally thought necessary for a farmer. But the boy also had a great love of reading and was drawn to a career that would indulge his appreciation of books. At the age of 16, he was apprenticed to a printer in the town of Reading, nine miles from his home. There he learned the skills of the printing trade from William Carnan and assisted in the production of Carnan's newspaper, the Reading Mercury. Eventually, Newbery was promoted to the position of assistant to the printer.

Built Successful Newspaper Business

When Carnan died in 1737, the 24-year-old Newbery inherited half of his printing business, sharing the company with Carnan's brother. The publisher soon gained more control over the business by marrying Carnan's widow. Newbery took responsibility for Carnan's children, and eventually had three of his own. The Reading Mercury thrived under his supervision; by 1743 it was sold in nearly 50 markets and was one of the top provincial papers of the day. The paper's success may have been in part due to Newbery's active interest in promoting his paper and investigating new markets and business possibilities. In 1740 he had undertaken a tour of England for these purposes, gaining information that may have guided him in his later book publishing ventures. It was in 1740 that Newbery published his first book, beginning the career for which he would be best remembered. For much of his life, however, a large part of his income was not from his publishing activities but from his side business ventures. One of these enterprises involved the sale of about thirty different patent medicines, including Dr. James' Fever Powder; advertisements for these products often appeared in Newbery's publications.

In his ongoing search for new opportunities, Newbery moved to London, opening the Bible and Sun publishing company in 1745 at St. Paul's Churchyard. This marked the beginning of Newbery's most productive years as a publisher. In London, he began the writing and selling of children's books, a market in which there was a growing demand for materials, particularly during the Christmas holidays. The books he produced were aimed both at the amusement and education of children. His first success in this area was the 1744 book A Pretty Little Pocket Book, a high-quality work that featured an entertaining and colorful style, including expensive copperplate engravings and a gilt cover. The book contrasted sharply with the dull and cheap appearance of earlier chapbooks, and the public eagerly snatched up copies; at least 10,000 copies were distributed between its initial publication and the end of the century.

Created High-Quality Children's Books

In 1746, Newbery published two more books directed at the education of children, Circle of the Sciences: Writing and Circle of the Sciences: Arithmetic. An introduction to the ideas of the English physicist and mathematician Isaac Newton were presented in the 1761 work, The Newtonian System of Philosophy Adapted to the Capacities of Young Gentlemen and Ladies … By Tom Telescope, popularly known as simply Tom Telescope. The book's author is a subject of debate; some believe that the author Oliver Goldsmith wrote the book, while others suggest that Newbery himself was the creator. This was another great success for Newbery, going through at least ten printings for a total of around 30,000 books by 1800. Newbery was cautious in business though, and his first printings were usually very small; only once he was able to gauge the interest of the market would he undertake further printings.

Children's literature was only one aspect of Newbery's role in literature and publishing in his day. He was an associate of a number of leading English writers, including Samuel Johnson, Oliver Goldsmith, and Christopher Smart. These authors and others contributed to Newbery's numerous newspapers in London and the provinces. One such paper was The Universal Chronicle or Weekly Gazette, which he founded in 1758; the paper published a number of famous works by Johnson, including "The Idler," "The Rambler," and "The Lives of the Poets." The Public Ledger, initiated in 1760, featured Goldsmith's "A Citizen of the World" in its first issue. Newbery also published Goldsmith's book The Vicar of Wakefield in 1766.

Memorialized in Book Awards

Newbery died on December 22, 1767, in London at the age of 54. His publishing business was carried on by his son, Francis Newbery, and later by one of Newbery's nephews, then the nephew's wife. Although the business lasted until 1801, it never again reached the remarkable level of success that Newbery had accomplished with his varied publishing projects. His contributions to the promotion of children's literature resulted in similar ventures by other companies, however, insuring a continuing commitment to the field. More than 150 years after the publisher's death, the Newbery Award for children's literature was established in 1922 by the American Library Association, honoring Newbery's pioneering work in presenting the first materials specifically designed for the amusement and entertainment of children.

Further Reading

For more information, see Darton, F. J. Harvey, Children's Books in England, Cambridge University Press, 1932; Meigs, Cornelia, A Critical History of Children's Literature, Macmillan, 1953; Noblett, William, "John Newbery: Publisher Extraordinary," History Today, April, 1972, pp. 265-71; and Welsh, Charles, A Bookseller of the Last Century, Being Some Account of the Life of John Newbery, Griffith, Farran, Okeden and Welsh (London), 1885.

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(born 1713, Waltham St. Lawrence, Berkshire, Eng. — died Dec. 22, 1767, London) English publisher. In 1744 he set up a bookshop and publishing house in London, and it became one of the first to publish children's books, including A Little Pretty Pocket-Book and Little Goody Two-Shoes. In 1781 his firm published the first collection of nursery rhymes associated with Mother Goose. He is commemorated by the Newbery Medal, awarded annually since 1922 by the American Library Association for the most distinguished contribution to children's literature in the U.S. It is presented along with the Caldecott Medal (see Randolph Caldecott), awarded for the best children's picture book.

For more information on John Newbery, visit Britannica.com.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: John Newbery
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Newbery, John, 1713–67, English publisher and bookseller. He established juvenile literature as an important branch of the publishing business. Included among his publications is Little Goody Two Shoes (1766). Although he published his books anonymously, it is assumed that he planned and wrote a number of them himself. In 1921 the Newbery medal was established by Frederic Melcher to be awarded by the American Library Association to the most distinguished children's book of the year written by an American.
 
Wikipedia: John Newbery
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Newbery's A Little Pretty Pocket-Book, originally published in 1744

John Newbery (baptized 9 July 171322 December 1767) was a British publisher of books who first made children's literature a sustainable and profitable part of the literary market. He also supported and published the works of Christopher Smart, Oliver Goldsmith and Samuel Johnson. In honor of his achievements in children's publishing, the Newbery Medal was named after him.

Contents

Early life

Newbery was born in 1713 to a Berkshire farmer in Waltham St Lawrence. He was apprenticed to a local printer at the age of sixteen. In 1737 his master, William Carnan, died and left the business to him and Charles Carnan, William's brother. Two years later, he married William Carnan's widow, Mary.[1]

Publishing career

By 1740 he had started publishing books in Reading, Berkshire; his first two publications were an edition of Richard Allestree's The Whole Duty of Man and Miscellaneous Works Serious and Humerous [sic] In Verse and Prose. In 1743, Newbery left Reading, putting his stepson John Carnan in charge of his business there, and established a shop in London, first at the Bible and Crown near Devereux Court and then at the Bible and Sun at 65 St. Paul's Churchyard. The first book he published there was A Little Pretty Pocket-Book in 1744.[2] This book has sometimes been called the "first children's book;" while other children's books by Thomas Boreman and Thomas and Mary Cooper had been published previously, A Little Pretty Pocket-Book is the first in Newbery's successful line of children's books. It already contains all of the hallmarks of a Newbery book. In developing his particular brand of children's literature, Newbery borrowed techniques from other publishers, such as binding his books in Dutch floral paper and advertising his other products and books within the stories he wrote or commissioned.[3] Newbery's firm published children's stories, ABC books, children's novels and children's magazines; his children's books constituted about one-fifth of the five hundred books his published.[1]

Newbery, it seems, both hired authors to write his books and wrote himself. Scholars have speculated that Oliver Goldsmith[citation needed] or Giles and Griffith Jones[4] wrote one of Newbery's best-selling stories, The History of Little Goody Two-Shoes. This was Newbery's most popular book, going through 29 editions between 1765 and 1800.[4]

Newbery also published a series of books written by "Tom Telescope" that were wildly popular, going through seven editions between 1761 and 1787 alone.[4] These were based on the emerging science of the day and consisted of a series of lectures given by a boy, Tom Telescope. The most famous is entitled The Newtonian System of Philosophy Adapted to the Capacities of Young Gentlemen and Ladies.

Newbery accrued most of his fortune from his patent and sales of Dr. James's Fever Powder, a medicine which claimed to cure the gout, rheumatism, scrofula, scurvy, leprosy, and distemper in cattle.[1] This product became successful due in part to Newbery's advertisements for it in his literature. In Goody Two-Shoes, the heroine's father dies because he was "seized with a violent fever in a place where Dr. James Fever Powder was not to be had."[5]

Newbery themes

Inspired by John Locke's very successful Some Thoughts Concerning Education, Newbery adopted the motto Deluctando monemus (Instruction through Delight). Locke had written that "children may be cozened into a knowledge of the letters; be taught to read, without perceiving it to be anything but a sport, and play themselves into that which others are whipped for." He also suggested that picture books be created for children. Locke also argued that children should be considered "reasoning beings." Newbery acted upon these suggestions. He also made his books relative cheap, charging only sixpence for A Little Pretty Pocket-Book, eightpence with a ball or pincushion.[2] The book was a hodge-podge of information and games, including riddles and advice on a proper diet, but its primary message was "learn your lessons . . . and one day you will ride in a coach and six."[4] "In Newbery's universe work is always rewarded and altruism pays dividends as reliably as Isaac Newton's laws of motion."[4]

Newbery's tales seem painfully didactic today, but were popular and enjoyed by children of the eighteenth and nineteenth century. Most of his stories concern a virtuous orphan who works hard (or is "industrious"), and therefore eventually becomes prosperous. They draw the world as a meritocracy where a child rises or falls on his or her character. Furthermore, many of the stories tell the life of the orphan from childhood to adulthood to illustrate rewards and punishments associated with "good" and "bad" behavior.

Legacy

His son Francis, his nephew Francis and Francis' wife Elizabeth and his grandson Francis Power continued the business after his death.

In 1922, the Newbery Medal was created in honor of him; it is awarded each year to the best children's book published in the United States.

Bestselling Newbery books

According to the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL 2.120), Newbery "wrote, wholly or partly" and "edited or materially influenced" the following works:

  • Mother Goose's Melody (1791) (A.H. Bullen's 1904 facsimile) by John Newbery, Isaiah Thomas, and William Henry Whitmore
  • A Little Pretty Pocket-Book (1744) by M. F. Thwaite and John Newbery
  • The Newtonian System of Philosophy (1761) by Tom Telescope, John Newbery, and Oliver Goldsmith
  • The Renowned History of Giles Gingerbread (1764)
  • The History of Little Goody Two-Shoes (1765) by John Newbery (perhaps written with Oliver Goldsmith)
  • The Entertaining History of Tommy Gingerbread a Little Boy who Lived Upon Learning by John Newbery

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Rose, 216.
  2. ^ a b Rose, 217.
  3. ^ Rose, 218.
  4. ^ a b c d e Rose, 219.
  5. ^ Qtd. in Rose, 219.

Bibliography

  • Buck. "The Motives of Puffing: John Newbery's Advertisements." Studies in Bibliography 30 (1977): 196–210.
  • Darton, F. J. Harvey. Children's Books in England. 3rd ed. Rev. Brian Alderson. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982.
  • Grey, Jill e. "The Lilliputian Magazine — A Pioneering Periodical?" Journal of Librarianship 2 (1970): 107–115.
  • Jackson, Mary V. Engines of Instruction, Mischief, and Mag!c: Children’s Literature in England from Its Beginnings to 1839. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1989.
  • Noblett, William. "John Newbery: Publisher Extraordinary." History Today 22 (1972): 265–271.
  • Roscoe, S. John Newbery and His Successors 1740-1814: A Bibliography. Wormley: Five Owls Press Ltd., 1973.
  • Rose, Jonathan. "John Newbery." The British Literary Book Trade, 1700–1820. Eds. J. K. Bracken and J. Silver. Dictionary of Literary Biography. Vol. 154. 1995.
  • Townsend, John Rowe. John Newbery and His Books: Trade and Plumb-cake for ever, huzza! Metuchen, N.J. : Scarecrow Press, 1994.
  • Welsh, Charles. A Bookseller of the Last Century, being Some Account of the Life of John Newbery. First published in 1885. Clifton: Augustus M. Kelley, 1972. ISBN 0678008833.

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