What did John Newbery do at St Paul’s Churchyard?

By Legacy Team·

Paul's Churchyard, EC4 Standing in the shadow of St Paul's Cathedral, you're standing where John Newbery established his revolutionary publishing business in the heart of Georgian London's literary world. From this address in St Paul's Churchyard, between roughly the 1740s and his death in 1767, Newbery transformed children's literature from a utilitarian afterthought into a thriving, imaginative enterprise—publishing the first editions of *A Little Pretty Pocket-Book* and *Goody Two-Shoes*, works that made him the father of modern children's publishing.

This churchyard location was no accident; it positioned Newbery at the epicenter of London's bookselling trade, surrounded by fellow printers and publishers, yet also within sight of thousands of families attending St Paul's, his potential customers. The brass plaque you're reading today marks not just a shopfront, but the birthplace of the idea that children deserved entertaining, beautifully illustrated books written specifically for them—a radical notion in the eighteenth century that Newbery proved could be both morally worthwhile and commercially successful from this very spot.

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