John Filby Childs
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John Filby Childs (1783–1853) was an English printer, known as a political radical, a successful lobbyist against the monopoly on printing the Bible, and a congregationalist active against church rates.


Life

He was born at Bungay, Suffolk, and carried on there the family printing business founded in 1795. With Joseph Ogle Robinson, he projected the series of "Imperial octavo editions of standard authors", which sold well for many years; it passed successively through the hands of Westley and Davis, Ball, Arnold & Co., and H. G. Bohn. The select committee of the House of Commons appointed in 1831 to inquire into the monopoly king's printers' patent arose from a meeting between John Childs, his brother and partner Robert, and
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M.P., on the subject of cheap bibles. Childs told the committee that he and his brother had been in business for a quarter of a century, that they employed over a hundred hands, and that they had printed editions of the Bible with notes (thus eluding the patent) for many years. Childs, a staunch nonconformist, suffered imprisonment on account of a conscientious refusal to pay church rates. This occurred in May 1836, and led to the agitation presaging the Braintree case. His incarceration was the subject of a debate in the House of Commons, and a reference by
Sir Robert Peel Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Baronet, (5 February 1788 – 2 July 1850) was a British Conservative statesman who served twice as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (1834–1835 and 1841–1846) simultaneously serving as Chancellor of the Exchequer ...
to "the Bungay martyr." In 1841 the two Childs brothers, Alderman Besley, and others, established ''The Nonconformist'' newspaper, for many years edited by
Edward Miall Edward Miall (8 May 1809 – 30 April 1881) was an English journalist, apostle of disestablishment, founder of the Liberation Society, and Liberal Party politician. Life Miall was born at Portsmouth. He was Congregational minister at Ware, Her ...
. Miall's early work was supported by a group including Childs and
Robert Halley Robert Halley (13 August 1796 – 18 August 1876) was an English Congregational minister and abolitionist. He was noted for his association with the politics of Repeal of the Corn Laws, and became Classical Tutor at Highbury College and Prin ...
, George Hadfield and Adam Thomson of Coldstream.Arthur Miall, ''Life of Edward Miall, formerly Member of Parliament for Rochdale and Bradford'' (1884), pp. 42–3
archive.org
/ref> He married the daughter of a Mr. Brightley. Their son Charles Childs (1807–1876) became the head of the firm of John Childs & Son. Childs died at Bungay on 12 August 1853, in his seventieth year.


References

;Attribution {{DEFAULTSORT:Childs, John 1783 births 1853 deaths English printers English Congregationalists 19th-century British businesspeople