136. Ink & Industry cover art

136. Ink & Industry

136. Ink & Industry

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

🎙️ London's Printing Revolution & the Birth of Children's Literature | The London History Podcast

Join Hazel Baker for a fascinating journey through 1740s London, a city alive with ink, ambition, and innovation. In this episode of The London History Podcast, we uncover how a tiny chapbook, Tommy Thumb’s Pretty Song Book, helped transform childhood reading – and how a widowed woman publisher, Mary Cooper, quietly reshaped literary history from her shop on Paternoster Row.

📚 Discover:

  • The buzz of London’s book trade around St Paul’s Cathedral

  • The Statute of Anne and how it revolutionised copyright

  • Mary Cooper and Thomas Longman – trailblazers of modern publishing

  • The engraving artistry of George Bickham the Younger

  • What was inside Tommy Thumb’s Pretty Song Book – and what was lost

  • Why only two copies of the book are known to survive

  • How nursery rhymes travelled from street cries to storybooks

  • The hidden role of women in the eighteenth-century print trade

This episode is packed with rich detail – from political tensions of the Jacobite rising to the changing face of children’s literature, and from the smells of damp paper to the sound of rhymes still sung today.

🎧 Whether you are a book lover, historian, educator, or simply curious about the untold stories behind everyday culture, this episode will leave you seeing nursery rhymes – and London itself – in a whole new light.

🔔 Subscribe to never miss an episode
💬 Share with someone who loves history, literature, or London
🌐 Find bonus content at: https://londonguidedwalks.co.uk/podcast

No reviews yet
In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.