Thornton's Bookshop
Company type | Retail bookshop |
---|---|
Industry | Book seller |
Founded | 1835 |
Founder | Joseph Thornton (1808–1891) |
Defunct | 2002 |
Headquarters | 11 Broad Street, , |
Thornton's Bookshop (locally known as Thornton's) was the oldest university bookshop in Oxford, England.[1][2] It was founded in 1835 by Joseph Thornton (1808–1891) in Magdalen Street.[3]
From 1870, the bookshop was located at 11 Broad Street (opposite Balliol College), continued as a family business by five generations of the Thornton family[4] and from 1983 by the Meeuws family, but closed at the end of 2002.[3] The shop premises on Broad Street were frequently used for television adaptations like Brideshead Revisited,[citation needed] and the last Inspector Morse episode, The Remorseful Day.[5]
The best description of the history of the bookshop Joseph Thornton & Son is that of the first 100 years which Frederick Thornton wrote for “The Bookseller” in 1935. Centenary of the firm of J. Thornton & Son, Booksellers 11. Broad Street, Oxford It may be of interest to citizens of Oxford and members of the University to learn that the above firm has been in existence fox one hundred years. It was founded i n September 1835 by Joseph Thornton, the son of the Rev. John Thornton of Billericay, Essex, the author of some twenty-seven books, most of them theological. Joseph Thornton started business in a small shop, subsequently Pacey's, in Magdalen Street as a secondhand bookseller. There exists an early statement of accounts which shows that he began with a cash capital of £260, a modest sum even for those days. In 1640 he married and moved to 51, High Street where his seven children were born. The elder of his two sons, John Henry, used to tell how as a boy he had sat on the steps of the shop in vacation time and had watched the coaches drawing up at the Angel Inn, or rattling over the old kidney stones on their way to and from London. He could also recall evenings spent with his brother and sisters clambering up the ladders and scampering round the scaffolding of the University Museum, then in process of being built. In 1853 Joseph Thornton removed his business to 18, Magdalen Street, on the site of the present Randolph Hotel. Ten years later it was moved again to 10, Broad Street, and finally in 1870 to No. 11, next door. John Henry ( 1845 – 1924) entered the business in 1860, became a partner in 1873 and sole owner in 1891 on the death of his father. Under him the business was considerably developed. He introduced new books (his father having adhered strictly to the secondhand trade) initiated the circulation of catalogues which have been a feature of the firm’s activities ever since. For some years, like his father, he lived over the shop, but by 1906, having ceased in l890 to use the premises as his home, he had taken the whole of the upper portion of the building into the business. Frederick Stanbury, the elder son of John Henry, entered the business in 1892, became a partner in 1902, and on the death of his father in 1924, became sole owner. During this partnership of father and son, the business was further extended, and methods of cataloguing and accountancy were modernized. In 1914 the upper portion of No. 12, Broad Street was added to the business premises. In 1922, John Stanbury, the only son of Frederick Stanbury, entered the business, and two years later was taken into partnership. During his connection with the firm the quality of the stock has been much improved and a varied selection of foreign books has been introduced. Frederick Thornton wrote to the Oxford Times, Spring 1935 Throughout the 100 years of its existence the clientele of the business has consisted mainly of the members and alumni of the University of Oxford and of other educational institutions in the British Isles and in all parts of the world. Indeed, not a day goes by without some consignment of books being sent abroad. In its earlier days the business dealt chiefly with Theological and Classical works, but during the past thirty years most branches of general bookselling have been developed, including early editions of standard English authors, learned periodicals, Oriental and Semitic literature, finely printed books, works on anthropology, travel and early voyages. 'Many of the firsts present customers date from the l870’s, and some from the 1860’s. Important libraries have been purchased, among them the library of the late Canon Dalton, sometime tutor to H.M.King George. The catalogue of this library "greatly interested the King", and he purchased some volumes from it. The firm frequently receives requests to trace rare books, or to report books dealing with abstruse subjects, in fact, recently an oriental student entered the shop and asked if a work could be recommended in which instructions were given as to how to make a women love him - here was a plunge into the lore of the middle ages. In 1983, nearly bankrupt, the bookshop merged with another Oxford bookshop, Holdan Books, owned by Willem A and Scharlie Meeuws and continued to trade for another 20 years When it moved first to Boars Hill near Oxford and finally to Faringdon where it stopped trading in 2023.
The premises are now occupied by "The outlet shop".
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Hibbert, Christopher, ed. (1988). "Thorton's Bookshop". The Encyclopaedia of Oxford. Macmillan. p. 435. ISBN 0-333-39917-X.
- ^ "Oxford's oldest bookshop to close down". Oxford Mail. UK. 30 November 2001.
- ^ a b "No. 11: House of Secrets (Harry Potter)". Broad Street, Oxford. Oxford History. Retrieved 14 June 2022.
- ^ "The remarkable story of the Thornton family". Oxford Mail. UK. 2 February 2011.
- ^ "Armed robbery at 'Morse' bookshop". BBC News. UK: BBC. 4 November 2002. Retrieved 14 June 2022.
External links
[edit]51°45′15″N 1°15′28″W / 51.754218°N 1.257658°W