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Thomas Payne

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Name
  
Thomas Payne


Thomas Payne Thomas Paine Wikipedia the free encyclopedia


Role
  
Founding Father of the United States

Died
  
June 8, 1809, Greenwich Village, New York City, New York, United States

Influenced
  
Robert G. Ingersoll, Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Edison

Influenced by
  
Benjamin Franklin, John Locke, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Voltaire, Montesquieu, Benjamin Rush

Books
  
Common Sense, The Age of Reason, Rights of Man, The American Crisis, The crisis

Similar People
  
Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, George Washington, Patrick Henry, John Adams

Thomas Payne (c.1718–1799) was an important bookseller and publisher in 18th-century London.

Thomas Payne Thomas Paine Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Life

Thomas Payne Thomas Paine American Revolution HISTORYcom

Payne was born in Brackley, Northamptonshire. From 1750 he ran a shop at Mews Gate in Castle Street near Leicester Fields (the site is now occupied by the National Gallery). The premises were notoriously small, but popular with the literati of that period.

Referred to as the "Literary Coffee House", the shop became a sort of club during the day for discussions on all subjects. Patrons included George Steevens, Thomas Crofts, John Hoole and Thomas Tyrwhitt. Payne issued sale catalogues on a regular basis, as did many of his contemporaries, and these are now good sources of information about prices, popular books, bookbinding, and other aspects of 18th-century book history.

Payne's daughter Sarah married James Burney, a naval officer and brother of novelist Frances Burney, some of whose work Payne had published. He retired to Finchley in 1790 leaving the business in the hands of his son, also Thomas Payne (1752–1831). He is buried at St. Mary’s church in Finchley, north London.

References

Thomas Payne Wikipedia