Richard Watts (died 24 March 1844) was an early nineteenth-century English printer, located in Crown Court, Temple Bar, London. His work is identified under the signature R. Watts.[1]

Watts was the printer for the University of Cambridge from 1802 until 1809,[2] (a switch to stenotype was made by the school in 1804).[2] He left Cambridge in 1809 and set up a printing workshop in Broxbourne, subsequently setting up the Oriental Type-Foundry on Temple Bar, London, in 1816.

Watts developed a reputation as "a cutter and founder of Oriental and foreign characters, of which he accumulated a considerable collection".[3] His Oriental Type-Foundry was also the oriental printer for the Church Missionary Society, the Bible Society, the Prayer Book Society, and the Homily Society.

Watts's son, William Mavor Watts (1797/98-1874), took over the printing business in Crown Court, Temple Bar.[4]

Watts died age 70 and is buried in All Saints' Church, Edmonton.

Apprentices to Richard Watts

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  • Richard Clay I (1789-1877), was apprenticed to Richard Watts in 1803. His son, Charles John Clay, was printer to the University of Cambridge between 1854–1882.[5]
  • Mirza Salih was apprenticed to Watts in 1819.[6]
  • Sullivan (Sulman) Law Hyder, was apprenticed to Watts for five years in the 1820s before going to work as a printer in Calcutta in 1931.[6]
  • William Colenso was apprenticed to Watts in 1833.

Further reading

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  • Nile Green, Terrains of Exchange: Religious economies of global Islam (Oxford University Press, 2014), especially Chapter 2: The Christian Origins of Muslim Printing.

References

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  1. ^ Reply of R. Watts to the Report of Dr. Milner and Mr. Wood relative to the University Press affairs. T. Gillet. 1809 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ a b "Public Buildings". History of the University of Cambridge. Illustrated by a series of engravings ... from drawings by R. B. Harraden, Jun (2d ed.). R. Harraden & Son. 1814. p. 245 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ Talbot Baines Reed, A History of the Old English Letter Foundries, 1887 (reprint Outlook Verlag, 2018.
  4. ^ Georg Lehner, Der Druck chinesischer Zeichen in Europa - entwicklungen im 19. Jahrhundert (Otto Harrassowitz Verlag, 2004), p. 214.
  5. ^ Michael Black, Cambridge University Press 1584-1984 (Cambridge University Press, 2000), p. 152.
  6. ^ a b Nile Green, "Terrains of Exchange: Religious economies of global Islam" (Oxford University Press, 2014), Chapter 2: The Christian Origins of Muslim Printing.