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Letter, 8 March 1892
Item
Son of a Dorset chemist (pharmacist), M.H. Hodder was born in Uxbridge, Middlessex. He started in the publishing business at age 14, working for Jackson & Walford, the official publisher for the Congrgational Union. His name was added to the company’s name in 1861. When Messrs. Jackson and Walford retired in 1868 he took over the firm; he then joined with Thomas Wilberforce Stoughton, who was an evangelical dissenter like himself, to form the well-known firm of Hodder & Stoughton, now owned by Hachette. In the 1880s and 1890s, Hodder & Stoughton published many of Sir John William Dawson’s books, including those which dealt with the relationship between science and religion, a controversial topic at the time. Hodder was a lifelong friend of Sir George Williams, the founder of the Young Men’s Christian Association, and he gave a speech to the 1869 meeting of the organization in Portland, Maine.
Letter from M.H. Hodder to John William Dawson, written from London, E.C..
Attached to “Modern science in Bible lands” by Sir J. William Dawson.