Watts & Co., was a London publishing house. In 1880 Charles Watts took over Austin Holyoake's publishing firm and changed its name to C. Watts and then subsequently to C. A. Watts & Co., The company was based at 17 Johnson's Court, off Fleet Street, London. To begin with Watts & Co. published various works by William Stewart Ross - a bitter critic of Bradlaugh who strongly disliked the term 'atheist'.[1]
References
edit- ^ Cooke, Bill (2003). The Blasphemy Depot. Great Britain: Rationalist Press Association. p. 356. ISBN 0-301-00302-5.