J. Walch and Sons was an Australian publisher, founded in Hobart, Tasmania, by Major James Walch and several of his sons.
Major James William Henry Walch (died 1852) and family [a] left England for Hobart, Tasmania on the barque Royal Saxon, arriving in November 1842, and was attached to Her Majesty's 54th Regiment. [1] On 1 January 1846, he and his second son James Henry Brett Walch (died 5 November 1897), [2] took over a bookseller's and stationer's shop established by James Tegg, at the corner of Liverpool and Elizabeth streets. [3] henceforth known as "Walch's corner".
An associated business, Walch Bros and Birchall, was founded to carry on a similar business in Launceston, later becoming A. W. Birchall and Sons Pty Ltd. [1]
In 1859 they published a 64 by 48 inches (1.6 m × 1.2 m) map of Tasmania. [4]
In 1861 they opened a stationery store with bookbinding and account book workshop headed by James Walch in Macquarie Street. In 1862 he began publishing the Tasmanian Almanac , [b] better known as Walch's Red Book. James was succeeded as editor by George D'Emden (died 1940); [5] retired 1938. [3]
In 1873 they purchased Downing's store in Davey Street for a warehouse [3] and in 1876 removed their Elizabeth Street premises to the rebuilt establishment at the corner of Elizabeth and Liverpool streets, whose second floor housed a pianoforte and artworks display room. [6]
James Walch died in 1897,
The company was restructured some time around 1921, when its public pronouncements were first signed "J. Walch and Sons Pty Ltd". [7]
In 1877 Thomas Lloyd Hood (died 1 May 1904), a Walch employee, opened a shop in competition with his ex-employer on a corner of Elizabeth and Liverpool streets, over the way from "Walch's corner", establishing his own landmark, "Hood's Corner". [8] In 1897 he opened new premises at 85 Elizabeth Street. [9] He opened shops in Zeehan and Queenstown.
Sons of James William Henry Walch and Eliza Walch include: