Marshall assigned the copyright to
Baldwin, Cradock, & Joy, who published new editions throughout the 1820s and 1830s, improving production standards and commissioning new versions of the illustrations. The
Dublin printer John Rice pirated the work in 1794, and in 1799 Marshall’s rival,
Elizabeth Newbery, published an un-illustrated French language version. Copies of the original edition were exported to the USA where they were copied in editions published in
Philadelphia by Johnson & Warner, (1813 and 1814), in
Baltimore by E. J. Coale, (1825), in
New York City by
Mahlon Day, (between 1832 and 1837), and in New York and
Boston by C.S. and J.H. Francis in 1851. Meanwhile, in the Britain,
Darton and Co. published several editions between 1842 and 1858, and the
Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge (SPCK) others between 1844 and 1860, which were adapted to include a religious message.
Lockwood and Co. took over the publication in 1862. An edition with a coloured lithographic frontispiece was jointly published by
Frederick Warne in
London and
Scribner, Welford, and Co. in New York in 1870, which was republished in 1894 by Warne.
George Routledge and Sons published an edition in 1871, and
Crosby Lockwood in 1885. An imitation
New cobwebs to catch little flies was also published by the
Religious Tract Society, between 1833 and 1839. ==References==