and
James MacAlister. train station on the main line of the
Pennsylvania Railroad Close friends with Anthony Drexel for more than 40 years, Childs served as the second President of the Board of Trustees of
Drexel University, succeeding the founder. In 1872, he was elected a member of the
American Antiquarian Society. The Antiquarian Society holds a substantial file of original issues of the
Public Ledger encompassing over 11,000 issues between 1836 and 1876. He was elected as a member to the
American Philosophical Society in 1886. In 1880 Childs and Drexel purchased west of Philadelphia along the tracks of the
Pennsylvania Railroad, an area which was to become known as the
Philadelphia Main Line, from banker J.H. Askin. The two laid out roads, public utilities, community amenities, churches, and building lots to create "Wayne Estate", later the unincorporated community of
Wayne, Pennsylvania, an early example of a planned community. The suburban village known as Wayne, on the
Pennsylvania Railroad, fourteen miles from Philadelphia, differs so much from the ordinary town allowed to grow up hap-hazard and to develop conveniences as population increases, that it is necessary, in describing it as it appears, to keep in mind some facts about its history. Wayne is not an accidental aggregation of cottages; it is a town built by design, and provided at the start with all the conveniences to which residents of cities are accustomed and which they are so apt to miss and long for when they go into the country or even into the suburbs of a great city. The scheme of the town was well thought out and planned before any of the new cottages were built, and, as it was undertaken by liberal gentlemen of abundant means, no expense was spared in the preliminary municipal work. Childs built his own summer home, Wooton, outside of nearby
Bryn Mawr. A 2013 article on Childs described the estate: Situated on almost 170 acres on Bryn Mawr Avenue in Radnor Township, the Wootton estate included a 50-room Tudor mansion, a clock tower, stables, pool, tennis courts, log cabins and several more buildings. The mansion was built in 1881 by architect John McArthur, who also designed Philadelphia’s City Hall. After Childs died childless, his godson
George W. Childs Drexel owned Wooton. In 1950, the estate was acquired for use as
St. Aloysius Academy, a private school for boys. The mansion at Wooton continues in use, as do several outbuildings from the original estate. Childs was also a very close friend of President Ulysses S. Grant, and they owned adjacent summer homes in Long Branch, New Jersey. When the dying Grant was struggling to complete his war memoirs to support his family after his death, he asked Childs to decide which firm should publish the work. Childs chose Charles L. Webster & Co., in which Mark Twain was a principal. In 1887 a movement arose to draft Childs himself for the presidency, but on January 25, 1888, he announced in the New York Times, "I am not a candidate and neither would I accept the (Republican) nomination for President." == Philanthropy ==