'' In January 1868, Foote moved to
London to work in a
West End library, soon engaging in radical
freethought. He founded a secular
Sunday school and the Young Men's Secular Association at the Old Street Hall of Science in 1869, and began contributing to
Charles Bradlaugh's
National Reformer in 1870. He also served as secretary of the London Republican Club (1870) and the National Republican League (1871). In 1876, he opposed Bradlaugh's control over the secularist movement by starting his own paper,
The Secularist, and in 1877, with
G. J. Holyoake and
Charles Watts, formed the
British Secular Union. A leading member of the Metropolitan Radical Federation, he championed free expression, opposed
socialism, and grew disillusioned with what he saw as democratic mediocrity. In 1887, he debated socialism with
Annie Besant. His defence of
liberalism alienated many supporters who turned to socialism, leading to financial difficulties, conflicts with other leaders, and bankruptcy from 1901 to 1905. Despite these challenges, Foote played a significant role in sustaining secularist radicalism into the twentieth century. Foote ran a publishing business from 1882, known later as the Pioneer Press, and edited
The Freethinker until his death, along with other publications such as the
Secularist,
Liberal,
Progress,
Radical Leader, and
Pioneer. He authored over eighty works, mainly polemical pamphlets, and his weekly editorial essays in
The Freethinker were compiled as
Flowers of Freethought (1893–4). == Later life and death ==