," 1870s, albumen silver print. Source: Stephan Loewentheil Photography of China Collection Thomas Child was born in
Shropshire, England, in 1841 to John and Elizabeth Child. In 1870, Child was hired by
Sir Robert Hart to join the
Chinese Maritime Customs Service as a gas engineer, and left England for Beijing with his photographic equipment in June of that year. Child lived in Beijing until 1889. When he arrived in Beijing, the city was still largely devoid of foreigners, and only a few photographers had ever produced images in and of the Chinese city. By March 1871, Child had started to photograph the architecture of Beijing. Since there was no commercial photography studio in Beijing at the time, Child saw demand develop quickly for his photographs and began devoting more of his time to photographing the architecture and people of Beijing and the surrounding areas. Child's renown as a photographer grew significantly in the coming years. In the late 1870s, he became a contributing photographer for
The Far East, a periodical published in Japan and China that featured images of both regions from the greatest photographers working in those locations. His images were published in the July 1877, August 1877, December 1877, and January 1878 issues of the quarterly, and an advertisement he took out in the April 1878 issue offered nearly 200 individual "Views of Beijing and its Vicinity" for 50 cents each. Although most of his negatives were created during the 1870s, Child continued to make and sell his prints throughout the 1880s. Child returned to England in 1889 with his family, except for his eldest son Alfred, also employed with the
Chinese Maritime Customs Service, who stayed behind in Beijing as his father's successor. Child formally retired from the Customs service the following year. He purchased a home in
Chelsfield,
Kent, and, in a nod to his time in China, named it "Chang-an-Tang," loosely translated as "Everlasting Tranquillity Studios". Child died near his home on 27 May 1898, after falling from a horse-drawn carriage and fracturing his skull. ==Photographs of China and Chinese architecture==