Brought up in Devon over the World War II period, his first job was as a reporter on the Western Morning News in Plymouth where he specialised in covering transport and holiday stories.[5] He later became a freelancer, combining journalism and radio and television reporting with fruit farming and being commissioned by the Dartington Hall Trust and others to produce reports on rural transport.[6] His first book (for young people) was published in 1959[7] and in 1960 he produced the first book in the series he was to edit (and later publish), A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain, The West Country.[8]
In later years, he also published some books under his own imprint. He continued to write himself, including a series of well-illustrated books on railway topics with Patrick B. Whitehouse and others,[10] and more books on travel-related topics.[11] He was keen to encourage new writers, and to this end launched the magazineWriters’ News in 1989, since sold.[12]
The David St John Thomas Charitable Trust
Having sold David & Charles, to F+W Media in 2000, and moved to Nairn, Scotland, he set up the David St John Thomas Charitable Trust. It makes awards to writers and also to gap year students.
Death
Thomas died in his sleep on 19 August 2014 at the age of 84 while on a cruise in the Baltic.[12]
^Thomas, Gilbert (1932). The Master-Light — letters to David. London: Allen & Unwin.
^Thomas, Gilbert; Thomas, David St John (1963). Double Headed — two generations of railway enthusiasm. Dawlish: David & Charles.
^Thomas, Gilbert (1947). Paddington to Seagood — the story of a model railway. London: Chapman & Hall.
^Gill, Crispin (1981). "From gangling youth to tycoon". Good Books Come from Devon — the David & Charles twenty-first birthday book. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. pp. 8, 32. ISBN0-7153-8139-3.
^E.g., Thomas, David St John (1963). The Rural Transport Problem. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
^Thomas, David St John (1959). Trains Work Like This. London: Phoenix House.
^Thomas, David St John (1960). A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain, Vol. 1, The West Country. London: Phoenix House.
^Thomas, David St John (1981). "Why we're here". Good Books Come from Devon — the David & Charles twenty-first birthday book. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. pp. 1, 12–13. ISBN0-7153-8139-3.
^e.g.Thomas, David St John (1984). Whitehouse, Patrick (ed.). The Great Western Railway — 150 glorious years. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN0-7153-8530-5.
^e.g.Thomas, David St John (1990). The Cunard Book of Cruising. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN0-7153-9074-0.
^ ab"David St John Thomas – publisher par excellence". The Railway Magazine. 160 (1, 364). Mortons Media Group Ltd. November 2014. ISSN0033-8923.