One type of publication with which Martha Gurney made a success was transcripts of trials. Her brother Joseph being a shorthand writer, she in partnership with him, from 1773, produced a long series of trial books. Her business was in the Temple Bar area of London, moving later to Holborn.[3] She also published sermons, for example those of James Dore, her minister at Maze Pond.[4] In the years 1788 to 1794 she was at her most active in producing pamphlets.[5]
In Baptist abolitionist publishing, Gurney's collaboration with William Fox was prominent, with the productions of other figures such as William Button, and John Marsom.[7] Fox's pamphlet of the early 1790s against sugar and rum from the triangular trade was published and promoted by Gurney, and sold eventually hundreds of thousands of copies, in 26 editions.[8]
^Timothy D. Whelan (2008). Politics, religion, and romance: the letters of Benjamin Flower and Eliza Gould Flower, 1794-1808. National Library of Wales. p. 59.