- John de Monins Johnson
John de Monins Johnson (1882 – 1956) was an English papyrologist, printer of the "
Oxford English Dictionary ", and collector.Biography
Johnson was born in
Lincolnshire inEngland , the second son of John Henry Johnson and Anna Braithwaite. He attended Magdalen College at theUniversity of Oxford . He received a scholarship to Exeter College, Oxford. He studied theclassics and Arabic in preparation for a career in theEgypt ianCivil Service . In Egypt, he became a papyrologist, discovering a papyrus byTheocritus , 900 years older than any such previously discovered manuscript.Johnson returned to Oxford during
World War I , physically unfit for military service. He became Assistant Secretary to the Delegates ofOxford University Press . In 1918 he married Dorothea, the daughter of his supervisorCharles Cannan . They had a son named Charles, and a daughter name Paulla. In 1925 Johnson became Printer to the University at Oxford, and in 1928 he was awarded anHon D.Litt for his work on the "Oxford English Dictionary". DuringWorld War II , in addition to his printing responsibilities, he became responsible for security at Oxford University Press, living on site until his retirement in 1946. During this time he became a collector of what he called "Printed Ephemera", establishing "The Constance Meade Collection of Ephemeral Printing" at Oxford University Press. Johnson's definition of printed ephemera was: "Everything which would ordinarily go into the waste paper basket after use, everything printed which is not actually a book." He continued to work on the collection until his death. His collection is currently held at theBodleian Library at the University of Oxford.External links
*worldcat id|lccn-n50-81716
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