Charles Henry Foyle


Charles Henry Foyle was an English businessman who invented the folding carton. He founded Boxfoldia in Birmingham in 1920, a company that was finally sold in 2003.
In 1940, he put £7,000 into a trust for general charitable objectives, including medical and educational facilities and housing for the working classes. Trustees were drawn from the City Council, the University of Birmingham and from the founder's family, and additional advisors were nominated from the company. The trust had an annual income of £5,500 by 1952. The C.H. Foyle Trust later adapted its memorandum to support educational, recreational and artistic activities of a charitable nature, with an emphasis on those from deprived areas in the West Midlands, with an income of £148,683 in 2008. Over its 70 years the Trust supported many individuals and schools and hundreds of charitable organisations, in both educational and other fields, with grants ranging from a few tens to many thousands of pounds. Major beneficiaries have included the Midlands Arts Centre, the at the University of Birmingham, the for the Staffordshire Hoard, and Selly Oak Hospital for the statue, .
Charles Henry Foyle was born in Hoxton, London. His brother William and Gilbert Foyle founded Foyles bookshop in London. He privately published Alice Through The Paper-Mill, an Alice in Wonderland-inspired satire on war-time paper control regulations with 12 illustrations by Arthur Wragg.