A few notes about the Apocrypha:
“Article VI of the Church of England (1562) authorizes the reading of these books (I (III) Esdras-II Maccabees) for example of life and instruction of manners, but not to establish any doctrine. However, much Protestant (especially Calvinist) opinion disapproved of the Apocrypha, which are frequently absent from extant copies of Geneva Bibles, particularly those printed in Holland. In 1615 Archbishop Abbott forbade the issue of Bibles without the Apocrypha, but copies of the Authorized Version surviving from editions of the 1630’s often lack them [i.e., the Apocryphal books], and were perhaps so purchasable. The first edition of an English Bible deliberately issued without them was probably the Geneva Bible of A. Hart, Edinburgh, 1640, which retains the Prayer of Manasses only and gives reasons for omitting the rest.”
The Cambridge History of the Bible: the West from the Reformation to the Present Day, S. L. Greenslade, editor, page 169
The 1650 Stationers printing of the King James Bible does not have the Apocrypha.