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Personal Impressions: The Small Printing Press in Nineteenth-Century America

by Harris, Elizabeth

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Description

This complete, definitive, and richly illustrated survey of small nineteenth-century printing presses, written by a former curator at the Smithsonian Institution, is the first history of these machines. There was, in those days, a small printing press for every purpose. And there were innumerable boys and men eager to make their fortunes by investing in one, printing for a local clientele, and, with luck, building a printing or publishing empire.
Printing was the most widespread, and competitive business of nineteenth-century America. Every city had not only its big presses for printing catalogues, books, and newspapers, but also countless smaller presses for printing small jobs - the pamphlets, posters, handbills, stationery, cards, and tickets that gave the century so much of its color. Several of the names we now count as giants of the publishing industry: Scribner, Doubleday, George Houghton of Houghton Mifflin, and Donald Brace of Harcourt Brace started out not as publishers, but as small-job printers, running their own shops and working humble, everyday, manually-operated presses.

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Product Details

  • David R. Godine, Publishe Brand
  • Jul 8, 2005 Pub Date:
  • 9781567922684 ISBN-13:
  • 1567922686 ISBN-10:
  • English Language
  • 8.74 in * 0.81 in * 11.22 in Dimensions: