PRINTING
The City of Westminster enjoys the honour
of being the place where a printing press was
first set up in this country.
Of William Caxton it is unnecessary to
speak at length. Sprung from an old Kentish
family, he was born, probably in London,
about the year 1422, and was afterwards apprenticed to Robert Large, an eminent member of the Mercers' Company, and Lord
Mayor. On the expiration of his indentures,
in 1446, he went to Bruges, where he
engaged in business and became the Governor
of the Company of Merchant Adventurers.
In March 1468-9 he began an English translation, 'as a preventive against idlenes' (he
tells us) of the Recuyell of the Historyes of
Troye, which he continued at Ghent, and
finished at Cologne, in 1471. The book being
in great demand Caxton set himself to learn
the newly-discovered art of printing in order
to multiply copies. The Recuyell probably
appeared in 1474, and was the first book
printed in English. Caxton learnt the art of
printing from Colard Mansion, who set up a
press at Bruges about 1473. He left Bruges
in 1476 and returned to England.
Caxton's claim to be the first English
printer has been opposed by some older writers,
who considered that Oxford was the first seat
of printing in England. It is now generally
agreed that Oxford's claim to have had a press
in 1468 cannot be sustained, and rests only on
a typographical blunder in the printing of a
date. Caxton's first printed works were
small treatises and short poems by Lydgate and
Chaucer; many of these are probably lost;
his first dated book is The Dictes and Sayinges
of the Philosophers, printed in 1477. The
chief work from his press was The Golden
Legend, a large folio volume illustrated with
rude woodcuts, and containing the lives of the
English saints. His press was set up in the
Almonry at Westminster, where the Guards'
Memorial now stands.
Caxton remained a parishioner of St. Margaret's until his death in 1491. The parish
accounts for 1490-2 state that 6s. 8d. was
paid for four torches 'atte burreying of Wylliam Caxton,' and '6d. for the belle atte same
burreying.' A memorial tablet was erected
to his memory in 1820 by the Roxburghe
Club, and in 1883 a stained glass window was
also set up in his honour by the London
printers and publishers. Caxton's life was a
busy one. To his work as a translator we
are indebted for twenty-one books from the
French and one from the Dutch; besides
which he printed nearly eighty books, some
of which passed through more than one large
edition. William Blades his biographer sums
up his character as that of a pious, diligent,
and educated man, who without aiming very
high led the life of an honest and useful
merchant.
Caxton's successor was Wynkyn de Worde,
who came to England with him, as a youth,
and continued as his workman and chief
assistant. He remained at Westminster after
his master's death and finished the Canterbury
Tales and Hilton's Seale of Perfection, which
had been begun by Caxton. In 1496 he
removed to the sign of the 'Sun' in Fleet
Street, and printed as many as 488 books
between 1493 and 1534. He was, like
Caxton, a man of learning, and introduced
many improvements in the art of printing as
practised in England. He founded his own
types, which were of beautiful design, and his
books are noted for the excellence of their
press-work. He was the first printer who
introduced the Roman letter into England,
and made use of it to distinguish anything
remarkable.
Richard Pynson, like Wynkyn de Worde,
was a workman or 'servant' of Caxton, and
afterwards set up a press of his own at Temple
Bar. He was King's Printer to Henry VIII,
from whom he received a grant of £4 annually during life. In this grant, which is dated
27 September 1515, he is styled 'Richard
Pynson, Esquire, our Printer.' Pynson used
this title of 'Esquire' in the colophon of his
Statuta, etc. His known productions number
210, and his types are clear and good; but
his press work is hardly equal to that of De
Worde. His first dated book was Diues and
Pauper, printed in 1493, and he continued to
print until 1529 or 1531. In his later books
he describes himself as living at the sign of
the 'George,' in Fleet Street, beside the
church.
One other early printer contributes to the
fame of Westminster as the cradle of the
English press. Julian Notary is believed by
Ames to have printed in France before he
came to this country. His name is associated
with that of John Barbier as printer of the
Salisbury Missal which Ames believed to have
been printed on the Continent. His first
residence in England, as stated on the colophons of his earliest books, was in King Street,
Westminster, but about 1503 he removed to
a house with the sign of the 'Three Kings,' in
the parish of St. Clement Danes, without
Temple Bar. In 1515 the colophon to The
Cronycle of England shows that he had removed to a house with the same sign in
St. Paul's Churchyard, at the west door of the
Cathedral, by the Bishop of London's Palace.
He is known to have printed twenty-three books,
the earliest of which is dated 20 December
1498, and the latest 1520. Notary used two devices, which also appear upon his bindings, and
will be described in the following section of
this article.
London printing soon left its first home.
Caxton's successors migrated to Fleet Street,
and the entire body of printers with hardly an
exception set up their presses within the City,
where the trade remained almost exclusively
for over two centuries. Professor Arber's list
of London printers for the year 1556 reveals
the curious fact that of the 32 booksellers and
printers then living in London no less than
15 lived in St. Paul's Churchyard, 5 others in
close proximity, 8 in Fleet Street, 2 in Lombard Street, 1 in Aldersgate, and another in a
locality unknown.
As a result of an examination of London
printed books from the time of Caxton to the
year 1556 it appears probable that only three
presses existed during that period outside the
City of London besides those of Caxton and
his immediate successors. (fn. 1) The three printers
were William Follingham or Follington, who
printed for Richard Banks in 1544 at Holy
Well in Shoreditch ; Hill, who printed between 1548 and 1553 at St. John's Street,
Clerkenwell; and Robert Wyer, 1527-50,
whose press was 'in the byshop of Norwytche
rentes, besyde charyng crosse.'
Wyer was one of the most prolific of the
English printers of the 16th century. Many
of his books are without date, and of a fugitive and popular character. His printing for
the most part is exceedingly poor, but some
of his books in 'foreign secretary Gothic' and
'large lower case Gothic' types are very well
executed.
The printing trade was kept under strict
control by the state, a control exercised chiefly
through the Archbishop of Canterbury and
the Stationers' Company. This company
made an order on 9 May 1615 limiting the
number of presses in the City of London to
nineteen. Similar, but for the most part ineffectual, attempts were made from time to time
to stop the natural growth of the art of printing.
In a list of printers in England who in 1649-
50 entered into recognizances not to print seditious books, among sixty-seven names, only one
Middlesex printer is found-William Bentley
of Finsbury. (fn. 2) In 1666, the year of the Great
Fire, the entire number of working printers
in and about London was stated to be 140,
but how many of them were working outside
the City does not appear. (fn. 3) From another list
in 1724 we have a more complete view of
the printing trade of the metropolis. (fn. 4) The
list was prepared by Samuel Negus, a printer,
who distinguished printers according to their
religious and political principles. The number of printers is 75, of whom 15 have addresses outside the City. Of these 6 lived in
St. John's Lane, 2 in Goswell Street, 2 in or
near the Savoy, 2 in Lincoln's Inn Fields, and
the 3 others in Covent Garden, Bloomsbury,
and Without Temple Bar.
The only printer of note in Negus's list
living outside the City is Woodfall, 'Without
Temple Bar.' An anonymous contributor to
Notes and Queries
(fn. 5) gives some valuable notes
drawn from the ledgers of Henry Woodfall
between the years 1734 and 1737. On
15 December 1735 he charged Bernard
Lintot as follows:-
|
|
£ |
s. |
d. |
| Printing the first volume of Mr. Pope's Works, Cr. Long Primer, 8 vo, 3000 (and 75 fine), @ £2 2s. per sheet, 14. sheets and a half |
30 |
09 |
0 |
| Title in red and black |
1 |
1 |
0 |
| Paid for 2 reams and ¼ of writing demy |
2 |
16 |
3 |
He also printed Pope's Iliad for Henry
Lintot in 1736 at a cost of £143 17s., described as 'demy, Long Primer and Brevier,
No. 2000 in 6 vols. 68 sheets & ½ @ £2 2s.
per sheet.' Woodfall's customers included
also Robert Dodsley, Lawton Gilliver, and
Andrew Millar. For the latter he printed
Thomson's poems; 250 8vo. copies of Spring,
in October 1734, and in the following
January the 1st part of Liberty in a cr. 8vo.
edition of 3,000 and 250 'fine copies.' The
Seasons was issued on 9 June 1744 in octavo.
There were 1,500 errata in the work, and a
special charge of £2 4s. was made for 'divers
and repeated alterations.'
In 1731 Edward Cave, who had followed
many employments, purchased a small printingoffice at St. John's Gate, Clerkenwell. Here
he printed and published the Gentleman's
Magazine, the first number of which appeared
in January 1730-1.
One of the most useful enterprises of the
brilliant Horace Walpole was the private
printing-press which he set up on 4 August
1757 at Strawberry Hill, his villa at Twickenham. In his letter of this date to Sir Horace
Mann he says, 'I am turned printer, and have
converted a little cottage into a printing office.'
He began with two Odes of Gray, printed by
William Robinson, who did not remain long
in his employment. His next work was Paul
Hentzner's interesting Journey into England,
a small edition of 220 copies. In April 1758
appeared the two volumes of his Catalogue o
Royal and Noble Authors, of which a second
edition, not printed at Strawberry Hill, was
called for before the end of the year. Writing
in 1760 he says, 'I have been plagued with a
succession of bad printers;' this hindered the
production of his edition of Lucan. It was
published in January 1761, and in the following year appeared the first and second volumes
of Anecdotes of Painting in England, with plates
and portraits, and the imprint 'Printed by
Thomas Farmer at Strawberry Hill, Mdcclxii.'
Then another difficulty arose with the printers,
and the third volume, published in 1763, had
no printer's name in the imprint. The fourth
volume, not issued till 1780, bears the name
of Thomas Kirgate, who seems to have been
taken on in 1772, and held his post until
Walpole's death. Between 1764 and 1768
the Strawberry Press was idle, but in the latter
year Walpole printed 200 copies of a French
play entitled Cornélie Vestale Tragédie, and
from that time to 1789 he continued to
print at intervals, his chief productions being
Mémoires du Comte de Grammont, 1772, of
which only 100 copies were printed, twentyfive of which went to Paris; The Sleep Walker,
a comedy in two acts, 1778; A Description
of the villa of Mr. Horace Walpole, 1784, of
which 200 copies were printed; and Hieroglyphic Tales, 1785.
A private printing office was carried on by
the notorious John Wilkes at his house in
Great George Street, Westminster, (fn. 6) where he
produced two works in 1763 and a few copies
of the third volume of the North Briton. He
is said to have employed Thomas Farmer, who
had also assisted Horace Walpole at Strawberry Hill. (fn. 7)
One of the few firms of renown in later
times outside the City of London is that
of Gilbert & Rivington. John Rivington,
fourth son of John Rivington the publisher,
and descendant of Charles Rivington of the
"Bible and Crown," Paternoster Row, succeeded to the business of James Emonson,
printer, in St. John's Square, Clerkenwell.
Rivington died in 1785, and his widow then
continued the business, taking John Marshall
into partnership in 1786. The firm became
noted for their fine series of the classical
authors. After many changes the business
passed into the hands of Richard Gilbert, who
in 1830 entered into partnership with William
Rivington, great-grandson of the first Charles
Rivington; the firm then became and has
since continued to be known as Gilbert &
Rivington. (fn. 8) The business has since 1881
been converted into a limited liability company, and the firm has a high reputation for
its oriental printing. (fn. 8a)
The well-known firm of Nichols, of Parliament Street, Westminster, was founded and
long continued in the City of London, and
does not come under notice here. The old
firm of Charles Whittingham & Co., though
on the borders of our county, also properly
belongs to London, having started in Fetter
Lane, and being now established in Took's
Court, Chancery Lane.
The story of the Kelmscott Press is a
fascinating page in the annals of 19th-century
printing. In May 1891 Mr. William Morris
the poet set up a private press in the Upper
Mall, Hammersmith, where he printed a small
quarto book entitled The Story of the Glittering
Plain. This was soon followed by a threevolume reprint of Caxton's Golden Legend,
illustrated with splendid woodcuts from the
designs of Sir Edward Burne-Jones. Together
with those completed by his executors after
his death, Morris printed in all fifty-three
books in sixty-five volumes, including the
magnificent Chaucer. By his tasteful combination of artistic borders, initials, and illustrations, with beautiful paper, Morris showed
the world how the book as a whole might be
made a thing of beauty, and his influence
upon book-production will certainly be longlived.
The local presses of Middlesex (fn. 9) are not
important and cannot be treated of at length.
At Ratcliff, John Storye (fn. 10) printed in (?) 1585
A breviat or table for the better observance of
fish days. William Bentley printed Bibles at
Finsbury in 1646, 1648, 1651, and later.
Thomas Newcomb printed the London Gazette
in the Savoy from 1665 to 1668. In other
places in Middlesex the earliest known products of the press date from the 18th century.
A few instances may suffice. Thomas Davis
printed in Whitechapel in 1706. Whitehead's Satires were printed at Islington, 'near
the Three Pumps,' in 1748. T. Lake was a
printer at Uxbridge in 1774. Printing was
carried on at Chelsea in 1772. (fn. 11)
Type Founding.- Closely allied to the art
of printing is that of type-founding. Modern
type-founding was first successfully established in England at Caslon's foundry in
Chiswell Street, close upon the City's border.
Caxton seems to have imported from abroad
some at least of the type which he used in
printing. His immediate successors, Wynkyn
de Worde and Pynson, may have used their
own types, and Pynson is thought to have
supplied other printers with type, but of this
there is no direct evidence. (fn. 12) John Day in
1567 cast the type for the works published by
Archbishop Parker in Anglo-Saxon. After
this date type-founding languished here for
nearly two centuries. English type had a
poor repute, and the best continued to be imported from Holland. In 1637, by a decree
of the Star Chamber, type-foundries in England were limited to four, each of which was
allowed to have two apprentices and no more.
William Caslon, founder of the existing letterfoundry in Chiswell Street, was born in 1692.
He first turned his attention to type-founding
in 1740, when he was engaged by the Christian Knowledge Society to make the punches
for a fount of Arabic type for printing the
Psalms and New Testament in that language.
This decided him to follow type-founding as
a distinct trade, and he established his foundry
in Chiswell Street, his first punches being cut
with his own hands. This foundry became
the parent house of type-founding in England,
and the excellence of Caslon's workmanship
soon drove Dutch types from the English
market. William Caslon died in 1766, and
the firm was then continued by William his
son, who died in 1778, Elizabeth Caslon,
who died in 1809, and Henry William Caslon, who died in 1874. (fn. 13) The business is now
conducted by a limited company under the
style of H. W. Caslon & Co. Limited.