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Chap. 21 - THE MINOR FOUNDERS FROM 1800 TO 1830

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2011

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Summary

This foundry was begun in Sheffield about the beginning of the present century. In 1810, Mr. Bower issued a price list below those of the London founders, whose founts he succeeded occasionally in underselling. Hansard mentions the foundry in 1824, under the style of Bower, Bacon and Bower. No specimen is known with an earlier date than 1837, when the firm was G. W. Bower, late Bower and Bacon.

A later specimen bears the name of Mr. G. W. Bower alone, and in 1841 the firm was Bower Brothers, who published Proposals for establishing a graduated scale of sizes for the bodies of Printing Types, and fixing their height-to-paper, based upon Pica as the common standard.

After the death of Mr. G. W. Bower, the foundry was continued by Mr. Henry Bower till his death about 1851, in September of which year the plant and stock were sold by auction and dispersed among the other founders. The Catalogue of this Sale contained about 50,000 punches and matrices; many of them, however, being obsolete or of small value.

BROWN, 1810.—LYNCH, 1810

These two individuals are included among the Letter Founders whose names are given in Mason's Printer's Assistant—the former having had his place of business in Green Street, Blackfriars, and the latter in Featherstone Buildings. They do not appear to have continued long in business, and their names are not included in the list of Letter Founders given in Johnson's Typographia in 1824.

Type
Chapter
Information
A History of the Old English Letter Foundries
With Notes, Historical and Bibliographical, on the Rise and Progress of English Typography
, pp. 357 - 364
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1887

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