Albion press

The Albion press is a model of early iron hand printing press, originally designed and manufactured in London by Richard Whittaker Cope (d. 1828?) around 1820. It worked by a simple toggle action, unlike the complex lever-mechanism of the Columbian press and the Stanhope press. Albions continued to be manufactured, in a range of sizes, until the 1930s. They were used for commercial book-printing until the middle of the nineteenth century, and thereafter chiefly for proofing, jobbing work and by private presses. Francis Meynell often used an Albion to proof pages of his designs for Nonesuch Press books, and printed some small books and ephemera using the press.

Albion Press of 1898 at the Bodleian Library, Oxford.

After Cope's death, Albions were manufactured by his heirs and members of the Hopkinson family (trading initially as 'Jonathan and Jeremiah Barrett' and later as 'Hopkinson and Cope'), who are said to have improved the design. From the 1850s onwards Albion presses were manufactured under licence by other firms, notably Harrild & Sons, Miller and Richard, and Frederick Ullmer Ltd.[1][2] The toggle-action, and the distinctive shape and 'crown' finial of the Albion, make it instantly recognizable.

References

  1. Victorian Government Printing Office; Hopkinson & Cope (1900), Printing Press - Hopkinson & Cope, Albion, 1859, Museum Victoria, retrieved 8 May 2019
  2. "Journalism in Western Australia". The W.A. Record. XXV (1055). Western Australia. 15 December 1900. p. 80. Retrieved 8 May 2019 via National Library of Australia.
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