Francis Bailey (publisher) explained

Francis Bailey
Birth Date:3 September 1744
Birth Place:Sadsbury Township, Pennsylvania, British America
Death Place:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Occupation:Printer

Francis Bailey (September 3, 1744 – November 1, 1817) was an early American printer, publisher and journalist in Pennsylvania from 1771 to 1807.

He began publication of the Lancaster Almanac in Lancaster, PA in 1771 and published the United States Magazine in 1778. In 1781, he became editor of the Freeman's Journal. In addition to printing editions of the Articles of Confederation and Thomas Paine's Common Sense, he acted as printer for Congress and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.[1]

Bailey was the first printer to refer to George Washington, in print, as the Father of His Country. He was also the first to print the first official printing of the first U.S. constitution, then called The Articles of Confederation.[2]

He was the first American publisher of the writings of Emanuel Swedenborg in 1787.[3]

Bailey was taught the printing trade by Peter Miller in Ephrata, Lancaster county. In 1778 or 1779 he removed to Philadelphia where he published a newspaper. Eventually he returned to Lancaster. Bailey's daughter-in-law managed a press shop in Philadelphia in 1818.[4]

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Founders Online . National Archives . March 24, 2019.
  2. [#stoltzfus|Stoltzfus, article]
  3. Web site: Gyllenhaal . Ed . New Church History Fun Facts . Academy of the New Church . March 24, 2019.
  4. [#thomas1874a|Thomas, 1874]