Printing Historical Society Explained

The Printing Historical Society (or PHS) is a learned society devoted to the study of the history of printing, in all its forms.

History

The Society was founded in London in 1964 by a group of teachers, scholars, students of design and bibliography, librarians, professional printers and amateur enthusiasts, notably James Mosley, James Moran, John Dreyfus, Michael Turner, Berthold Wolpe, David Chambers and Michael Twyman.[1] At the time, and to some degree ever since, the PHS had close connections with the St Bride Library (then called the St Bride Printing Library) and the Department of Typography & Graphic Communication at the University of Reading. The PHS was the first society to be instituted specifically for the study of printing history, and has been followed by several others, notably the American Printing History Association.

Aims

The aims of the PHS are stated to be "to foster an interest in the history of printing and encourage both the study and the preservation of printing machinery, records, and equipment of historical value".[2] In 2016 it subsumed the National Printing Heritage Trust,[3] and added to its aims to raise funds to preserve printing equipment and archives, and to lobby for the creation of a national printing museum for the U.K.[4]

Publications

Since its inception, the PHS has produced a series of scholarly publications which are available to members, and often also to the general public. An occasional monograph series has included reprints of works and specimens of historical significance, as well as original books on printing type, printing presses, lithographic printers and other aspects of the discipline. In 2015 the Society issued An epitome of the history of printing in sixteen leaves as a keepsake for its fiftieth anniversary (which included pages printed by all the main reproductive processes, from woodcut to digital) and a special number of the PHS Journal.[5] The Journal was originally issued annually and latterly published twice a year, has a good reputation for learning, originality, accuracy and detail, and for the reproduction of specimens of historical printing processes and documents. The Society has also published a Bulletin and, after 2000, joined with the Friends of St Bride and the National Printing Heritage Trust in issuing the quarterly Printing History News (edited by Paul W. Nash 2005–2015 and Ken Burnley 2015 onwards). The Journal has had a series of distinguished editors and guest-editors, including Mosley, Twyman, Margaret M. Smith, Richard Lawrence and John Trevitt. It has been edited by Paul W. Nash since 2014.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. David . Chambers . David John Chambers . Iain . Bain . Iain Bain . The Printing Historical Society: the early years . Journal of the Printing Historical Society . n.s. . 21 . 2014 . 7–18 .
  2. Quotation of original aims from www.printinghistoricalsociety.org.uk.
  3. Paul W. Nash, "Closure of the National Printing Heritage Trust", Printing History News 51 (Summer 2016), p. [1].
  4. "The principal aims of the trust", National Printing Heritage Trust, Certificate of membership (2015), p. [2].
  5. Journal of the Printing Historical Society n.s. 21 (2014).