- For the thoroughbred horse trainer of the same name, see
Charles E. Whittingham
Charles Whittingham (16 June 1767-5 January 1840)
was an English printer.
Biography
He was
born at Caludon or Calledon, Warwickshire
, the son of a farmer, and was apprenticed to a
Coventry
printer and
bookseller. In 1789 he set up a small printing press in a
garret off Fleet
Street
, London
, with a loan
obtained from the typefounding firm of William Caslon, and, by 1797, his business
had so increased that he was enabled to move into larger
premises.
An edition of
Gray's
Poems,
printed by him in 1799, secured him the patronage of all the
leading publishers. Whittingham inaugurated the idea of printing
cheap, handy editions of standard authors, and, on the
bookselling trade threatening not to sell his
productions, took a room at a
coffee
house and sold them by auction himself.
In 1809 he
started a paper-pulp factory at Chiswick
, near
London, and in 1811 founded the Chiswick
Press. From 1810 to 1815 he devoted his chief attention
to illustrated books, and is credited with having been the first to
use proper overlays in printing
woodcuts, as
he was the first to print a fine, or "Indian Paper" edition. He was
one of the first to use a
steam engine
in a
pulp mill, but his presses he
preferred to have worked by hand. He died at Chiswick.
His nephew, also
Charles Whittingham (1795-1876),
who from 1824 to 1828 had been in partnership with his uncle, in
1838 assumed control of the business.
He already had
printing works at Took's Court, Chancery Lane
, London, and had printed various notable books,
specially devoting himself to the introduction of ornamental
initial letters, and the artistic arrangement of the printed
page. The imprint of the Chiswick press was now placed on
the productions of the Took's Court as well as of the Chiswick
works, and in 1852 the whole business was removed to London. Under
the management of the younger Whittingham the Chiswick Press
achieved a considerable reputation. He died on 21 April 1876.
References
External links