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Proof of our Albion's origin

March 27, 2018 Ray Nichols

A few weeks ago, we requested research information from the archives at The Frick Collection in New York City. We've been trying to find positive evidence that our Albion iron hand press was indeed one of a pair of Albion presses purchased in the late 1920s by Porter Garnett, director of Laboratory Press at the Carnegie Institute of Technology, to print The Frick Collection Catalogue. Laboratory Press was the first fine press educational program in the United States.

We purchased the press in May 2008 from the Museum of Printing, then in North Andover, Massachusetts (now in Haverhill). Here is a photo of us loading the press on our trailer.

Over the past several years, we've put together a lot of circumstantial evidence that our press was one of the Carnegie Institute presses. Still, we have longed to see the actual serial number (8112) written down somewhere.

The answer came back today, which you can see in the photo at the top.

The photo above shows the serial number before we cleaned off the paint to expose some very precious metal. Below is a beauty shot of our Harrild and Sons Super Royal (20.5" x 27.5") Albion iron hand press.

The photo below of two printers working on The Frick Collection Catalog started as circumstantial evidence. In Gabriel Rummonds' book, Printing on the Iron Handpress, the photo's caption listed the press as being in Pittsburgh. Another photo with the same caption showed 2 iron hand presses.

The image below, which shows legs that match our Albion, got Ray to thinking our press might somehow be connected, and voila, it is.

← Laboratory Press : metal type composition the old-fashioned wayThe actual March for Our Lives →

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