The British Art Printer and Lithographer

Subtitle: "A Journal in the Interests of the Printer, the Lithographer, the Artist, the Engraver, the Process Worker, the Bookbinder"

Related Journals

  • Art Printer & Lithographer
    • In 1895, when Hilton was barred by court from publishing The British Art Printer and Lithographer, he tried to evade the injunction by switching the title to The Art Printer and Lithographer for the journal's remaining 3 issues

Start Date(s)

  • 1895 (journal itself)

End Date(s)

  • 1895 (Shattock)
  • 1896 ()

Editor(s)

Printer/Publisher(s)

City

  • Swindon, England (COPAC)
  • , (NSTC)

Notes

  • "THE BRITISH ART PRINTER AND LITHOGRAPHER, a bi-monthly journal in the interests of good printing and fine illustration. Conducted by Robert Hilton. Sample copy, 30 cts.; $2.00 per annum. For the letterpress printer, the lithographer, the artist, the engraver and process worker and the bookbinder. Fine supplements in wood-cuts, halftones and photochromotypes, chromo and monotint lithography, collotype and photogravure. Fully up-to-date in all technical subjects relating to the craft" ("Representative" p. 496)
  • "In May [of 1896] Raithby, Lawrence won an injunction against Hilton ordering him to desist [editing and publishing The British Art Printer and Lithographer] for ten years dating from the original 1890 agreement, and he was also ordered to pay the plaintiff's court costs. Hilton agreed to the judgment, but it was soon discovered that he had visited his printer again and paid for the sheets of the second number in the name of G. Brown. The second number appeared in July (backdated to March/April and now called simply The Art Printer & Lithographer)" (Young pp. 39-41)
  • Was later called The Art Printer & Lithographer (from vol. 1 no. 2 March/April 1895 to 1896) (Shattock p. 52)
  • Printer/publisher changes in 1895: “The firm of Messrs. Eddington & Cadbury has been dissolved and the business ‘closed out.’ The proprietors of The Art Journal have, therefore, taken the printing and publishing of that journal under their own control” (“Prints” p. 145)
  • Publisher's address (Eddington & Cadbury, The Victoria Press): Swindon, Wiltshire ("Representative" p. 496)
  • Publisher's address (London): 25 Pilgrim St., Ludgate Hill ("Gatherings" p. 122)
  • Editor's address: 37-39 Essex Street, Strand ("Representative" p. 496)

Subject Categories

Issues

Sources that Discuss this Journal

  • "Gatherings" p. 122
  • "Prints" p. 145
  • "Raithby" p. 202
  • "Representative" p. 496
  • COPAC
  • NSTC
  • Roberts p. 36
  • Shattock p. 52
  • Stewart vol. 1, p. 401
  • Ulrich and Kup p. 83
  • Young p. 39-41

Works Cited

  • "Gatherings." The American Bookmaker, vol. 19, no. 4, Oct. 1894, p. 122. Google Books.
  • "Prints." The Photogram, vol. 2, no. 18, June 1895, pp. 145-46. Google Books.
  • "Raithby, Lawrence & Co. v. Hilton." The British Printer, vol. 8, no. 46, July-August 1895, p. 202. Google Books.
  • "Representative Trade Journals." The Inland Printer, vol. 14, no. 5, Feb. 1895, pp. 496. Google Books.
  • COPAC: Consortium of Online Public Access Catalogues. Library Hub Discover, JISC.
  • NSTC (Nineteenth-Century Short Title Catalogue), in C19: The Nineteenth-Century Index, Chadwyck-Heaney, 2020. ProQuest.
  • Roberts, Helene E. “British Art Periodicals of the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries.” Victorian Periodicals Newsletter, no. 9, 1970, pp. 1–183. JSTOR.
  • Shattock, Joanne. The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature. Vol. 4: 1800-1900. Edited by Frederick W. Bateson. 3rd ed. Cambridge UP. 1999.
  • Stewart, James D., editor. British Union-Catalogue of Periodicals. 4 vols. Butterworths, 1968.
  • Ulrich, Carolyn F., and Karl Kup. Books and Printing: A Selected List of Periodicals, 1800-1942. W. E. Rudge, 1943.
  • Young, Matthew McLennan. The Rise and Fall of the Printers' International Specimen Exchange. Oak Knoll P, 2012.
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