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  • Joseph Hertgen
  • Bill Young of Lititz
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D. B. Landis Wants Your Business.

Ink Blotters Printed by David Landis to Advertise his Print Shop

Before ballpoint pens became popular here in the 1940s, everyone wrote with fountain pens.  So everyone needed an ink blotter when their fountain pens overflowed, or wouldn't flow smoothly.

Buinesses advertised their companies on ink blotters, like business cards.  In addition to printing blotters for other companies, David Landis printed at least 50 different ink blotters to advertise his own printing business.  Here are a few of those Landis blotters.

(Click Image to Enlarge It.)

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(Click Image to Enlarge It.)

06:56 AM | Permalink

D. B. Landis Prints his Masterpiece: His Book "Lancaster Lyrics"

In 1914, at age 52, D. B. Landis printed and published his greatest work: his beautifully-crafted book of poetry Lancaster Lyrics.

This book is a showcase of Landis's poetry about the pleasures and pains of life in Lancaster County.

Landis began writing poetry when he was a schoolboy in Landisville, where he wrote with the pen-name "Davy Derby." 
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(Above: David's Portrait in his Book Lancaster Lyrics)



David Mourns his Two Young Children:

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(Above) In 1891, when David was 29 years old, his two young childred died of diptheria, one day apart. A few months later he wrote these poems in their memory. 23 years later he printed the poems in his book Lancaster Lyrics.



David Prints his Photos of Lancaster County in His Lancaster Lyrics Book:

David's favorite pleasures were photography and bicycling.  He pedalled up and down Lancaster's back roads to capture fleeting images of our rural landscapes and early architecture. He printed these images as screened halftone prints in his Lancaster Lyrics.

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David Celebrates Lancaster County's Favorite Sin: Overeating

The life of D. B. Landis is a celebration of his Pennsylvania German  (Pennsylvania Dutch) heritage. David was the leading historian of his family's Mennonite ancestry. (In 1888, at age 26, he authored and published his family's genealogy: The Landis Family of Lancaster County.) He was the eighth generation of Landises in this county.

David was bilingual.  He spoke both English and the Pennsylvania German dialect. He printed poems in both languages.  Lancaster Lyrics also includes David's poems that are sort-of his Dutchified poems. These affectionate poems capture in ink the thick Germanic accents of his countrified relatives and neighbors.

David wrote Dot Belly! (That Belly!) in 1912, and printed it two years later in his Lancaster Lyrics book.

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04:57 PM | Permalink

John Baer is the People's Friend: the "Volksfreund" Newspaper

Volks2_1best John Baer transformed one of Lancaster County's most-failed newspapers into our most-popular German-language newpaper: Der Volksfreund (The People's Friend) (...as in the Volkswagen...The People's Car.)

This floundering newspaper had twice suffered the public humiliation of being sold at sheriff sales, before John Baer purchased the paper in 1817.

The printers William Hamilton and Joseph Ehrenfried had both lost this floundering newspaper at sheriff auction, before John Bear transformed this sour lemon into lemonade.  Baer turned this paper into "a complete pecuniary and political success."

In 1838 John Baer also purchased Der Beobachter (The Observer) from Samuel Wagner.  John then combined his two newspaper into one weekly paper: Der Volksfreud und Beobachter.

Baer published this newspaper for 20 years until his death in 1858.  His sons Reuben and Christian then continued the publication of the Volksfreund.

John Baer: A Bilingual Printer for a Bilingual People

Volks40best_1 John Baer's customers spoke both Pennsylvania German and English. So did John Baer. He printed his newspaper with Roman and fraktur fonts to appeal to both sides of the language divide.  Here, in his October 1824 Volksfreund newspaper, he announces the upcoming first issue of the first almanac he ever printed, the Agricultural Almanac. Gerald Lestz continues publication of this almanac today. Baer also advertises his handbill-printing business here.  This newspaper issue also includes an address by Judge Franklin (Richter Franklin).  This is Judge Walter Franklin, who was the President Judge of the Court of Common Pleas. (Click Image to Enlarge It.)


John Baer Says: Buy your Dutch Ovens from George Mayer

Volks1bigbest Colonel George Mayer (1781-1862) was a wealthy Pennsylvania Dutch iron merchant / hardware-store owner.  In this 1820 Volksfreund advertisement The Colonel promotes his iron wares for sale at his Lancaster hardware store: his Eisen Glas u.(nd) Farben Stohr (Iron, Glass and Paint Store.)

John Baer used one of his fanciest fonts for The Colonel's advertisement. Presumedly, these ads were a great success. The Colonel eventually owned four house and more than 8 acres of land in Lancaster.

In this ad, The Colonel's wares include 50-gallon iron kettles (eisen-kettel), Dutch ovens (Backöfen), and woodenware / cedar ware (Zeder-Geschirr).

Colonel Mayer's hardware store and John Baer's print shop were both located on the first block of North Queen Street.

The Colonel was competing with John F. Steinman's hardware store, located around the corner on West King Street. (Located at the site of my favorite letterpress restaurant, The Pressroom Restaurant.)

Today we remember the Colonel as the inventor of the Mayer butt hinge, a somewhat ill-named claim to fame.

(Click  image to enlarge it.)

07:51 AM | Permalink

David Landis Loves Landisville

David Landis loved his hometown Landisville. He loved everyone's hometown around here.

David had a life-long love affair with Lancaster County.  He celebrated this affection in his poetry book Lancaster Lyrics ...and in the postcards he photographed, printed, and published.

David's postcards are autobiographical images of Lancaster's historic architecture and landscapes.

His postcards are his personal tribute to the local communities that patronized his art and built his business.

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07:56 AM | Permalink

David Landis's "Job Printing": Saffron and other Drugs

Druggist1_1 David Bachman's bread-and-butter work was "job printing": designing and printing paper items for local businesses. 

David's business savvy allowed him to corner the market for printing for local druggists.

David kept archived samples of his job printing. These druggist container labels are from his archive.

Here in Lancaster County, our farm families' favorite use of the saffron herb is to flavor our egg noodles and to color our chicken-corn soup a crayon yellow.

Foodies often describe saffron as "the world's most expensive spice."  But if it's been growing behind your barn for 100 years, it's as cheap as dirt.

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09:10 AM | Permalink

So is it John Bear, Bär, or Baer?

John's signature appears as "John Bear" beneath his portrait in the 1883 History of Lancaster County by Ellis and Evans. He also used this spelling on title pages of his English-language books, although he printed his German name, Johannes Bär, on title pages of his German-language imprints. 

John's sons Reuben and Christian spelled their name "Baer", which is the spelling used for the Baer almanac today. John's biographers have used all three spellings.  So do I.  I like to keep everyone happy.

01:10 PM | Permalink

"The Best Pressman in America" Prints a Smash Hit: The 1804 Mennonite Hymnal

Gesangbuch_initial Johann Albrecht was the best pressman in America, according to Albrecht's fellow printer William McCulloch of Philadelphia.   

Johann was indeed Lancaster's most prolific printer of the 18th century.   From 1787 to 1806 he printed and published more than 100 editions of German-language books, pamphlets, and almanacs.

The local Mennonites quickly learned that Johann Albrecht was the perfect partner for their publishing projects. (Even though Johannes was Moravian, not Mennonite.)

The most popular book Johann ever printed was a brand-new 1804 Mennonite hymnal ...titled Ein Unpartheyisches Gesang-Buch (A Non-Sectarian Hymnbook). This songbook was an instant, runaway bestseller.

Albrechttune_1 This book was uniquely challenging for Johann to print, because of the many pages of musical notation. The Lancaster Mennonites had requested that Johann print lots of musical notes in this songbook, and not just text.

They said that the Mennonite hymnbook printed the previous year by Michael Billmeyer in Germantown (near Philadelphia) had too much text and not enough notes. (the 1803 Zions Harfe / Zion's Harp).

Johann met this challenge by printing lots of hymn tunes in this songbook with lots of diamond-shaped notes. 

The local Mennonites were pleased as punch with Johann's final result. The first edition of 1804 was followed by an 1808 edition, printed by Johann's sons Georg and Peter.

This book became the most reprinted hymnbook of any American Mennonite hymnbook. By the 1980s this book had been published 32 times.

After the first two Albrecht editions, John Baer printed five more editions, in 1820, 1829, 1841, 1848, and 1853. John Baer's sons then printed nine more editions. Beginning in 1923, numerous editions were printed by the local Amish with the imprint "Verlag von den Amischen Gemeinden in Lancaster County, Pa."

Johann Albrecht's hymnbook is now the oldest American Mennonite hymnal in continuous use ...in the galaxy.  Here in Lancaster County, the Old Order Mennonites and the Amish have been singing the same German-language hymns in this same songbook for more than 200 years. And next Sunday they will sing these same songs again.

P.S. Thank You to the late Martin Ressler for being the definitive bibliographer of Ein Unpartheyisches Gesang-Buch.

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Above: A young Mennonite boy named Johannes Miller received this 1804 songbook (Gesang-Buch) from his grandfather Isaac Kaufman, on February 21, 180?.  Johannes Miller (born 1797) grew up to became a prominent businessman in Manheim Township where he operated a grist mill.

His grandfather who gave him this songbook, Isaac Kaufman, owned land that became today's Landis Valley Museum.

An anonymous fraktur artist created a watercolor-and-ink fraktur for Johannes' songbook, and inscribed the boy's name on the endpaper.

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Above: A Matched Pair of Ein Unpartheyisches Gesang-Buch (A Non-Sectarian Hymnbook) Printed by Johann Albrecht in 1804 for the Mennonites. (The top one has Johannes Miller's fraktur on the endpaper.)

03:54 AM | Permalink

Johann Albrecht Shows Off his Printers' Ornaments

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Sometime in the early 1800s, the Philadelphia printer William McCulloch referred to Lancaster's Johann Albrecht as the best pressman in America. (in McCulloch's letters to the Boston printer Isaiah Thomas, who in 1810 authored the first history of American printing.).

Maybe McCulloch was easily impressed by Johann's printers' ornaments. (Hey, I am too.)  Johann jazzed-up his printing with these type-metal ornaments, to brighten-up his blackletter text.

This (snowflake?) was one of John's favorites ornaments. Johann's decorations that I show above are in these books:

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Jesus und Die Kraft seines Bluts: (Jesus and the Power of his Blood) by Johann Daniel Otterbein, a pastor in Dillenburg, Germany, who was associated with today's Church of the United Brethren in Christ. Printed by Johann Albrecht in Lancaster in 1790.

Der Psalter der Könings und Propheten Davids: (The Psalms of the Kings and the Prophet David) printed by Johann Albrecht in Lancaster in 1791.

Fliegender Brief evangelischer Worte an die Jugend: (Evangelistic Pamphlet [Flying Letter] to the Youth) by Ernst Gottlieb Woltersdorf, a Lutheran teacher in Germany. Printed by Johann Albrecht in Lancaster in 1794.

Das Eifrige Christenthum: (Passionate Christianity) by Thomas Watson, a Puritan pastor in England. Printed by Johann Albrecht in Lancaster in 1802. It's the first American edition, and is based on German-language editions from Basel and Frankfurt.

The covers for Johann's printed books are no great beauties. But they sure are pious.

06:06 AM | Permalink

Johann Albrecht's Sun God: Phoebus Shines Bright on Lancaster County

Neuer Lancästerscher Calender, 1808  (New Lancaster Almanac, 1808)

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In 16th century almanacs and in Early-American poetry a sun couldn't just be a sun.  It had to be Phoebus the Sun God from ancient mythology.  And the moon had to be Diana.

...as in "...tis an omen bad, the yoemen say, if Phoebus shows his face the second day."

...or as in ..."scarce shall setting Phoebus vanish, ere the deathless deed be done," an exact quote of the very-poetic Boston Patriots when they were dumping tea overboard at the Boston Party, if you believe Early-American poets.

Sun2 This bright-and-shining face smiles down on the front covers of all the almanacs printed by Johann and his sons.

Whatever the name of that smiley-faced God, his radiance certainly was working well for Lancaster in 1808, when Johann's sons Georg and Peter printed this almanac.

Lancaster City was basking in its urban prosperity.  It had flourished, to become one of the largest inland cities in the United States at that time. It had even become the capital of Pennsylvania, a title the city held from 1799 to 1812.

Lancaster County was equally prosperous, and had become a Breadbasket of America. It had become the proverbial Land of Milk and Honey.

Thankfully that happy-faced Sun God still shines bright here in Lancaster, despite the threats of Father Time.

Cale1_1 The Albrechts' Landwirthschafts Calender ( Agricultural Almanac)

09:41 AM | Permalink

Francis Bailey: Lancaster's Favorite Hot-Headed Printer

Steuben3best_1 Francis Bailey is my favorite Revolutionary War printer. He was defiant. He was radical. He fought British taxes with his press. He was anti-Federalist in a Federalist Lancaster County.  He was Swedenborgian, when his neighbors were Presbyterian and Mennonite.  Francis Bailey was a rascal.

Francis Bailey is the perfect Scots-Irish symbol of a revolutionary American free press. He is one of Lancaster's greatest claims to letterpress fame.

Francis' family had deep roots in southern Lancaster County. Francis learned the printer's trade from Peter Miller, at the Ephrata Cloister. Francis then set up shop in Lancaster, at the site of today's Lancaster Newspapers.


Francis Bailey's Firsts:

We bibliophiles have an obsessive lust for firsts: First editions, First printings, First American editons, First Australian editions, First illustrated editions, First thus editions....  Fortunately, Francis Bailey has lots of Firsts.

Francis printed some of the great, iconic works of our Early American nation. He was:

  • The first printer to name George Washington, in print, as the Father of His Country.
  • The first printer to print the first official printing of the first U.S. constitution (the Articles of Confederation)
  • The first printer to print the first editon of the first major book of poetry of the "Father of American Poetry," Philip Freneau, who was also known as "The Poet of the Revolution".
  • The first printer to print the first publication (A Sermon on Tea) of Lancaster-born David Ramsay, an important historian of the American Revolution.
  • The first printer to print government securities certificates for the first opening of the New York Stock Exchange in 1792.
  • The first printer to print in America the works of Swedish mystic Emanuel Swedenborg  ...helping Johnny Appleseed (of cooking-pot hat fame) become a Swedenborgian missionary.
  • The official printer of the U.S. Congress and the state of Pennsylvania.  (Not a First, but not bad.)

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A Francis Bailey Timeline: 

1735? - Octorara, Lancaster County: Bailey is born in Sadsbury Township, Lancaster County, into an old Scots-Irish / Presbyterian family. His parents are Robert Bailey and Margaret McDill Bailey.

ca 1753 - Ephrata, Lancaster County: Bailey is a printing apprentice to Peter Miller and the printers at the Ephrata Cloister. (Yes, Bailey has to use a block of wood for a pillow, like everyone else in the cloister.)

1771 - Lancaster City:  Bailey opens a print shop in Lancaster.

1773 - Lancaster City: Bailey begins printing on West King Street, at the site of today's Lancaster Newspapers. He prints here until he moves his business to Philadelphia circa 1780.

1774 - Lancaster City: Bailey prints Sermon on Tea, calling for American resistance to the British, authored by Lancaster-native David Ramsay. (Don't be a slave to the British. Don't drink their tea.)

1776 - Lancaster City: Bailey prints an early edition of Thomas Paine's Common Sense, the first American publication to openly call for independence from England. The first edition had been published anonymously in Philadelphia, earlier that same year.

1777 - Lancaster City: Bailey prints the first official printing of  the Articles of Confederation, which is the first constitution of the U.S.  The next year he prints these Articles in German, titled Artikel Des Bundes...This is probably the first German-language printing.

1778 - Lancaster City: Bailey prints a short-lived newspaper: Das Pennsylvanische Zeitungs-Blat (The Pennsylvania News Sheet)  He calls himself Frantz Bailey in this newspaper. Frantz uses this newspaper mainly to tell Lancastrians about the British occupation of Philadelphia.

Also in 1778 - Lancaster City: Bailey is the first to name George Washington "Father of his County, when the cover of Bailey's 1779 almanac calls "Waschington" "Des Landes Vater."

1779 - Philadelphia: Bailey prints and publishes the United States Magazine, edited by York-County native Hugh H. Brackenridge. Philip Freneau, know as "The Father of American Poetry" contributes poetry to each issue.

1780 - Lancaster City  and Philadelphia: Congress authorizies Bailey to print an impossibly-tedious, 226-page book: The Constitutions of the Several Independent States of America and the Treaties; The Declaration of Independence; The Articles of Confederation between the said States; The Treaties

Bailey prints this book at his Lancaster print shop, with some of the work "farmed out" to Philadelphia printers. This book serves as the basis for many reprints in Europe, Britain, and America. (The book has a 1781 Philadelphia imprint.)

By 1780 - Philadelphia: Bailey opens a full-time print shop in Philadelphia on Market Street between Third and Fourth Streets. His print-shop sign is a painting of a skull: the skull of Shakespeare's Yorick ...made famous by Hamlet's skull monologue. Bailey's Philly imprints say "Printed by Francis Bailey at Yorick's Head."

1781 - Philadelphia: Bailey begins printing and publishing his infamous Freeman's Journal newspaper. This newspaper is stridently anti-federalist. Meanwhile, Lancaster County is stridently Federalist.

1784 - Philadelphia: Bailey hears a lecture by Swedenborgian Scotsman James Glen, and becomes the first American apostle of the Swedenborgian church, and their first American printer. This year he also prints the Pennsylvania Constitution in German: Die Regierungsverfassung der Republik Pennsylvanien...

1786 - Philadelphia: Bailey prints the first collected edition of the poetry of Philip Freneau who is "The Father of American Poetry."   The book is titled The Poems of Philip Freneau. Written Chiefly During the Late War.

1792 - Philadelphia: Bailey buys the type-founding equipment used by Jacob Bay of Germantown, near Philadelphia. Bay was the Swiss-American type founder who had become one of the first American typefounder in the 1770s, after working for Christoph Saur II. Bailey had purchased much of his type from Bay.

1797 - Philadelphia:  Bailey prints the first American book on the subject of bridge building: An Essay on Building Wooden Bridges, authored by the artist Charles Wilson Peale. (Three years later the cornerstone is laid for the first known American covered bridge at Easton, PA., built by Timothy Palmer.)

1797 -  Octorara, Lancaster County: Francis Bailey's father transfers the Bailey homestead in Octorara to Francis, two years before the father's death at age 90. Francis Bailey builds a print shop here, and continues on as the official printer for the State of Pennsylvania, until his death in 1815.

1800 - Lancaster City: Francis and his son Robert print numerous books here, including Pennsylvania's Acts of the General Assembly and reports of the state House of Representatives.

By 1803 - Lancaster City: Bailey has transferred his Lancaster printing business to his son, the printer Robert Bailey.

1807 - Octorara, Lancaster County: Bailey prints The Young Mill-Wright's and Miller's Guide, authored by Oliver Evans and Thomas Ellicott, about flour mills. It is "one of the most important native-grown works of early American technology." (William Reese, authority on printed Americana.)

1812 - Philadelphia: McCulloch describes Bailey: "He is a very aged man, has often the vertigo, and is not often to be seen. He was bred a carpenter, in Lancaster county. He obtained some knowledge of printing in a country town."

1815 - Philadelphia:  Bailey dies. His daughter-in-law, Lydia Bailey, and his grandson, Robert William Bailey continue their own printing business.

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More Bailey Links:

Bailey Poses for his Portrait:  Bailey's 1791 portrait is at the Cincinnati Art Museum. It is by Charles Wilson Peale.  Bailey holds a letter "A" in his hand. (You might not be able to see the "A" unless you Photoshop it.) Bailey has big ears. (To see the portrait you have to click on the museum's "I accept these terms.")

Mrs. Bailey Holds a Book:  Mrs. Francis Bailey was Elenor Miller Bailey, formerly of Bart Township, Lancaster County.  Her 1791 portait is also at the Cincinnati Art Museum. Hopefully the book she is holding was printed by her husband. (To see the portrait you have to click on the museum's "I accept these terms.")

Bailey's 1775 Lancaster Broadside about the Battle of Bunker Hill. It's boring typography, but it's not boring history.

Swedenborgian Church names a Building for Bailey: Urbanan University, in Ohio, built "Bailey Hall" in 1853.

Bailey was a Witness to Ben Franklin's Will.  This is the text of Ben's will.

Bailey Prints Money.  Some of Bailey's Pennsylvania notes and stock certificates are at this link. Search for the word Bailey.

Bailey Prints Another Revolutionary Broadside in 1776: This one is signed by Matthias Slough, one of Lancasters most ardent revolutionaries. Slough also was Lancaster's most prominent innkeeper.  His White Swan tavern was located where today's Watt and Shand building is located.

Bailey Prints a New Testament, but Only One Complete Copy Survives:  In 1780, Bailey printed an English-language New Testament in Philadelphia. The Houston Baptist University has the only known copy. 

08:21 PM | Permalink

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