spridgets
[Top] [All Lists]

Re: [Spridgets] California fires

To: midgetsprite@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [Spridgets] California fires
From: "Robert Bruce Evans" <b-evans@earthlink.net>
Date: Sun, 18 Nov 2007 18:17:00 -0800
Jim Johnson wrote:  "My last year of high school...I got a part time job with 
the local newspaper as a Linotype operator.... Does that count as being from 
the days of "hot type"??"

Do you have splatter marks from the hot lead too?  

Most people today have never heard of a Linotype machine, let alone the name 
Ottmar Mergenthaler.  Ottmar, a clockmaker by trade, ranks right up there with 
Johannes Gutenberg, for in 1886, his new machine that produced a "line of type" 
was the first new printing improvement in over 400 years.   It was his machine, 
the Linotype, that gave publishers for the ability for first time to produce 
books and newspapers for the masses.  It was the machine that at the time made 
the United States the most literate and informed society in the world.  While 
they began to pass from the scene with the introduction of cold type in the 
1970's and then by computers, because of their unique abilities, they are still 
found in job shops across the country.

Although he actually designed the machine in 1883, he nearly went insane trying 
to figure out how to make the correct spaces between words so that the line 
would be "right justified".  The day (and his sanity) was saved when he devised 
the wedge-like spacebands that did the job automatically, and the first machine 
from the Mergenthaler Linotype Company was used at the New York Herald in 1889. 

Although Mergenthaler died a decade later, many of you still use products from 
his company:  http://www.linotype.com/ .

That concludes today's lesson.  Snap quiz on Tuesday.

Silas P. Gumbody
Professor of Printing History
Bald Knob, Arkansas
_______________________________________________

Edit your replies

http://www.team.net/archive

http://autox.team.net/mailman/listinfo/spridgets

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>