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Press Figures in America: Some Preliminary Observations by G. Thomas Tanselle
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Press Figures in America: Some Preliminary Observations
by
G. Thomas Tanselle

The study of press figures in recent years has provided an important tool for the bibliographical investigation of eighteenth-century books. Though it has long been known that these figures appeared in English books as early as 1680 and as late as 1823,[1] their significance has not even yet been fully explored; in the studies that have appeared, volumes printed in England have been drawn upon for illustration, and nothing has been said about American practice. Indeed, I have talked with bibliographers who assumed that press figures were not used in America at all, since printing shops in the colonies rarely had more than two presses[2] and their record of work would thus not be difficult to keep in other ways. The matter is less simple, however, and press figures certainly were used, at least by the end of the eighteenth century. An examination of these figures should prove of interest both for what they reveal about American printing practice and for the additional evidence they may hopefully furnish toward clarifying the exact nature of press figures in general.

In the course of examining well over a thousand books printed in America between 1775 and 1825,[3] I discovered, first of all, that press figures are in fact quite rare in American books and do not occur with anything like their frequency in English books of the same period. But beyond that, I found that certain printers at certain times did use figures extensively and regularly. Two clusters began to emerge within


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the group of books I was looking at: certain volumes printed in Philadelphia in the 1790's and others printed in New York in the 1810's. Admittedly the volumes had been chosen, at this stage, on the basis of their availability; which books I came across in various libraries was entirely a matter of chance. The grouping, then, did not constitute a statistically valid random sample; amounting to only one per cent of the books published in America during these years, it may not have been representative in any way. Nevertheless, it did yield nearly one hundred volumes with press figures, a large enough body of evidence on which to base a few tentative observations.[4]

In addition, certain procedures made the search somewhat less random than at first appeared. For one thing, when a figured volume was located, other books issued by the same printer were specifically sought out. In some cases (as with Isaac Riley) many figured books were found in this way; in others (as with John Thompson and Jacob Berriman) no further figured books turned up. Second, eighty-one Bibles were examined, representing forty-seven of the printers of English Bibles in America before 1820, on the theory that (1) if a particular printer ever used press figures, he would have been likely to use them in such a long book,[5] and (2) this type of survey would provide a quick index to the practices of a large number of printers. As it turned out, eighteen of these Bibles, the work of seven printers, did contain figures.[6]


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It should also be pointed out that various kinds of numbers other than press figures may appear in the lower margins of printed pages during these years. This is not the place to survey American practice in using numerals as signatures, but it is of course true that numerals, rather than letters, were increasingly employed as signatures in the early nineteenth century. At the turn of the century numerals were occasionally used in conjunction with letters to register a consecutive count of the quires: Mathew Carey's Bibles, for example, generally have, on the first recto of every gathering, a number in parentheses to the left of the signature—as "(23) Z" followed by "(24) AA".[7] Another kind of figure is the numeral identifying each section of a work to be issued and sold in parts. In John Payne's New and Complete System of Universal Geography (Evans 34316), printed in 1798-1799 by John Low of New York, the fourth verso of each of the first ten gatherings of the text is labeled "No. 1"; quires L through U are marked "No. 2" on $4v; X through Gg "No. 3"; and so on—indicating that the work was issued in ten-quire sections.[8] A third kind of figure is that which records the use of standing type: Mathew Carey's early Bibles from standing type sometimes give the number of the impression on $1r and $3r (the seventh, 19 August 1805, is an illustration); later a more complicated system is used, with a double figure in parentheses on $1va (as 26-3 in 1808, 39-1 in 1811, 47-8 or 48-1 in 1813, 83-2 in 1818).[9]


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Leaving aside all these figures (however intriguing, as those of Mathew Carey undoubtedly are), I shall record in the following pages some of the press figures which I have thus far discovered in American books. The first section will take up a sampling of the work of several printers (all but one from Philadelphia) in the 1790's, giving a more detailed examination of the work of one of them, Thomas Dobson, and of one of his products, the great eighteen-volume Encyclopaedia. The Bibles enter into this section because, with the exception of some of Mathew Carey's Bibles, none of the sixty-nine post-1800 Bibles I examined contained figures. The second section deals with some of the works printed in the 1810's by Isaac Riley of New York (and the related printer Charles Wiley) and again concentrates on one large project, in this case Riley's important series of state supreme court reports.

The evidence provided by all these volumes does not, unfortunately, solve the most vexing questions about press figures: the significance of unfigured formes in otherwise figured works,[10] and the identification of the figures as designating machines or men.[11] But the aims


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of the present survey are less ambitious: to record the press figures in a number of volumes whose figures have not previously been noticed, in the belief that valid conclusions about the nature of press figures (or the distribution of work among pressmen in a given shop at any time) can come only after a large body of data has been accumulated. It is too early to draw many conclusions about American press figures; but the progress toward those conclusions will certainly be facilitated by having a body of evidence readily available and a standardized method for recording it. The present aims, in short, are simply to furnish a starting point, however tentative, for the analysis of American press figures and to supplement, however provisionally, the information already acquired about English press figures.[12]

I

The practice of using printed figures to keep a record of the work done by particular pressmen[13] was employed extensively in the 1790's by several of the most prolific printers in Philadelphia. Such men as David Hall, William Sellers, and Thomas Dobson were making use of these figures at the beginning of the decade and at its end. One should assume, therefore, since they issued Bibles, statutes of Pennsylvania, and encyclopedias, that a large body of material exists, from which a thorough survey of American press figures can some day be drawn. Only a few works will be examined here, to serve as illustrations of the practice of several different printers at various times throughout the decade. First, three books printed by Hall & Sellers (in 1790, 1791, and 1798) will represent the work of one firm at different times and in different formats; then three Bibles, each by a different printer and in a different format, will provide some comparisons; three books printed by Thomas Dobson will act as an introduction to his great work, the Encyclopaedia; and, finally, a quick look at the complications of Mathew Carey's Bibles will serve as a transition to the next century.


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Hall and Sellers, whose names first appeared in joint imprints in 1766, issued in 1790 a duodecimo Book of Common Prayer and Whole Book of Psalms (listed separately in Evans but printed together with continuous signatures). This book, gathered in sixes, contains the figure 1 twenty-four times, in every case on $6v:

1. Book of Common Prayer and Whole Book of Psalms. Philadelphia: Hall & Sellers, 1790. Evans 22821 and 22356. NN.

12: a-c6 A-Uu6, 276 leaves, pp. [331] 4-221 [222-224] [=552].

Figures: figure 1 on $6v of a, b, c, A, B, D, H, K, M, N, O, Q, S, U, Y, Aa, Cc, Ee, Gg, Ii, Ll, Nn, Pp, Rr.

Little can be deduced from this meager example. One may merely observe that the figures, when they occur, are placed invariably on the last page of a gathering but that nearly half the quires (twenty-two) are unfigured. The figures alone do not here provide such unequivocal evidence of half-sheet imposition as they do in some other volumes, although the fact that 1 occurs on the same page of five consecutive gatherings (a-c, A-B) —and later in three (M-O) —strongly suggests half-sheet imposition (for in the case of two half-sheets worked together the same figure would not be expected to occur in the same forme of two consecutive quires). However, the pattern for most of the volume (particularly from O through Ss) is an alternation between figured and unfigured gatherings; assuming that a second pressman worked without a figure, this arrangement of figures is consistent with the results obtained by working two half-sheets together. Surely the lack of a figure, in this instance, does represent the work of a second press; but whether that press printed every other sheet by half-sheet imposition, or the inner formes of two consecutive half-sheets, is a matter impossible to determine on the basis of the figures alone. In other words, evidence from the figures suggests that at least gatherings a, b, c, A, F, G, M, N, Tt, and Uu are the product of half-sheet imposition but that the other thirty-six gatherings could conceivably be the result of either method of producing half-sheets.[14]

A second Hall & Sellers example, from the following year, illustrates a regular division of labor in folio:

2. Acts of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania [7 December 1790 to 13 April 1791]. Philadelphia: Hall & Sellers, 1791. Evans 23670. DLC.

2: π1 a-i2 χ1 A-Dd2, 74 leaves, pp. [i-iii] iv-xxxix [xl], [1] 2-108.

Summary of figures: 4 of 36 sheets figured in both formes, 28 figured in one forme, 4 unfigured.

   
Fig.  1v   2r   1r   2v   Totals 
19  25(i)  11(o)  36 


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In this second Hall & Sellers volume, as in the first, the only figure that appears is 1, and again the unfigured formes clearly represent work by another pressman, since the usual pattern is for each sheet to consist of one figured and one unfigured forme (and whenever both formes of a sheet are figured, both formes of another sheet are unfigured, so that the balance is retained). The long series of sheets (from F through Q) in which the inner formes alone are figured suggests offhand that composition was keeping pace with presswork, while those sheets in which both formes (or neither forme) are figured suggest that at those points composition was lagging behind or that one press was required briefly for another job; the alternating pattern (as in Q-S, Y-Aa, Cc-Dd) could also indicate an imbalance between composition and presswork, if the inner or outer formes were consistently the first formes through the press; but, if this condition did not obtain, then obviously other explanations could fit. In the absence of precise information about the figures in other books printed at the same time in Hall & Sellers' shop, it is difficult to make any reliable deductions about the relations between composition and presswork or the size of the edition.

Of course, certain rough calculations can be made. If one accepts the estimate that a colonial compositor could set approximately 600 ems (1200 ens) per hour,[15] then a forme of this book (roughly 8000 ens) would have been nearly seven hours' work; if the output of the press was about a token an hour (250 sheets, not perfected),[16] then nearly 1750 copies of a forme could have been machined in that same time. If then the appearance of figure 1 in many consecutive inner formes is taken to mean that the minimum time for presswork on any one inner forme was the time required for composing the next inner forme, the result would be to estimate the edition at 1750 copies (or perhaps between 1500 and 1750); however, if only one compositor were attempting to supply both presses, the time available for presswork would be twice as long. On the other hand, the appearance of figure 1 in three consecutive formes, two inner and one outer (as in Bb-Cc), might suggest, if two compositors were working, an edition of only 750 to 875 copies, or, with one compositor, an edition of 1500 to 1750 copies


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(the same as that postulated for two compositors above). It is not necessary to assume that the pressmen were machining each forme during the whole of the time available, for Benjamin Franklin commented on the fact that, given the small size of editions in America, pressmen did not have constant work, as compositors did, and "must often stand still";[17] or pressmen might work on other jobs, such as blank forms or broadsides. Press figures, in other words, will become of greater usefulness in these calculations as more complete data are assembled about the work in a shop at any particular time and as more precise time limits can be established through external evidence.

One interesting feature of the volume is the appearance of figures (three times) on $1r—that is, on the same page as the signature—contrary to customary practice in both England and America. The usual locations in Hall & Sellers folios at this time (at least as illustrated by this book) are the recto and verso of the second leaf of each gathering; it is impossible, at the present stage, to assign reasons for the deviations, since they do not occur simply at those places where $2 presents an unusual situation (such as short text) and since they may be the result merely of fortuitous circumstances that made it more convenient to insert the figure in one place rather than another.

One more book printed in this shop, another volume of session laws characteristically issued as a folio in twos, shows that seven years later the practice in placing figures had shifted somewhat:

3. Laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Volume II. Philadelphia: Hall & Sellers, 1798. Evans 34331. MWA.

2: π2 a-b2 c1 A-9X2 2AH2 2I1, 434 leaves, pp. [4] [i] ii-ix [x], [1] 2-817, 2i-iii [34].

Summary of figures: 129 of 216 sheets figured in both formes, 32 figured in one forme, 55 unfigured.

   
Fig.  1v   2r   1r   2v   Totals 
131/4  137/6  144(i)  146(o)  290 

NOTE: Oblique lines are used to separate frequencies for column a of a page from those for column b, with the number following the oblique line referring to column b; where no oblique lines appear, the figures referred to occur nearer the left side of the page. Figures for abnormal gatherings or inserted sheets (such as 2I in this example) are not included in the tabular statistics.

As in the earlier volume, the only figure which appears is 1, but the regular position for figuring the inner formes has become $1v instead of $2r (although figures appear on $2r a number of times near the beginning of the volume). As before, figures do appear on the first page of a gathering, along with the signature (four times: F, 2E, 2H, and the single leaf 2I at the end). But, contrary to earlier practice, the division of labor (assuming the unfigured formes to be the work of a second press) is not generally


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to assign the two formes of each sheet to separate presses; normally here (129 times) the figure appears in both formes, with occasional interruptions when both formes are unfigured. A pattern sometimes seems to emerge (as in 3Z-4L, where alternate gatherings are figured in both formes and the intervening ones entirely unfigured), but it does not last for long, and certain runs of doubly figured sheets are quite extensive (as 7L-7Y, 8A-8I, 9G-9S, 2A-H). Perhaps the most interesting feature of the figuring is the positions of the figures relative to the footnotes, although the differences in these positions probably do not distinguish different pressmen but are only indications of the shifting ease or difficulty of inserting figures at particular points. There are a great many long footnotes in the volume, and the figures are 108 times placed above the footnotes (that is, between the text and the note) and 25 times below. In ten instances also the figures occur near the right margin, the normal position being near the left.

Three Bibles, printed at various times through the decade, may serve to represent the figuring of three more printers. The first of these Bibles, the work of William Young, a prolific Philadelphia printer who began issuing books in 1785, shows the unusual situation in which the signature page is the preferred one for figures:[18]

4. Holy Bible. Philadelphia: W. Young, 1790. Evans 22345, Hills 25. NN.

12: A-Ll12, 408 leaves, no pagination.

Summary of figures: 4 of 34 sheets figured in both formes, 21 figured in one forme, 9 unfigured.

           
Fig.  2r   1r   2v   5r   12v   Totals 
13/1  3(i)  15(o)  18 
0/1  0/1  0(i)  4(0) 
1(i)  6(o) 
---  ----  ---  --  ---  ---  ---  --- 
Totals  21/1  0/1  0/1  4(i)  25(o)  29 

Although only four sheets (Dd, Ff, Gg, Ll) are figured in both formes, the fact that the same figure appears in both formes in those instances suggests that, in the majority of sheets, the unfigured inner forme was machined by a different man from the figured outer one. Perhaps this pattern supports the suggestion that figures were not used (and indeed were superfluous) when presswork was proceeding according to some previously arranged schedule and were needed only when there were deviations from it.[19]


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Young's Bible of the following year, though gathered differently (with alternating quires of six and twelve leaves), still has its figures (when they appear) on $1r.

Another instance of figuring on $1r and $2r furnishes, at the same time, an example of the large quarto Bible. The 1792 Bible printed in New York by Robert Hodge and Samuel Campbell contains fifty-five figures:

5. Holy Bible. New York: Hodge & Campbell, 1792. Evans 24097, Hills 38. NN.

4: π2 A-3M4 χ3K-3M4 3N4R4; 2A-Q4; 3A-Ee4 3Ff2; a-i2, 554 leaves, no pagination.

Summary of figures: 4 of 133 sheets figured in both formes (T, U, Aa, Hh), 47 figured in one forme, 83 unfigured; all 11 half-sheets unfigured.

         
Fig.  2r   3v   1r   4v   Totals 
0(i)  5(o) 
0/1  45  5(i)  45(o)  50 
--  ---  ---  --  ---  ---  --- 
Totals  0/1  49  5(i)  50(o)  55 

Since the major part of the book is not figured, and since figures do appear at scattered points throughout (as in 4M, 4N, and 2A, after the regular figuring stops with 3N), one may take the volume as a further indication that figures were sometimes used to record occasional assistance by a press not originally assigned to the job.

One further Bible—representing a third format, the large folio—may be chosen from the work of the Philadelphia printer Jacob R. Berriman:

6. Holy Bible. Philadelphia: Printed for Berriman & Co. by Jacob R. Berriman, 1796. Evans 30065, Hills 53. NN.

2: [A]2 B-7I2 [7K]2 7L-9D2, 376 leaves, no pagination.

Summary of figures: 150 of 188 sheets figured in both formes, 12 figured in one forme, 26 unfigured.

         
Fig.  1v   2r   1r   2v   Totals 
37/1  56  74/1  94(i)  76(o)  170 
22  39  80  61(i)  81(o)  142 
----  --  -----  -----  -----  ---- 
Totals  59/1  95  154/1  155(i)  157(o)  312 

Although $1r had been a standard position for figures in the two previous volumes, it is clear that Berriman avoided the signature page, for the outer forme is almost exclusively figured on $2v, while the inner is figured extensively on both $1v and $2r. No figures appear in this book until sheet O, but after O there are only 38 unfigured formes; if figures are used only for unscheduled piecework, then the bulk of the volume falls into this category—which may conceivably be the case, since the presswork was started without figures (the first thirteen sheets). Another large folio Bible of this time which exhibits a similar pattern of figures is the famous "hot press" edition printed by John Thompson and Abraham Small of Philadelphia in 1798. Not only are figures lacking in the first 36 sheets, but there are large gaps later in the volume; where figures do appear, they are normally on $2ra and $2va, as in the Berriman work, and again only the


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figures 1 and 2 are used (but with more variation in position on the page, since they often come at the right side, or in the center, of the lower margin).

The final series of examples from this period represents the work of perhaps the most enterprising of the Philadelphia printers before Mathew Carey—Thomas Dobson. Although his name appeared in imprints in 1786 and 1787, it was not until 1788 that he began printing some of the books he promoted, and another year or two before he printed any considerable number; but by 1790 he was ready to embark on the great Encyclopaedia, which he brought to conclusion in 1798 and which furnishes an extensive illustration of the sustained use of press figures. Before turning to that work, one may glance at a few other figured books from his shop during the same years. Thomas Percival's Moral and Literary Dissertations illustrates Dobson's practice, in half-sheet duodecimo, of figuring the last page of a quire:

7. Thomas Percival. Moral and Literary Dissertations. Second Edition. Philadelphia: Thomas Dobson, 1798. Evans 34342. Tanselle copy.

12: [A]6 B-S6 T2, 110 leaves, pp. [i-iii]iv-xii,[1]2-204 [205] 204 [2].

Summary of figures: 14 of 18 half-sheets figured, 4 unfigured.

           
Fig.  1v   6v   Totals 
---  ---  --- 
Totals  13  14 

The only deviation from the pattern, the 1 on F1v, is explained by the fact that F6v is blank. An earlier volume, in half-sheet octavo, also shows the consistent choice of the last page of a gathering for figures, though the figures occur more sporadically:

8. William Currie. An Historical Account of the Climates and Diseases of the United States. Philadelphia: Thomas Dobson, 1792. Evans 24239. MWA.

8: π4A-3F4, 212 leaves, pp. [4] [1] 2-4, [1] 2-409 [410], [i] ii-v [vi].

Summary of figures: 22 of 53 half-sheets figured, 31 unfigured.

           
Fig.  4r   4v   Totals 
11  11 
---  ----  ---- 
Totals  21  22 

The deviation on E4r is due to the fact that the text is short on E4v, although somewhat short texts on Ii4v and 3C4v did not prevent the placing of figures on those pages. Dobson occasionally issued separately some of the longer articles in the Encyclopaedia, and the same year (1792) saw the publication of such an extract in A Compendious System of Anatomy (Evans 24206); gathered in eights, it too is normally figured (with a 3)


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on the last page of gatherings. And a crown quarto, published the year after the Encyclopaedia, shows resemblances to the method of figuring in the large work:

9. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society. Volume IV. Philadelphia: Thomas Dobson, 1799. Evans 35106. WU.

4: a-e4 f2, A-B4 C2 D-Ll4 Mm-Nn2 Oo4 (-Oo3) Qq4-4E4, 307 leaves, pp. [i-ii] iii-xliv, [1] 2-281 288-531 [532-534] [=528], [1] 2-42.

Summary of figures: 2 of 75 sheets figured in both formes (Aa, Kk), 30 figured in one forme, 43 unfigured; 3 of 4 half-sheets figured (C with 2, Mm and Nn with 1).

           
Fig.  1v   4r   2v   4v   Totals 
0(i)  5(o) 
4(i)  9(o)  13 
11  4(i)  12(o)  16 
--  --  --  ---  ----  -----  --- 
Totals  25  8(i)  26(o)  34 

As in the Encyclopaedia, the figures generally appear on $4r and $4v, with more outer formes than inner figured; and, as in the last volume of the Encyclopaedia, the figures stop altogether halfway through.[20] Another Dobson quarto, also figured with 1, 2, and 4, and figured on $4r and $4v, is the 1796 printing of The Four Gospels, annotated by George Campbell.[21]

Dobson's crowning work is of course the eighteen-volume Encyclopaedia, the largest job that any American printer had attempted up to that time. It is a reprinting of the third edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, with revisions and additions (the article on "America," for example, was completely rewritten by Jedidiah Morse). Dobson took each part of the Britannica as it was issued, set his men to work on it, and managed to keep pace with the Edinburgh printers, for his final volume appeared only a few months after the Edinburgh one. His original plan was to issue the work in weekly parts of five gatherings each. Printing began late in 1789, and the first weekly issue appeared at the beginning of January 1790. The tenth issue, released in early March, finished the first half of Volume I, and with


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that issue the practice of weekly publication ceased; from then on, a half-volume was issued approximately every ten weeks. Although separate title pages, all bearing the date 1798, were supplied for each volume upon completion of the entire work in 1798, it is nevertheless possible to date with some accuracy the appearance of each volume and to deduce the amount of time available for the printing of each. To have completed a work of such magnitude so expeditiously, and to have fallen so little behind schedule, Dobson must certainly have been an efficient and industrious manager. The whole production is generally considered the greatest achievement in American printing before the nineteenth century; in the words of Lawrence Wroth, the Encyclopaedia "marks the end of printing in America as a household craft and the beginning of its factory stage of development."[22]

It is appropriate that such a work should be one of the first American instances of the consistent and extensive use of a professional device for keeping efficient records—the press figure. And, as an example, it is nearly an ideal one, for it is large enough to provide plentiful data and prolonged enough to represent one printer's work during a period of more than eight years; the volumes are comparable as printing jobs, since they are parts of the same work, and the knowledge of the time taken to produce each one is important external information of a kind not always available. Dobson did not use press figures at the beginning of his task, probably believing that the division into weekly parts itself provided a convenient enough way of keeping records. On $4v of every fifth gathering of Volume I through 3D (the work is quarto) appears an indication of the weekly issues—that is, "No 1" falls on E4v, "No 2" on K4v, "No 3" on P4v, and so on. After sheet 3D ("No 10"), when the weekly issue ceased, these numbers still occur through the rest of the volume (except that numbers 11, 15, 19, and 20 are missing), but press figures also make a somewhat tentative appearance in seven formes. In Volume II Dobson is still not sure, for "No 22" appears on K4v and "No 23" on P4v, but after that figures occur consistently through the volume and the following fifteen volumes. Then, in the final volume, figures appear only in the first half (through 3D); beginning with 3E, the signature page also carries the designation "Part II," and the practice of using figures seems to have been abandoned.

If the dating of these volumes established by Evans (in 33676-93) is correct, it is interesting to note the way in which the number of different figures in each volume correlates with the supposed speed of production. In Volume II, the first one regularly figured, only the figures 1 and 2 are used, and this is true also of Volume III; these volumes may have required


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more than the predicted twenty weeks each to print, since only two volumes per year were issued in 1790 and 1791. Then, according to Evans, Volumes V, VI, and VII came out in 1792 and VIII, IX, and X in 1793; the press figures increase accordingly to 1, 2, and 3 in IV and V, and to 1, 2, 3, and 4 in VI through XI. When the pace again slows down to two volumes per year in 1794, 1795, and 1796 (Volumes XI through XVI), the number of figures decreases to three (1, 2, and 4). And 1, 2, and 4 are also the figures in XVII (mid-1797) and XVIII (early 1798). Even though the work is not divided equally among these pressmen, it is in accord with common sense to find that more pressmen were at work on those volumes which were produced more quickly. Such would not be the case if some of the pressmen machined only one or two formes for a given volume in odd moments between other jobs (as in XIV, where 3 appears only once), but in general each figure that appears represents a substantial amount of work.

Assuming again that the colonial compositor could set 1200 ens an hour, it would have taken him about 32 hours to set one forme, for the Encyclopaedia's closely-packed double column pages contained about 9620 ens each. If a pressman, machining roughly a token an hour, worked for 32 hours on one forme, the result would be an edition of 8000 copies, surely an unwarrantably large number. Furthermore, if an edition of this magnitude were postulated, the volumes could not possibly have been printed in the envisaged time; for a pressman, machining approximately eight tokens a day, six days a week, would require more than 41 weeks to complete 62 formes—and figure 4 appears in 62 formes of Volume VII, one of the volumes supposedly produced most rapidly. There is no reason to suppose, therefore, that the pressmen engaged in work on the Encyclopaedia spent their entire time on it—in fact, the Dobson Four Gospels of 1796 contains the same figures (1, 2, 4) as those in the Encyclopaedia volumes of that year. Nor is there reason to suppose that the copy could not have been cast off accurately (given the printed copy of the Edinburgh edition), so that more than one compositor might work at once.

Continuing with the example of Volume VII for a moment, the time taken to produce that volume had to be great enough to allow for the machining of 62 formes, since that is the largest number machined by any one man (even assuming all the unfigured formes to be printed by one man, there are only 44 of them). Because Volume VII falls in the middle of that series of volumes seemingly published with greatest speed, it may be safe, for purposes of argument, to assume that the originally planned rate—for the whole volume—of ten formes a week (or a volume in twenty weeks) was actually achieved. If, then, a man worked steadily for twenty weeks to complete 62 formes, the size of the edition would be in the neighborhood of 3870 copies; but of course he may not have devoted so much time to this job. Perhaps a more accurate basis for calculation is to begin with the notion of issuing five sheets (ten formes) per week. Since the


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figures in later volumes (after Volume I) indicate generally a division of labor between the inner and outer formes, one may then assume that a pressman was expected, at most, to machine five formes in a week, a figure that suggests an edition of 2400 copies.

All these numbers are, at this stage, only rough guesses based on various feasible ways of manipulating the data; it is not possible, without more knowledge of other work in Dobson's shop at the same time and other external information, to be much more precise. But such calculations do suggest the help which press figures will some day be able to give. And further possibilities may suggest themselves to anyone who examines carefully the patterns in an extended series of figures. The press figures in Dobson's Encyclopaedia offer an opportunity, unique in American printing, for doing this, and summaries of them are presented below:

10. Encyclopaedia; or a Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and Miscellaneous Literature. . . . Philadelphia: Printed by Thomas Dobson [1790-]1798.

  • Volume I. [1790]. Evans 22486, 33676. ICU. 4: π2 a2 b4 A-5H4, 408 leaves, pp. [2] [i-iii] iv-xiv, [1] 2-799 [800].
  • Summary of figures: Press figures appear only in five quires, as follows:                
    (i)  (o) 
    Sig.  4ra   4va  
    ----  ----  ---- 
    4D 
    4E 
    4G 
    4H 
    4I  2b 
  • Volume II. [1790]. Evans 22486, 33677. ICU, IEN-M. 4: π1 A-4C4 dddd-nnnn 2 4D-5H4, 421 leaves, pp. [2] [1] 2-576 [40] 577-799 [800].
  • Summary of figures: 51 of 100 sheets figured in both formes, 9 figured in one forme, 40 unfigured; 1 of 10 half-sheets figured (dddd with 2).

         
Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   1r   2v   3r   4v   Totals 
14/2  33/5  17(i)  39(o)  56 
10/1  22/2  19/1  35(i)  20(o)  55 
--  --  --  ---  ---  --- 
Totals  11/1  36/4  52/6  52(i)  59(o)  111 

  • Volume III. [1791]. Evans 23351, 33678. ICU. 4: π1 A-5I4, 405 leaves, pp. [2] [1] 2-806 [807-808].
  • Summary of figures: 78 of 101 sheets figured in both formes, 22 figured in one forme, 1 unfigured.

         
Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   1r   2v   3r   4v   Totals 
20/5  1/1  67  25(i)  69(o)  94 
51/1  28  56(i)  28(o)  84 
--  --  --  ---  ---  --- 
Totals  71/6  1/1  95  81(i)  97(o)  178 

  • Volume IV. [1791]. Evans 23351, 33679. ICU. 4: π1 A-4H4 4I2 4I*2 4K2 4K*2 4L-5G4 χ1, 398 leaves, pp [2] [1] 2-793 [794].

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  • Summary of figures: 50 of 97 sheets figured in both formes, 41 figured in one forme, 6 unfigured; 3 of 4 half-sheets figured (two times with 2, once with 3).

           
Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   1r   2v   3r   4v   Totals 
2/1  17  33/1  21(i)  35(o)  56 
2/1  26/1  2/1  28/1  32(i)  33(o)  65 
10  10(i)  10(o)  20 
--  --  --  --  --  --  ---  ---  --- 
Totals  4/1  5/1  51/1  3/1  71/2  63(i)  78(o)  141 

  • Volume V. [1792]. Evans 24300, 33680. IEN-M. 4: π1 A-4X4 4X*4 (-4X*4) 4Y-5I4, 408 leaves, pp. [2] [1] 2-720 [6] 721-807 [808].
  • Summary of figures: 45 of 102 sheets figured in both formes, 55 figured in one forme, 2 unfigured.

           
Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   1r   2v   3r   4v   Totals 
o(i)  5(o) 
24  46  32(i)  51(o)  83 
17  30  24(i)  33(o)  57 
--  --  --  --  --  ---  ---  --- 
Totals  10  41  80  56(i)  89(o)  145 

  • Volume VI. [1792]. Evans 24300, 33681. IEN-M. 4: π1 A-5G4 5H1, 398 leaves, pp. [2] [1] 2-794.
  • Summary of figures: 64 of 99 sheets figured in both formes, 35 figured in one forme.

             
Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   1r   2v   3r   4v   Totals 
2/1  16  24  25(i)  26(o)  51 
3/1  12/3  23/2  19(i)  26(o)  45 
3/1  12  0/1  32/4  18(i)  39(o)  57 
6(i)  4(o)  10 
--  --  --  --  --  --  ---  ---  --- 
Totals  9/3  44/3  1/1  83/6  68(i)  95(o)  163 

  • Volume VII. [1792]. Evans 24300, 33682. IEN-M. 4: π1 A-5H4, 401 leaves, pp. [2] [1] 2-797 [798-800].
  • Summary of figures: 57 of 100 sheets figured in both formes, 42 figured in one forme, 1 unfigured.

             
Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   1r   2v   3r   4v   Totals 
0/1  22  5(i)  23(o)  28 
3/1  10/1  18/2  17(i)  21(o)  38 
16  9/1  18(i)  10(o)  28 
21/1  33  26(i)  36(o)  62 
---  --  --  --  ---  ---  --- 
Totals  5/1  52/2  3/1  82/3  66(i)  90(o)  156 

  • Volume VIII. [1793]. Evans 25450, 33683. IEN-M. 4: π1 A-5G4, 397 leaves, pp. [2] [1] 2-89 98-799 [800] [=792].
  • Summary of figures: 38 of 99 sheets figured in both formes, 60 figured in one forme, 1 unfigured.

             
Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   1r   2v   3r   4v   Totals 
11/1  7/2  13(i)  9(o)  22 
27  7(i)  28(o)  35 
20  12(i)  21(o)  33 
13/1  24/3  16(i)  30(o)  46 
--  --  --  --  --  ---  ---  --- 
Totals  36/2  78/5  48(i)  88(o)  136 


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  • Volume IX. [1793]. Evans 25450, 33684. IEN-M. 4: π1 A-5H4, 401 leaves, pp. [2] [1] 2-800.
  • Summary of figures: 43 of 100 sheets figured in both formes, 56 figured in one forme, 1 unfigured.

             
Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   1r   2v   3r   4v   Totals 
1/1  17  3/1  22  20(i)  26(o)  46 
10/2  1/1  20/1  14(i)  23(o)  37 
12/3  5(i)  15(o)  20 
22/3  13(i)  26(o)  39 
--  --  --  --  --  --  ---  ---  --- 
Totals  6/1  40/2  4/2  76/7  52(i)  90(o)  142 

  • Volume X. [1793]. Evans 25450, 33685. IEN-M. 4: π1 A-S4 T2 T*2 U2 U*2 X2 X*2 Y2 Y*2 Z2 Z*2 Aa2 Aa*2 Bb-4H4 *4I2 4I-5F4 5G2, 397 leaves, pp. [2] [1] 2-620 619-788 [=790] [791-792].
  • Summary of figures: 22 of 92 sheets figured in both formes, 66 figured in one forme, 4 unfigured; 3 of 14 half-sheets figured (with 2, 3, and 4).

             
Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   1r   2v   3r   4v   Totals 
13  1(i)  14(o)  15 
0/1  6/1  14  9(i)  14(o)  23 
8(i)  8(o)  16 
14  31/1  21(i)  35(o)  56 
--  --  --  --  --  ---  ---  --- 
Totals  2/1  27/1  65/1  39(i)  71(o)  110 

  • Volume XI. [1794]. Evans 26943, 33686. IEN-M. 4: π1 A-5K4, 409 leaves, pp. [2] [1] 2-814 [815-816].
  • Summary of figures: 23 of 102 sheets figured in both formes, 72 figured in one forme, 7 unfigured.

             
Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   1r   2v   3r   4v   Totals 
2(i)  2(o) 
7/4  26/2  14(i)  31(o)  45 
3(i)  2(o) 
7/1  24  3/2  21/3  35(i)  29(o)  64 
--  --  --  --  --  ---  ---  --- 
Totals  9/1  36/4  5/2  51/5  54(i)  64(o)  118 

  • Volume XII. [1794]. Evans 26943, 33687. IEN-M. 4: π1 A-3S4 3T2 3T*2 3U2 3U*2 3X2 3X*2 3Y2 3Y*2 3Z2 3Z*2 4A-5A4 5B2 *5B2 5C2 *5C2 5D2 *5D2 5E-5H4, 401 leaves, pp. [2] [1] 2-799 [800].
  • Summary of figures: 29 of 92 sheets figured in both formes, 57 figured in one forme, 6 unfigured; 15 of 16 half-sheets figured (three times with 1, eight times with 2, four times with 4).

           
Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   1r   2v   3r   4v   Totals 
18/1  8(i)  22(o)  30 
9/2  23  19(i)  25(o)  44 
10/1  22/3  15(i)  26(o)  41 
--  --  --  --  --  ---  ---  --- 
Totals  17/1  17/2  63/4  42(i)  73(o)  115 

  • Volume XIII. [1795]. Evans 28628, 33688. IEN-M. 4: π1 A-5H4, 401 leaves, pp. [2] [1] 2-799 [800].
  • Summary of figures: 16 of 100 sheets figured in both formes, 76 figured in one forme, 8 unfigured.

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Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   1r   2v   3r   4v   Totals 
0/2  19  4(i)  21(o)  25 
19  7(i)  25(o)  32 
35/1  12(i)  39(o)  51 
--  --  --  --  --  ---  ---  --- 
Totals  10/2  73/1  23(i)  85(o)  108 

  • Volume XIV. [1795]. Evans 28628, 33689. IEN-M. 4: π1 A-5H4, 401 leaves, pp. [2] [1] 2-797 [798-800].
  • Summary of figures: 8 of 100 sheets figured in both formes, 77 figured in one forme, 15 unfigured.

               
Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   1r   2v   3r   4v   Totals 
0(i)  1(o) 
19  2(i)  20(o)  22 
2/1  14/1  5(i)  20(o)  25 
0/1  0(i)  1(o) 
0/2  2/1  0/1  28/1  7(i)  37(o)  44 
--  --  --  --  --  --  --  ---  ---  -- 
Totals  3/2  5/1  0/1  7/1  62/3  14(i)  79(o)  93 

  • Volume XV. [1796]. Evans 30390, 33690. IEN-M. 4: π1 A-5H4, 401 leaves pp. [2] [1] 2-799 [800].
  • Summary of figures: 21 of 100 sheets figured in both formes, 78 figured in one forme, 1 unfigured.

           
Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   1r   2v   3r   4v   Totals 
1/1  16  8(i)  16(o)  24 
16  9(i)  17(o)  26 
5/1  0/1  52/3  11(i)  59(o)  70 
--  --  --  --  --  ---  ---  --- 
Totals  4/1  15/1  0/1  84/3  28(i)  92(o)  120 

  • Volume XVI. [1796]. Evans 30390, 33691. IEN-M. 4: π1 A-5H4, 401 leaves, pp. [2] [1] 2-799 [800].
  • Summary of figures: 25 of 100 sheets figured in both formes, 70 figured in one forme, 5 unfigured.

           
Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   1r   2v   3r   4v   Totals 
24/1  11(i)  28(o)  39 
4/1  17  10(i)  17(o)  27 
46/1  6(i)  48(o)  54 
--  --  --  --  ---  ---  ---  --- 
Totals  11/1  14  87/2  27(i)  93(o)  120 

  • Volume XVII. [1797]. Evans 32088, 33692. IEN-M. 4: π1 A-5L4 5M2, 415 leaves, pp. [2] [1] 2-827 [828].
  • Summary of figures: 17 of 103 sheets figured in both formes, 81 figured in one forme, 5 unfigured; the one half-sheet unfigured.

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Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   1r   2v   3r   4v   Totals 
37/2  12(i)  44(o)  56 
3(i)  3(o) 
6/2  39/1  11(i)  42(o)  53 
--  --  --  --  ---  ---  ---  --- 
Totals  12/2  11  79/3  26(i)  89(o)  115 

  • Volume XVIII. [1798]. Evans 33693. ICN, IEN-M. 4: π1 A-6C4 6D2, 475 leaves, pp. [2] [1] 2-945 [946-948].
  • Summary of figures: 19 of 118 sheets figured in both formes, 30 figured in one forme, 69 unfigured.

           
Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   1r   2v   3r   4v   Totals 
22  8(i)  23(o)  31 
18  8(i)  18(o)  26 
3(i)  8(o)  11 
--  --  --  ---  ---  -- 
Totals  48  19(i)  49(o)  68 

The fact which strikes one immediately about these figures is the consistency with which they are used over a period of eight years. Their usual positions remain $4ra and $4va; the deviations from these pages (or even from the left to the right sides of these pages) are comparatively few. Certain patterns appear at times (such as the split between 1 and 2 in II and III, or the long run of 4 in XVI, A-X, and they usually suggest that inner and outer formes, in general, were worked off by different presses. The matter of unfigured formes is inconclusive: the same figure rarely occurs in both formes of a sheet, suggesting that perhaps unfigured formes were the work of the same pressman indicated in the related figured formes; on the other hand, the same figure does occur in both formes frequently enough to raise doubts (as in XI, where a distinction is seemingly made between the single 4 in 3I-3O, etc., and the double 4 in 3T, 4T, and 5D). The figures seem to have been placed with some care, for they usually are found above the footnotes, just as the signatures are (though there are exceptions, as IX, Kk4v); in the two instances in which a figure appears on $1r (XIV, Kk1rb, and XVI, 4K1ra), it comes below the footnote, while the signature remains above. But it required some attention to detail to insert figures so high on the page as was necessary to precede the long footnotes on X, Hh4v and Ii4v. In some cases where figures appear on leaves other than $4, though by no means all, there is some peculiarity (such as short text or a long footnote) which would render the figure more unsightly than usual or more difficult to insert; in other instances a figure appears despite a short text (see X, T2r), and in one volume a figure even comes on the final page, just above the words "End of the Seventh Volume." Since the placing of figures may often have been a function of the physical arrangement of the shop (just which edge of the forme was easier to reach


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at the proper moment),[23] the fact that three figures in the Encyclopaedia are upside down takes on added interest (figure 3 on VI, 3S4v; figure 4 on IX, Uu3v, and XIV, 5F2r). Systematic study of deviations from the usual positions, in conjunction with such accidents as turned figures, when undertaken for all the books in a shop at one time, may yield information about the mechanical set-up and physical organization of the shop.

An overall picture of the customs of figuring in Dobson's shop during these years, as represented in the Encyclopaedia, can be gained (from one viewpoint) by examining the habits of each of the pressmen who used figures, in terms of the number of times they figured each page:[24]

               
Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   1r   2v   3r   4v   Totals 
0(i)  1(o) 
19  26  136  19  395  182(i)  423(o)  605 
22  52  223  14  17  369  297(i)  400(o)  697 
16  76  132  99(i)  140(o)  239 
22  46  114  20  13  387  183(i)  421(o)  604 
--  --  --  --  --  --  --  ---  ---  --- 
Totals  70  140  549  45  54  1284  761(i)  1385(o)  2146 
The two least popular pages are $1r and $2r, but the reason is not the desire to avoid rectos, since the regular position for figuring inner formes is $4r and since the second most frequent position for outer formes is $3r. In other words, whenever $4r and $4v were not used, the chances favored $3r and $3v; the first two leaves were least often chosen. Of the four principal figures (the one o may be a mistake), number 3 is responsible for the smallest amount of work, while 1, 2, and 4 performed roughly the same amount. The resemblance between 1 and 4 is especially striking, both in the total number of formes worked (605-604) and the proportion of inner (182-183) and outer (423-421) —as well as in the fact that these are the only two figures to appear on $1r and $2r. Not only did the four men figure outer formes much more often than inner; they were more definite in their preference of the page on which to figure outer formes. Number 1 figured $4v in 93% of his figured outer formes; number 2, 92%; number 3, 94%; and number 4, 92%. But number 1 figured $4r in only 75% of his figured inner formes; number 2, also 75%; number 3, 77%; and number 4, 62%. The only departure from the general pattern is 4's preference of $2v over $3r as his second-choice position in the outer forme; but there are actually no striking deviations that serve to distinguish the four men.


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To complement this somewhat static overview, one may examine various percentages of figured and unfigured formes and sheets as they change during the course of the eighteen volumes:

                                         
Vol.  % formes figured  % formes unfigured  % sheets figured in both formes  % sheets figured in one forme  % sheets unfigured  % inner formes figured  % outer formes figured  % inner figured formes figured on $4r  % outer figured formes figured on $4v 
97  95  100  100 
II  56  44  51  40  52  59  77  98 
III  88  12  77  22  80  96  95  98 
IV  73  27  52  42  65  80  83  94 
72  28  44  54  55  87  73  90 
VI  82  18  65  35  69  96  70  94 
VII  78  22  57  42  66  90  82  94 
VIII  69  31  38  61  48  89  80  94 
IX  71  29  43  56  52  90  80  92 
60  40  24  72  42  77  72  93 
XI  58  42  23  71  53  63  74  88 
XII  63  37  32  62  46  79  45  92 
XIII  54  46  16  76  23  85  52  87 
XIV  47  53  77  15  14  79  43  82 
XV  60  40  21  78  28  92  57  95 
XVI  60  40  25  70  27  93  52  96 
XVII  56  44  17  79  25  86  42  92 
XVIII  29  71  16  25  59  16  42  47  98 
Averages 
(based on III-XVII)  66  34  36  60  46  85  67  92 
Volumes I, II, and XVIII, which are not figured all the way through, do not fall into the same pattern as the other fifteen volumes; volumes III through XVII do conform roughly to a pattern, with XIV the only notable exception (less than half its formes are figured). Since 85% of the outer formes are figured, as opposed to only 46% of the inner formes, one might argue, if one assumes unfigured formes to be the work of the same press as the preceding forme, that outer formes were normally the first laid on. However, if unfigured formes are not taken as the work of a separate press, then one would expect the percentage of sheets figured in both formes to rise at times when great speed was desired; yet, as the table shows, there is no steady increase in this figure for those volumes supposedly issued most rapidly (V-X), though it is true that the later figures are generally lower. Furthermore, when 66% of the formes are figured consistently over a period of years, it seems reasonable to assume that the figures represent a device for recording more than simply occasional piecework. The testimony of the figures provides a basis for reconstructing in detail the printing of the bulk of the Encyclopaedia, as soon as a few still doubtful points are cleared up. The answers to these questions (the significance of unfigured formes, the composition-presswork ratio, the length of time spent by pressmen in

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working off various formes) will emerge, it is hoped, from a study of Dobson's other work.

It remains to say a word about the other great Philadelphia printer of the time, Mathew Carey. Although he first issued a Bible (Douay) in 1790, the only Bibles of his in which I have discovered figures come after 1800. The story of Carey's numerous printings of the King James Bible from standing type after 1804 is a complex one which deserves detailed study in its own right, and it is not possible here, without the benefit of such a study, to do more than give the broadest outline of Carey's use of press figures. First of all, it may be worth calling attention to Joseph Charless, who printed Carey's first quarto King James Bible in 1801:

11. Holy Bible. Philadelphia: Printed for Mathew Carey by Joseph Charless, 20 October 1801. Shaw 171, Hills 77. NN.

  • 4: π1 A-4F4 2A-R4 x 2 4G-5F4 5G2 aaa-eee 4 fff 2, 467 leaves, no pagination.
  • Summary of figures: Figure 2 appears on $1v of every gathering except A, C, D, x, and fff.

About the printing of this Bible a number of external facts are known. Composing and printing began in April, just after Charless' proposal of 15 April 1801: "Suppose 120 sheets of which I engage to execute one Sheet per day—Provided the Font is large enough to employ a Sufficient number of Compositors."[25] Since the job was finished in early September (Carey's account book shows a credit to Charless for the Bible on 26 September), or about 130 working days later, the original plan of a sheet per day was adhered to fairly closely. Although each forme contained about 38,000 ens, or about 32 hours' work in composition time, it would have been possible to compose a sheet in one day with six or seven compositors—not a surprising figure in the light of Charless' concern about keeping employed "a Sufficient number of Compositors." Further, the Carey account book and other documents fix the size of the edition at 2000 copies. Since the daily output of one press was about eight tokens, 2000 perfected sheets would be the daily product of two presses working together. The conclusion to which one is led, therefore, is that the unfigured formes in the 1801 Charless Bible were worked off by a second press. Figure 2 appears consistently in the inner formes; only if another press consistently machined the unfigured outer formes could a perfected edition-sheet be completed in one day.

As to the later Carey Bibles, only these observations can be made at this time: Carey continued to use press figures at least as late as 1818, for they appear in Bibles to that time with changes apparently reflecting the division


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of labor in each printing (that is, they do not seem to be present simply because they were locked up in standing type at some earlier period and not removed when their usefulness ceased); in the earlier years (and at least as late as 1811), some of his quarto Bibles were gathered in eights, and in these the figures are found on $1v and $3v; in his regular quarto Bibles, the figures come exclusively on $1v; the figure 2 appears in the overwhelming majority of instances, but in the 1803 Bible figures 3, 4, 5, and 7 also occur (here the New Testament at least was printed for Carey by T. S. Manning); only rarely is $1v unfigured. Even a cursory examination of the Carey Bibles suggests that the full story of their printing will demand a study both of press figures and of impression figures (those three-digit numbers in parentheses). But with Carey we have moved into the nineteenth century.

II

After the complications of the volumes of the 1790's, the figures in the books of Isaac Riley in the 1810's may seem rather simple. Nevertheless they furnish, aside from the Encyclopaedia, the most concentrated example of press figures thus far discovered in American printing, for works published by Riley consistently contained them between 1810 and 1816. Born in Cornwall, Connecticut, on 29 November 1770, Riley had established himself as a bookseller, "I. Riley & Co.," in Middletown as early as 1791, and in the following years he entered into partnerships with merchants in several cities (Freeman & Riley in Baltimore, Goodrich & Riley in Philadelphia, Overton & Riley in Middletown), while he carried on business himself in New York. By 1799 he had become the silent partner of Henry Caritat, a bookseller, and by June 1804 he had set himself up as a printer and publisher (I. Riley & Co.). During the next decade his location, according to his imprint, was 1 or 4 City Hotel, Broadway, but in 1815 he moved to 12 and 14 Wall Street and in 1816 to 27 William Street. After 1817 (until his retirement in 1822 and his death in Maine on 14 March 1824) his activities were principally confined to bookselling in Philadelphia.[26]

It appears that Riley first began using press figures in 1809. Although I have not examined every book that Riley printed and am presenting only a representative sample here, I have not discovered press figures in any of his books before that year and have found that his books from 1810 on almost invariably contain them. That 1809 is the borderline is suggested by the fact that the first volume of Royall Tyler's Vermont Reports (1809) does not have figures, while the second volume (1810) does have. In addition, one work of 1809 which utilizes figures carries them on $4v, whereas Riley's practice beginning in 1810 was almost always to place them on $3v


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(in octavos printed by half-sheet imposition). This work, deposited for copyright on the same day as Tyler's Reports, 27 October 1809, is Edward Augustus Kendall's three-volume Travels:

12. Edward Augustus Kendall. Travels through the Northern Parts of the United States, in the Years 1807 and 1808. 3 vols. New York: Riley, 1809. Shaw 17862. NhHi.

  • Volume I. 8: π42 A-Ss4 Tt2, 172 leaves, pp. [i-iii] iv-xi [xii], [1] 2-330 [331-332].
  • Volume II. 8: π4 A-Qq4, 160 leaves, pp. [i-iii] iv-vi [vii-viii], [1] 2-309 [310-312].
  • Volume III. 84 A-Pp4 Qq2, 158 leaves, pp. [i-iii] iv-vi [vii-viii], [1] 2-161 166-312 [=308].
  • Summary of figures: 103 of 121 half-sheets figured; 3 quarter-sheets unfigured.

                 
(I)  (II)  (III) 
Fig.  3v   4v   4v   1v   4r   4v   Totals 
19  10  15  44 
16  13  29 
17 
--  --  --  --- 
Totals  38  35  27  103 

The regularity of the figuring is striking, for there are only three instances where the figure appears on a page other than $4v, in Qq of Volume I and in N and Nn of Volume III. The reason for the change is not clear, since there is nothing unusual about $4v in those gatherings that would make a figure there awkward; certain gatherings which do have a short text on $4v, as M and X in Volume I and Y in Volume II, still have the figure as usual. Neither is it possible to determine why (if there was a reason at all) a few figures are nearer the right side of the page (in E and U of Volume I, M and Gg of Volume II, Dd of Volume III), when they are generally nearer the left. Nor is the significance of the unfigured quires more apparent here than in the earlier books. Since the same figure often appears in consecutive quires, the absence of a figure cannot refer to the same man as the last one indicated but rather suggests a sixth man who worked without a number. The only matter on which the figures seem to offer some comprehensible evidence is whether the work was printed by half-sheet imposition or by working two half-sheets together (inner A and B in one chase, outer A and B in another). If the latter method had been used one would not find figures on the same pages of consecutive gatherings, a situation which occurs throughout most of these three volumes; one may conclude that this work, like most of Riley's later octavo volumes, was printed by half-sheet imposition.

Since the three volumes of Kendall's Travels must have been printed at roughly the same time in Riley's shop, one is tempted to look for relationships among the figures that might suggest, if not concurrent printing, at


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least the distribution of work. But evidence from these three volumes alone provides justification for saying no more than the obvious: that 1 and 2 shared most of the work on Volume I, helped out by 3 and 4 at the end; that 3 replaced 1 beginning with the fifteenth sheet of Volume II, replaced in turn by 4, who performed an increasingly large share of the labor near the end of the volume; and that 1, working the beginning and end of Volume III, was helped by 4 and 5 in the middle and by 3 briefly at the end. Beginning with 1810 several different works with figures (rather than volumes of the same work) can be cited for each year, and their copyright deposit dates can be used to indicate roughly the time of year; but, even so, a more complete survey of Riley's books would be necessary before any fairly reliable statements could be made about the size of the editions or the presswork schedule in his shop.

One of the books which Riley printed in early 1810, another travel account, may be used to reveal the transition at this time to his fixed policy of placing figures on $3v, for the first volume of the work, like the Kendall book, has the figures on $4v, while the second has them regularly on $3v:

13. Christian Schultz, Jun. Travels on an Inland Voyage. 2 vols. New York: Riley, 1810. Shaw 21289. CSmH.

  • Volume I. 8°: [1]4 24 32 A-Cc4, 114 leaves, pp. [i-iii] iv-xviii [xix-xx], [1] 2-207 [208].
  • Figures: 4 on 23 v; 1 on 4v of every gathering A through Bb.
  • Volume II. 8°:π4 A-Ee4, 116 leaves, pp. [i-iii] iv-viii, [1] 2-224.
  • Summary of figures: 23 of 29 half-sheets figured.

         
Fig.  3v   4v   Totals 
17  19 
--  --  -- 
Totals  20  23 

Clearly, 1 preferred to place his figure on $4v and 4 on $3v; 1 does not vary from his practice in Volume I, and 4 varies only rarely in Volume II.[27] Again the figures are normally at the left (those in B and O of the second volume being the only exceptions). The figures here offer a way of confirming the normal expectation that the preliminary gatherings were printed last (or at least after the rest of Volume I), for quire 2 has the figure 4, not found otherwise in that volume but occurring throughout most of Volume II (and, according to 4's custom in Volume II, the figure appears on 3v). The fact that figure 1 appears in every quire but one in Volume I may raise some doubts about the assumption that figures were used only when a regular and customarily followed scheme was broken; on the other hand, the exclusive printing of a volume by one man or press would probably not be an ordinary pattern, except when the size of the edition was such that composition and presswork proceeded at an equal pace. Four more of Riley's octavos in fours of 1810 illustrate his consistent use of $3v as


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the location for figures: in John Anthon's An Appendix to the Touchstone of Common Assurances, figures occur in only fifteen gatherings, on $3v in all but four of them; in William Sampson's Trial of the Journeymen Cordwainers of the City of New-York, $3v is chosen for thirteen out of sixteen figures; in Sir George Steuart Mackenzie's A Treatise on the Diseases and Management of Sheep, five out of eight figures are on $3v; and in C. J. Ingersoll's Inchquin, the Jesuit's Letters, twelve out of sixteen occur on that page.

Another category of Riley's output, the duodecimo volumes gathered in sixes and printed by half-sheet imposition, is represented in the books of 1810. In this format the figures generally appear on the fifth verso of each quire, as in Sophie R. Cottin's The Saracen. There are only two instances in each of its two volumes where a figure appears on a page other than $5v; one of those, in Q of Volume II, occurs where the text of 5v is very short (but this may not be the reason for the change, since a figure does appear on another short page, X5v). A rhythmical pattern of alternation exists for a time between 2 and 4 in Volume I and between 5 and no figure in Volume II; but 4 prints the last half of each volume almost without help. Again it appears to be a sixth man who works without a figure. Other examples of the duodecimo format, however, show that the figures do not occur with the same regularity in these volumes as in the octavos. In Mary Palmer Tyler's The Maternal Physician (1811), figure 1 appears on $5v six times and on $4v five times, out of a total of 24 gatherings; in The Mirror of the Graces (1813), figures occur on only four of 21 half-sheets (two of those times on $5v); in The Universal Receipt Book (1814), on only seven of 24 (six times on $5v); and in John Bonnycastle's The Scholar's Guide to Arithmetic (9th ed., 1815), on eleven of 20 (eight times on $5v). Some of these later volumes, though published by Riley, were printed by Charles Wiley or his partner Cornelius Vanwinkle. Both Vanwinkle and Wiley were located at 3 Wall Street during this period (with Riley at 14 Wall in 1815); there must have been a close association among the three men, for Vanwinkle and Wiley did a number of printing jobs for Riley and are the only American printers besides Riley who actively used press figures in the post-1810 period, so far as I have yet discovered.

This much will have suggested that Riley's books, of various formats and sizes, continually employed press figures, and in a fairly consistent way. Before further progress can be made toward analyzing these figures, however, more of them must be put on record, so that a comprehensive picture of the activities in Riley's shop at any given time can be pieced together. Most important for this purpose, because it bulks largest in the amount of time required for composition and presswork, is the series of thick octavo volumes which issued in a steady stream from his presses. It is also the most important part of his output historically, for it includes his many legal treatises—he not only reprinted standard British works which were needed


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by American lawyers but also contacted a number of state supreme courts urging that their reports of cases be prepared for publication. He was one of the American pioneers in this field, and his imprint appears on the early volumes of reports for Connecticut, New York, South Carolina, Vermont, and Virginia. Of the volumes I have thus far located and examined, several fall into the period of late 1810 and early 1811; by tabulating their figures together, a pattern may begin to emerge even before every book and odd job on hand at the time have been identified.

    October 1810 — March 1811[28]

  • 14. Royall Tyler. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of . . . Vermont. Volume II. New York: Riley, 1810. Shaw 19098. Copyright 30 November 1810. ICU-L, NN, VtU.
  • 8°: π4, 1-614, 248 leaves, pp. [i-iii] iv-v [vi-viii], [1] 2-488.
  • Summary of figures: 55 of 62 half sheets figured.

               
Fig.  3v   4v   Totals 
10  10 
20  20 
10 
6/1 
----  --  -- 
Totals  53/1  55 

  • 15. William Johnson. Reports of Cases Adjudged in the Supreme Count of . . . New-York. Volume II. New York: Riley, 1810. Shaw 15759. Copyright 1 October 1810. WU-L.
  • 8°: [a]4 b2 A-3T4, 266 leaves, pp. [i-v] vi-xii, [1] 2-520.
  • Summary of figures: 37 of 66 half-sheets figured; one quarter-sheet figured (with 3).

                 
Fig.  2r   2v   3r   3v   4v   Totals 
0/1 
12  17 
--  ---  --  --  --  -- 
Totals  3/1  29  37 

  • 16. William Pyle Taunton. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Court of Common Pleas. Volume I. New York: Riley, 1810. Shaw 20243. Copyright 1 November 1810. MWA.
  • 8°: π4 A-3G4 a-d4, 232 leaves, pagination according to earlier edition.[29]

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  • Summary of figures: 20 of 58 half-sheets figured.

               
Fig.  2v   3v   Totals 
--  --  -- 
Totals  19  20 

  • 17. William Johnson. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of . . . New-York. Volume I, second edition. New York: Riley, 1811. Shaw [? cf. 15759]. Copyright 17 January 1811. ICU-L, WU-L.
  • 8°: [a]4 b4 A-4L4 4M1 1-24 32, 339 leaves, pagination according to earlier edition.
  • Summary of figures: 61 of 84 half-sheets figured; 1 quarter-sheet figured (with 4).

               
Fig.  1v   2v   3r   3v   Totals 
10 
2/1  12  17 
17/1  21 
---  --  --  ----  -- 
Totals  2/1  49/1  61 

  • 18. Elihu Hall Bay. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Superior Courts of . . . South Carolina. Volume II. New York: Riley, 1811. Shaw 18661. Copyright 7 February 1811. WU-L.
  • 8°: π4 A-4E4, 300 leaves, pp. [i-iii] iv-viii, [1] 2-591 [592].
  • Summary of figures: 45 of 75 half-sheets figured.

                 
Fig.  2v   3v   4r   4v   Totals 
1/1  8/1  13 
13  13 
---  ----  --  --  -- 
Totals  2/1  39/1  45 

  • 19. William W. Hening and William Munford. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia. Volume IV. New York: Riley, 1811. Shaw 16644. Copyright 11 February 1811. WU-L.
  • 8°: [a]4 b4 A-4E4, 304 leaves, pp. [i-v] vi-xv [xvi], [1] 2-592.
  • Summary of figures: 48 of 76 half-sheets figured.

                 
Fig.  2v   3v   4r   Totals 
1/1  11 
2/1  12 
10 
---  --  ---  -- 
Totals  7/1  38  1/1  48 


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  • 20. Collections of the New-York Historical Society. Volume I. New York: Riley, 1811. Shaw 23554. Copyright 23 March 1811. WHi.
  • 8°: π4 A-3G4 3H2, 218 leaves, pp. [i-iii] iv-vi [vii-viii], [1] 2-428.
  • Summary of figures: 48 of 54 half-sheets figured; 1 quarter-sheet figured (with 5).

                 
Fig.  2v   3v   4v   Totals 
11  11 
11  12 
13  14 
--  --  --  -- 
Totals  46  48 

On the basis of these seven volumes alone certain generalizations emerge about the consistency of Riley's practice in figuring half-sheet octavos. Out of a total of 478 quires, 317 (or about two-thirds) are figured. Of those that are figured, 276 (or 87%) have the figure on $3v; the next most popular position is $2v, but this occurs only 24 times. Rectos are figured only seven times, and never the first leaf recto. The figures normally occur near the left margin, for only eight out of the 317 appear at the right edge. Figures 4 and 5 are found most frequently (72 and 71 times, respectively), with 3 running close behind (63 times); 2, 6, and 1 occur least often (47, 40, and 24 times, respectively). Beyond this one cannot go without further data; it is futile to attempt a reconstruction of the printing schedule or to deduce information about the size of these editions, when Riley obviously printed more than seven books in his shop during this period, and those other books must enter into one's calculations. Toward this end, I shall present one more group of Riley books, all of 1811. The legal octavos issued by Riley after that, between 1812 and 1816, were only "Published by I. Riley"; the printing was done by Charles Wiley or by Vanwinkle & Wiley. A further look at some of these volumes will serve for comparison with the practices in Riley's own shop. Then a statistical summary at that point will perhaps have somewhat greater validity.

    1811

  • 21. Alexander de Humboldt. Political Essay on the Kingdom of New Spain, translated by John Black. Volume I. New York: Riley, 1811. Shaw 23006. CSmH.
  • 8: π42 A-Tt4 Uu2, 176 leaves pp. [i-iii] iv-xii, 2[i] ii-cxv [cxvi], [1] 2-221 [222-224].
  • Summary of figures: 26 of 43 half-sheets figured; 2 quarter-sheets unfigured.

             
Fig.  1v   2r   3v   4r   Totals 
--  --  --  --  -- 
Totals  22  26 


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  • 22. Humboldt. Volume II. CSmH.
  • 8°: [A]4 B-3A4 3B2, 190 leaves, pp. [1-3] 4-377 [378-380].
  • Summary of figures: 41 of 47 half-sheets figured; 1 quarter-sheet unfigured.

             
Fig.  2v   3v   4v   Totals 
0/1  13  14 
11  13 
---  --  --  -- 
Totals  5/1  34  41 

  • 23. Giles Jacob. The Law-Dictionary, revised by T. E. Tomlins. Volume I. Printed for, and published by I. Riley, New-York; and P. Byrne, Philadelphia. I. Riley, Printer. 1811. Shaw 23105. ICU-L.
  • 8: π4 2π1 A-3U4 3X2, 271 leaves, pp. [i-iii] iv-x, [1] 2-531 [532].
  • Summary of figures: 22 of 67 half-sheets figured; 1 quarter-sheet figured (with 1).

           
Fig.  3r   3v   Totals 
19  20 
---  --  -- 
Totals  20  22 

  • 24. Jacob. Volume II. ICU-L.
  • 8°: π1 A-3Y4 273 leaves, pp. [2] [1] 2-543 [544].
  • Summary of figures: 58 of 68 half-sheets figured.

         
Fig.  2v   3r   3v   4v   Totals 
43  47 
10  11 
--  --  --  --  -- 
Totals  53  58 

  • 25. Jacob. Volume III. ICU-L.
  • 8°: π1 A-4H4 4I1, 310 leaves, pp. [2] [1] 2-618.
  • Summary of figures: 69 of 77 half-sheets figured.

               
Fig.  1v   2v   3r   3v   4v   Totals 
38  48 
--  --  --  --  --  -- 
Totals  56  69 

NOTE: Volumes IV, V, and VI of Jacob's Law-Dictionary also were published jointly by Riley and Byrne and bear the date 1811. But they were printed by Fry and Kammerer and contain no figures.

  • 26. William W. Hening. The American Pleader and Lawyer's Guide. Volume I. New York: Riley, 1811. Shaw 22987. Copyright 6 August 1811. NN (which lacks 2 leaves of [1] and 3S4).
  • 8°: [1]4 2-64 A-3S4, 280 leaves, pp. [i-viii] ix-xlvii [xlviii], [1] 2-509 [510-512].

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  • Summary of figures: 50 of 70 half-sheets figured.

                 
Fig.  2v   3v   4v   Totals 
11  12 
7/1 
12  13 
--  ----  --  -- 
Totals  44/1  50 

  • 27. Thomas Day. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of . . . Connecticut. Volume III. New York: Riley, 1811. Shaw [? cf. 17286]. Copyright 16 November 1811. WU-L.
  • 8°: [A]4 B-3Z4, 276 leaves, pp. [i-iii] v v[vi-viii], [1] 2-543 [544].
  • Summary of figures: 63 of 69 half-sheets figured.

             
Fig.  2v   3v   4v   Totals 
22  26 
28  30 
--  --  --  -- 
Totals  57  63 

  • 28. Speeches of John Philpot Curran, Esq. Volume I. New York: Riley, 1811. Shaw 22651. Copyright 20 November 1811. NN.
  • 8°: π2 A-Tt4 Uu2, 172 leaves, pp. [4] [1] 2-340.
  • Summary of figures: 40 of 42 half-sheets figured; 2 quarter-sheets unfigured.

           
Fig.  2v   3v   4v   Totals 
26  29 
4/1 
--  ----  --  -- 
Totals  35/1  40 

  • 29. Curran. Volume II. CSmH, NN.
  • 8°: π2 A-Ss4 Tt2, 168 leaves, pp. [4] [1] 2-331 [332].
  • Summary of figures: 38 of 41 half-sheets figured; 2 quarter-sheets unfigured.

             
Fig.  2v   3r   3v   4v   Totals 
23  27 
5/1 
--  --  ----  --  -- 
Totals  33/1  38 

    Charles Wiley, 1812-1814

  • 30. William Johnson. Reports of Cases Adjudged in the Supreme Court of . . . New-York. Volume III. New York: Printed by C. Wiley, 1812. Shaw 26287. Copyright 27 May 1812. WU-L.
  • 8°: π4 A-3I4, 224 leaves, pp. [i-v] vi-viii, [1] 2-439 [440].
  • Summary of figures: 52 of 56 half-sheets figured.

           
Fig.  1v   2r   2v   3v   4v   Totals 
13  17 
16  17 
14  18 
--  --  --  --  --  -- 
Totals  43  52 


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  • 31. Thomas Day. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of . . . Connecticut. Volume IV. New York: Riley, 1813. Printed by C. Wiley. Shaw 28214. Copyright 6 July 1813. WU-L.
  • 8°: π2 A-3S4, 260 leaves, pp. [i-iii] iv-v [vi-viii], [1] 2-512.
  • Summary of figures: 60 of 64 half-sheets figured; 1 quarter-sheet figured (with 2).

               
Fig.  1v   2r   2v   3v   4v   Totals 
10  14 
11 
21  23 
--  --  --  --  --  -- 
Totals  51  60 

  • 32. Thomas Harris and John M'Henry. Maryland Reports [1780-1790]. Volume II. New York: Printed by C. Wiley, 1812. Shaw 25956. Copyright 27 May 1812. ICU-L, WU-L (both lacking 634).
  • 8°: π4 a-c4 1-634, 268 leaves, pp. [i-iii] iv-viii, 2[i] ii-xxiv, [1] 2-502 [503-504].
  • Summary of figures: 60 of 67 half-sheets figured.[30]

                 
Fig.  1v   2v   3r   3v   4v   Totals 
18  19 
19  21 
0/1 
--  ---  --  --  --  -- 
Totals  3/1  52  60 

  • 33. Joseph Chitty. A Practical Treatise on Pleading. Volume I. Second American Edition. New York: Printed by C. Wiley, 1812. Shaw 25064. Copyright 23 June 1812. WU-L.
  • 8°: [A]4 B-C4 D2 E4 1-744, 314 leaves, pp. [i-v] vi-xxxiii [xxxiv-xxxvi], then according to earlier edition.
  • Summary of figures: 74 of 78 half-sheets figured; 1 quarter-sheet figured (with 1).

             
Fig.  1v   2v   3r   3v   Totals 
17  21 
34  34 
16  17 
--  --  --  --  -- 
Totals  68  74 

  • 34. George Cooper. A Treatise of Pleading. New York: Published by I. Riley, 1813. Printed by C. Wiley. Shaw 28225. MWA.
  • 8°: [A]4 B-E4 1-494, 216 leaves, pagination according to earlier edition.

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  • Summary of figures: 52 of 54 half-sheets figured.

               
Fig.  1v   2v   3v   4v   Totals 
12 
19  25 
--  --  --  --  -- 
Totals  42  52 

  • 35. George Caines. New-York Term Reports. Volume I. Second Edition. New York: Published by I. Riley, 1813. Printed by C. Wiley. Shaw 29344. Copyright 7 May 1813. ICU-L.
  • 8°: [a]4 b2 1-774 782, 316 leaves, pagination according to earlier edition.
  • Summary of figures: 75 of 78 half-sheets figured; 2 quarter-sheets unfigured.

             
Fig.  1v   2v   3r   3v   4v   Totals 
54  60 
11 
--  --  --  --  --  -- 
Totals  64  75 

  • 36. Caines. Volume II. 1814. Shaw 32323. Copyright 8 February 1814. ICU-L.
  • 8°: π4 1-574, 232 leaves, pagination according to earlier edition.
  • Summary of figures: 53 of 58 half-sheets figured.

               
Fig.  2v   3r   3v   Totals 
17  18 
18  22 
--  --  --  -- 
Totals  48  53 

  • 37. William Munford. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia. Volume II. New York: Published by I. Riley, 1814. Printed by C. Wiley. Shaw 27411. Copyright 21 January 1814. WU-L.
  • 8°: [a]4 b4 c2 1-764, 314 leaves, pp. [i-iii] iv-xx, [1] 2-607 [608].
  • Summary of figures: 71 of 78 half-sheets figured; 1 quarter-sheet unfigured.

                 
Fig.  2v   3v   4v   Totals 
14  20 
10  11 
10  10 
4/1  18  23 
----  --  --  -- 
Totals  10/1  59  71 

It can be seen from these examples, all in half-sheet octavo and containing comparable material, that the choice of pages for figuring is just as firm as in the Dobson Encyclopaedia—but in this case the page is $3v. Reasons for the deviations can sometimes be guessed, as in item 36, where 423 v has extra white space at the lower left and 513 v a long footnote, or in item 35, where 33 v and 43 v have long footnotes and 153 v short text. But in 36 there is a figure on 303 v even though the text is short, and in 35 both short text


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and footnotes do not prevent the choice of 102 v and 323 v. One cannot therefore carry this sort of argument very far, but in general it seems true that $3v was avoided if it represented an unusual situation (such as short text or long footnotes) that might make insertion of a figure more difficult. Again the edition size is indeterminate without more information, but one can at least speculate that item 14, for example, would require roughly fourteen hours' composition time for each forme of eight pages and that a press working with half-sheet imposition during this time (that is, spending half the time printing white paper and half the time perfecting) could produce an edition of 1750 copies. Identical figures do appear in many consecutive half-sheets of this volume, but there are too many other unknown factors (number of compositors, additional jobs worked off by the same presses during this time) to make the estimate at all reliable.

The statistics of figure frequencies (based on items 14-37 above) do not reveal any striking differences in practice between the shops of Isaac Riley and Charles Wiley (frequencies for Riley come before the hyphen, those for Wiley after):

                   
Fig.  1r   1v   2r   2v   3r   3v   4r   4v   Totals 
3-3  8-16  6-2  199-136  10-4  226-161  387 
0-1  0-1  5-7  1-1  54-90  2-0  62-100  162 
0-3  3-3  66-32  3-0  3-0  75-38  113 
3-0  9-0  2-1  117-25  3-0  134-26  160 
1-0  1-1  14-3  1-1  138-35  1-0  156-40  196 
1-6  1-0  5-12  59-109  1-0  1-5  68-132  200 
--  --  --  --  --  ----  --  --  ----  ---- 
Totals  8-13  2-2  44-41  10-5  633-427  4-0  20-9  721-497  1218 
21  85  15  1060  29  1218 
In both cases $3v is the usual page for figures, with $2v the second choice; in both $2r and $4r are unpopular, with $1r never used; in both six figures appear, with figure 1 most frequently. More revealing is the percentage table, which shows that Wiley used figures somewhat more steadily:                    
Vol.  % half-sheets figured  % figured half-sheets figured on $3v  
14  88  98  22  87  83  30  93  83 
15  56  78  23  33  91  31  94  85 
16  34  95  24  85  91  32  90  87 
17  73  82  25  90  81  33  95  92 
18  60  91  26  71  90  34  96  81 
19  63  79  27  91  90  35  96  85 
20  89  96  28  95  90  36  91  91 
21  60  85  29  93  89  37  91  83 
Averages for Riley  73  90  Averages for Wiley  93  86 

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Whereas some of the Riley books examined have only 33 or 34% of the half-sheets figured, the Wiley volumes consistently have figures on over 90% of the half-sheets. Of those half-sheets figured, however, Riley's more frequently have the figures on $3v, but only by a margin of 4%. In short, there are no significant differences between the customs of these two related firms in figuring their legal octavos in half-sheet, but their practice does at least provide evidence of the consistency with which press figures were still being used (by some firms, at any rate) in America in the second decade of the nineteenth century.

III

On the basis of these examples of American books with press figures, drawn from the twenty-five year period between 1790 and 1814, a few observations may be made: (1) press figures do not occur in American books of this time with great frequency, but they appear regularly in the work of certain printers; (2) the two most extensive examples thus far discovered are volumes printed in Philadelphia by several printers (especially Thomas Dobson) in the 1790's and books printed in New York by Isaac Riley and Charles Wiley in the 1810's; (3) Dobson, using four figures, figured about 66% of the quarto formes he printed for his Encyclopaedia, figured 36% of the sheets in both formes, and figured 85% of the outer formes; (4) Riley, using six figures, figured 73% of the formes in his legal octavos in half-sheet, Wiley 93%; (5) Dobson generally figured inner formes on $4r and outer on $4v, while Riley and Wiley placed their figures on $3v of the half-sheet gathering;[31] (6) evidence exists, in the press figures, for possible detailed reconstruction of the printing history of several large projects, such as the Dobson Encyclopaedia, the Riley legal reports, and the Mathew Carey Bibles, as well as many smaller works turned out by these printers during the same years. Furthermore, the data lean slightly toward the conclusion that press figures stand for men and that unfigured formes are the work of at least one additional press crew, working without a number. Press figures have not yet been located in American books before 1790, but further search is obviously called for.

A sketch of this kind can do no more than describe, record, and suggest possibilities; it raises more problems than it solves. Those solutions, as in any scientific investigation, can come only after a large body of data has been accumulated and recorded in such a way as to bring out patterns and trends, ideally by tables listing every figure, forme by forme. For American figures, unless one assumes at the beginning that they behave in the same


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manner as English ones, it is necessary to observe their occurrence in a great many books before one can comment on them with anything but guesses. Not until all the books printed by a given printer at a particular time have been examined in conjunction with advertisements, dates, and other external information will it be possible to speak with some assurance. Not until then will press figures be accorded the respect of an established scholarly tool rather than the fascination of an enigma.

INDEX

This list records the titles of all American books which I have thus far discovered to contain press figures. Each book taken up in the present article is referred to by the item number assigned to it in the discussion; books not discussed are referred to by their Evans or Shaw[32] numbers.

    Before 1800

  • Acts of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania [1790-91]. Philadelphia: Hall & Sellers, 1791. Item 2.
  • A Compendious System of Anatomy. Philadelphia: Dobson, 1792. Evans 24206.
  • Currie, William. An Historical Account of the Climates and Diseases of the United States. Philadelphia: Dobson, 1792. Item 8.
  • Bible. Philadelphia: Young, 1790. Item 4.
  • Bible. Philadelphia: Young, 1791. Evans 23183.
  • Bible. New York: Hodge & Campbell, 1792. Item 5.
  • Bible. Philadelphia: Berriman, 1796. Item 6.
  • Bible. Philadelphia: Thompson & Small, 1798. Evans 33408.
  • Bible. Philadelphia: Dobson, 1799. Evans 35188.
  • Book of Common Prayer and Whole Book of Psalms. Philadelphia: Hall & Sellers, 1790. Item 1.
  • Encyclopaedia. 18 vols. Philadelphia: Dobson, [1790-] 1798. Item 10.
  • The Four Gospels, annotated by George Campbell. Philadelphia: Dobson, 1796. Evans 30086.
  • The Four Gospels, annotated by George Campbell. Philadelphia: Bartram, 1799. Evans 35200.
  • Laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Volume III. Philadelphia: Hall & Sellers, 1798. Item 3.
  • Percival, Thomas. Moral and Literary Dissertations. Second Edition. Philadelphia: Dobson, 1798. Item 7.

  • 159

    Page 159
  • Transactions of the American Philosophical Society. Volume IV. Philadelphia: Dobson, 1799. Item 9.

    After 1800

  • Anthon, John. An Appendix to the Touchstone of Common Assurances. New York: Riley, 1810. Shaw 19370.
  • _____. A Digested Index to the Reported Decisions of the Several Courts of Law in the United States. Volume I. New York: Riley, 1813. Shaw 27742.
  • Ballantine, William. A Treatise on the Statute of Limitation. New York: Wiley, 1812. Shaw 24688.
  • Bay, Elihu Hall. Reports of Cases . . . South Carolina. Volume II. New York: Riley, 1811. Item 18.
  • Bible. Philadelphia: For Mathew Carey by Joseph Charless, 1801. Item 11.
  • Bible. Philadelphia: Carey, 1803-18. Numerous printings (those examined correspond to Hills 102, 121, 132, 156, 161, 163, 208, 231, 238, 261, 345).
  • Bonnycastle, John. The Scholar's Guide to Arithmetic. New York: Riley, 1815. Shaw 34161.
  • Caines, George. Cases . . . in the Court for the Trial of Impeachments . . . New-York. New York: Riley, 1810. Shaw 20888.
  • _____. New-York Term Reports. Volume I, second edition. New York: For Riley by Wiley, 1813. Item 35.
  • _____. New-York Term Reports. Volume II, second edition. New York: For Riley by Wiley, 1814. Item 36.
  • _____. New-York Term Reports. Volume III. New York: For Riley by Van Winkle & Wiley, 1814. Shaw 32324.
  • Campbell, John. Reports of Cases Determined at Nisi Prius in the Court of King's Bench. 2 vols. New York: Riley, 1810, 1811. Shaw 20248.
  • [Campe, J. H.] An Abridgement of the New Robinson Crusoe. New York: Riley, 1811. Shaw 22474.
  • Chitty, Joseph. A Practical Treatise on Pleading. Volume I, second American edition. New York: Wiley, 1812. Item 33.
  • Collections of the New-York Historical Society. Volume I. New York: Riley, 1811. Item 20.
  • _____. Volume II. New York: Van Winkle & Wiley, 1814. Shaw 32340.
  • Cooper, George. A Treatise of Pleading. New York: For Riley by Wiley, 1813. Item 34.
  • Cottin, Sophie Ristaud. The Saracen, or Matilda and Malek Adhel. 2 vols. New York: Riley, 1810. Shaw 19874.
  • Cranch, William. Reports of . . . the Supreme Court of the United States. Volumes V, VI. New York: Riley, 1812. Shaw [? cf. 27351].
  • Curran, John Philpot. Speeches. 2 vols. New York: Riley, 1811. Items 28, 29.
  • Day, Thomas. Reports of Cases . . . Connecticut. Volume III. New York: Riley, 1811. Item 27.
  • _____. Reports of Cases . . . Connecticut. Volume IV. New York: Wiley, 1813. Item 31.
  • East, Edward Hyde. Reports of Cases . . . in the Court of King's Bench. New York: For Riley by Van Winkle & Wiley, 1814. Shaw [? cf. 34804].
  • Edwards, Thomas. Reports of Cases . . . in the High Court of Admiralty. New York: For Riley by Fanshaw & Clayton, 1815. Shaw 34805.
  • Harris, Thomas, and John McHenry. Maryland Reports [1780-90]. Volume II. New York: Wiley, 1812. Item 32.
  • _____. Reports of Cases . . . Maryland. Volume III. New York: Published by Riley, 1813. Shaw [? cf. 25956].

  • 160

    Page 160
  • Hening, William W. The American Pleader and Lawyer's Guide. Volume I. New York: Riley, 1811. Item 26.
  • _____, and William Munford. Reports of Cases . . . Virginia. Volume IV. New York: Riley, 1811. Item 19.
  • Humboldt, Alexander von. Political Essay on the Kingdom of New Spain. 2 vols. New York: Riley, 1811. Items 21, 22.
  • [Ingersoll, C. J.] Inchquin, The Jesuit's Letters. New York: Riley, 1810. Shaw 20436.
  • Jacob, Giles. The Law-Dictionary. Volumes I, II, III. New York: Riley, 1811. Items 23, 24, 25.
  • Johnson, William. Reports of Cases . . . New-York. Volume I, second edition. New York: Riley, 1811. Item 17.
  • _____. Reports of Cases . . . New-York. Volume II. New York: Riley, 1810. Item 15.
  • _____. Reports of Cases . . . New-York. Volume III. New York: Wiley, 1812. Item 30.
  • Kendall, Edward Augustus. Travels. 3 vols. New York: Riley, 1809. Item 12.
  • Mackenzie, Sir George Steuart. A Treatise on the Diseases and Management of Sheep. New York: Riley, 1810. Shaw 20622.
  • The Mirror of the Graces. New York: For Riley by Wiley, 1813. Shaw 29177.
  • Munford, William. Reports of Cases . . . Virginia. Volume I. New York: Riley, 1812. Shaw 27411.
  • _____. Reports of Cases . . . Virginia. Volume II. New York: Wiley, 1814. Item 37.
  • _____. Reports of Cases . . . Virginia. Volume III. New York: For Riley by Van Winkle & Wiley, 1816. Shaw 27411.
  • Sampson, William. Trial of the Journeymen Cordwainers of the City of New-York. New York: Riley, 1810. Shaw 20885.
  • Schultz, Christian. Travels on an Inland Voyage. 2 vols. New York: Riley, 1810. Item 13.
  • Select Cases Adjudged in . . . New-York. Volume I. New York: Riley, 1811. Shaw 23552.
  • Taunton, William P. Reports of Cases . . . Court of Common Pleas. Volume I. New York: Riley, 1810. Item 16.
  • [Tyler, Mrs. Mary Palmer.] The Maternal Physician. New York: Riley, 1811. Shaw 23354.
  • Tyler, Royall. Reports of Cases . . . Vermont. Volume II. New York: Riley, 1810. Item 14.
  • The Universal Receipt Book. New York: For Riley by Van Winkle & Wiley, 1814. Shaw 33515.

Notes

 
[1]

R. W. Chapman, "Printing with Figures," Library, 4th ser., III (1922-23), 175-176.

[2]

Lawrence C. Wroth, in The Colonial Printer (2nd ed., 1938), pp. 62-63, discusses the equipment of the colonial printing shop.

[3]

I have not thus far noted any press figures in American books earlier than this period.

[4]

A previous article which surveys patterns of press figures in a large number of books, though it uses a somewhat different method from the present one, is Kenneth Povey, "A Century of Press-Figures," Library, 5th ser., XIV (1959), 251-273; in it he surveys 111 English octavos dated from 1688 to 1797.

[5]

The reasonable assumption that figures would be more likely to occur in large books is borne out in a negative way (though of course not proved) by an examination of a collection (in the Wisconsin Historical Society) of 105 pamphlet sermons printed in the United States between 1771 and 1815; none of them contains figures.

[6]

For whatever usefulness it may have as negative evidence, Bibles printed by the following printers were checked and found to contain no figures (the numbers referring to the particular editions examined, as listed in Margaret T. Hills, The English Bible in America [1961], and the asterisks indicating that the plates were stereotyped by a firm other than the printer listed): William B. Allen (Newburyport), 278; R. Aitken (Philadelphia), 11; E. F. Backus (Albany), *300; Bible Society of New York, *303; Bible Society of Philadelphia, *213; D. & G. Bruce (New York), 279; J. T. Buckingham (Boston), 134, 155; Carey, Stewart & Co. (Philadelphia), 23; R. Cochran (Philadelphia), 106; B. & J. Collins (New York), 328; I. Collins (Trenton), 31; Cummings & Hilliard (Boston), 277; Abel Dickinson (Philadelphia), 189; Daniel Fanshaw (New York), *351, *377; Hugh Gaine (New York), 40; S. G. Goodrich (Hartford), *354; W. Greenough (Boston), 250, 260, 379; Greenough & Stebbins (Boston), 165, 177, 191, 214; Griggs & Dickinsons (Philadelphia), 259; J. & J. Harper (New York), *353; George F. Hopkins (New York), 76; Hudson & Co. (Hartford), 307, 335; Hudson & Goodwin (Hartford), 168, 179, 215, 237, 281; Jacob Johnson (Philadelphia), 116, 143; George Long (New York), 211, 229, 272; Simeon L. Loomis, Hart, & Lincoln (Hartford), 297; Mann & Douglas (Morris-Town), 122; W. Mercein (New York), 301; E. Merriam (Brookfield), 273; Munroe, Francis & Parker (Boston), 276; W. E. Norman (Hudson), *330; Sage & Clough (New York), 103; J. Seymour (New York), 175, 233; B. W. Sower (Baltimore), 217; Isaiah Thomas (Worcester), 30, 44, 90; Thomas & Andrews (Boston), 105, 115, 125; Thomas B. Wait (Boston), 171; Anson Whipple (Walpole, N.H.), 275; R. P. & C. Williams (Boston), *355; W. W. Woodward (Philadelphia), 135, 180, 240, 308. The following did contain figures: Jacob R. Berriman (Philadelphia), 53; Mathew Carey (Philadelphia), 102, 121, 132, 156, 161, 163, 208, 231, 238, 261, 345; Joseph Charless (Philadelphia), 77; Thomas Dobson (Philadelphia), 66; Hodge & Campbell (New York), 38; Thompson & Small (Philadelphia), 62; William Young (Philadelphia), 25, 32.

[7]

Another similar arrangement, used by Isaiah Thomas, was to repeat single alphabets with consecutive numbers—as 50Z, 51A, 52B, and so on.

[8]

Another version of this device occurs in the Bangs & Mason five-volume Bible, printed by J. & J. Harper (New York) in 1823; on $1r of every twentieth gathering there is an indication of the part "No." as well as the volume number. Cf. Volume I of Dobson's Encyclopaedia (1790), discussed as item 10 below.

[9]

Still other numbers that occur occasionally may simply be errors such as the "2" that appears near the lower edge of C8r in Azariah Mather's The Gospel-Minister Described (New London: T. Green, 1725).

[10]

For the view that unfigured formes represent work by the same press which printed the preceding or succeeding figured formes, see F. B. Kaye's edition of Mandeville's The Fable of the Bees (1924), II, 394-395; and Philip Gaskell, "Eighteenth Century Press Numbers: Their Use and Usefulness," Library, 5th ser., IV (1950), 249-261. For the view that unfigured formes are the work of a separate press, working without a number, see Walter E. Knotts, "Press Numbers as a Bibliographical Tool: A Study of Gay's The Beggar's Opera, 1728," Harvard Library Bulletin, III (1949), 198-212. D. F. McKenzie, in "Press-Figures: A Case History of 1701-03," Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society, III (1960), 32-46, believes that a single unfigured forme is the work of the press which printed the other (figured) forme of the sheet but that an entirely unfigured sheet is the work of a different press; William B. Todd, in "Patterns in Press Figures: A Study of Lyttleton's Dialogues of the Dead," SB, VIII (1956), 230-235, believes that the normal pattern was to use one figure for both formes, unless speed was important, in which case two different figures would be used.

[11]

For a statement of the position that figures stand for the pressmen, not the machines, see William B. Todd, "Observations on the Incidence and Interpretation of Press Figures," SB, III (1950-51), 171-205; Todd, "Press Figures," Library, 5th ser., VII (1952), 283; McKenzie, loc. cit. For the opposite view, that they represent presses, not men, see Philip Gaskell, "An Early Reference to Press-Figures," Library, 5th ser., VII (1952), 211; and J. D. Fleeman, "Eighteenth-Century Printing Ledgers," TLS, 19 December 1963, p. 1056. For additional discussion of press figures, see William B. Todd, "Press Figures and Book Reviews as Determinants of Priority," PBSA, XLV (1951), 72-76; Todd, "Bibliography and the Editorial Problem in the Eighteenth Century," SB, IV (1951-52), 41-55; and Giles Barber, "Catchwords and Press Figures at Home and Abroad," Book Collector, IX (1960), 301-307.

[12]

In future articles I plan to pursue in greater detail various aspects of American press figures suggested here. For the present discussion only one copy of most works was examined, since the aim, at this preliminary stage, was not to discover previously unrecognized printings through variations in press figures but simply to locate some of the books in which the figures could be found and to ascertain some of their characteristics.

[13]

I do not mean to imply that I have found evidence which proves that the figures designate the men instead of the presses; but it is convenient to be able to refer to them as standing for one or the other, and I shall speak of them as men in this article. A pressman was often identified with a press, and references to the number of a press in nineteenth-century printing books may have taken for granted the equation of the two. There does not seem to be a great deal of point in indicating on the printed sheets themselves the number of the press they were printed on, except as a record of the work done by a particular man at that press, in which case the distinction between man and press has little significance.

[14]

In this distinction in terminology between "half-sheet imposition" and "two half-sheets worked together," I am following the analysis by Kenneth Povey, "On the Diagnosis of Half-sheet Imposition," Library, 5th ser., XI (1956), 268-272.

[15]

See Wroth, The Colonial Printer, p. 164; the minimum pay per week for composition was eight dollars, at 25&c.nt; per 1000 ems, and a man on a six-day week of about nine or ten hours a day could earn his minimum by setting about 600 ems per hour. In London at this time a compositor had to be capable of setting 1500 ens (750 ems) per hour; see Ellic Howe, The London Compositor (1947), p. 59. Charlton Hinman, discussing an earlier period, uses the figure 1000 ens per hour (in a twelvehour day); see The Printing and Proof-Reading of the First Folio of Shakespeare (1963), I, 44-45.

[16]

It has become conventional, following Moxon, to set this figure for presswork, and Wroth accepts it for early American printing (p. 80), suggesting however that a ten-hour day resulted in only eight tokens printed on one side. See Herbert Davis and Harry Carter's edition of Moxon's Mechanick Exercises (2nd ed., 1962), pp. 292, 484-486; cf. Hinman, I, 41-42.

[17]

Quoted in Wroth, pp. 162, 181.

[18]

It may also be pointed out that in Young's 1790 Bible the signature pages often have a cross or dagger (τ) in the lower margin under the first column; this is true of all gatherings except E, N, Dd, Ff, and Gg (in Dd the cross comes on 5r, since 1r is the New Testament title page; in Gg there is an asterisk on 2r).

[19]

Cf. William B. Todd, "Concurrent Printing: An Analysis of Dodsley's Colleclection of Poems by Several Hands," PBSA, XLVI (1952), 45-57: "whenever books contain press figures their very presence implies unsystematic piecework engaged in conjunction with other miscellaneous endeavors. For labor which is predetermined, controlled, and properly recorded by the overseer . . . the figures become superfluous and accordingly disappear."

[20]

It has been suggested that differing sizes of press figures, when more than one size of a given number appears in the same work, may indicate different pressmen or presses—see J. D. Fleeman, "William Somervile's 'The Chace,' 1735," PBSA, LVIII (1964), 1-7. By referring to William Bowyer's ledgers, Fleeman is able to determine which presses and pressmen were responsible for each forme of this book; but the significance of the sizes of type is not clear, since two sizes of figure 3 were used by each of two presses and do not therefore provide a means for distinguishing between the work of the two presses. In the present instance, the 1 in Nn, the 2 in E and Gg, and the 4 in F, G, and H are appreciably smaller than those same numbers used as press figures elsewhere in the volume. Since it seems unlikely, however, that a system promising such confusion would have been preferred to the more obvious and sensible procedure of continuing the numbers in order, I have disregarded size in tabulating the totals for various figures.

[21]

A 1799 printing of this work which appears to have been produced from the same setting of type is the one which reads "Philadelphia: Printed by A. Bartram" on the title page.

[22]

Wroth, p. 294; other discussions of the Dobson Encyclopaedia are in Evans 22486 (the source for information about the plans and dates of publication) and in Herman Kogan, The Great EB: The Story of the Encyclopaedia Britannica (1958), p. 25.

[23]

Cf. Povey, "A Century of Press-Figures," pp. 254-256. Povey cites evidence that some pressmen prefer to figure the near side of the forme, some the off side; in the Encyclopaedia the off side is consistently the choice.

[24]

It should be remembered that half-sheets are not included in any of the summary statistics.

[25]

See David Kaser, Joseph Charless: Printer in the Western Country (1963), pp. 27-31. Charless also printed for Carey Choice Tales (1800) and Conductor Generalis (1801). Cf. Letter XI (5 February 1834) of "Autobiography of Mathew Carey," New England Magazine, VI (1834), 230-234: "In 1801, I published a quarto edition of the Bible, (of three thousand copies,) . . ." (p. 230). On Carey's Bibles, see also Mason Locke Weems: His Works and Ways, ed. E. E. F. Skeel (1929), II, 133-157.

[26]

Information about Riley is taken from G. L. McKay's directory of the New York book trade from 1633 to 1820 (1942), the imprint catalogue at the American Antiquarian Society, and the imprints of Riley's books.

[27]

When 3 placed his figure on N4v, it was perhaps because N3v had a short text.

[28]

As in the previous statistics, only regular gatherings are counted—in this case, only the complete half-sheets. Gatherings of two leaves (quarter-sheets) are listed but are not tabulated, since they would unfairly affect the results. Also as before, numbers following an oblique line in the summaries refer to figures occuring nearer the right edge of a page; the normal position is nearer the left edge.

[29]

Many of the reprinted legal volumes are paged so that reference can be made to the first edition. Thus the number in the headline corresponds to the page in the first edition on which the text beginning the present page fell; wherever the next page of the first edition began, there will be an asterisk in the text and in the margin indicating the new page. Under this system a recto headline may carry an even page number, and two consecutive headlines may have the same number (or skip over a number).

[30]

Figure 4 on 23 v of the Wisconsin copy is not present in the University of Chicago copy. This is the only instance of a variation in figuring among the books which I examined in multiple copies, and the significance of the variation is not clear —whether it represents a second impression of gathering 2 or an accidental loss of the figure.

[31]

Kenneth Povey's observation, in "A Century of Press-Figures," p. 254, that the preference for rectos or versos often depends on the predilection of individual pressmen does not seem to hold true for these American books; in these examples all figures appear most often on those pages ($4r and $4v in quarto, $3v in half-sheet octavo) which must have been established by shop policy as the pages for figures.

[32]

It should be understood that the policy for assigning entry numbers in the Shaw-Shoemaker checklist sometimes makes it difficult to refer to one particular volume. The multi-volume legal reports for various states, for example, are often given only one entry, under the year of the first volume. Even though inclusive dates are given, the dates of individual volumes are obscured, and the names of later printers do not appear at all. Cf. Shaw 20243, 27411. Entry 16644 lists four volumes of the Virginia Reports under the date of the first volume, 1808; since the printer for that volume is Smith & Maxwell, Riley's name never appears. Sometimes the name of the compiler of the reports is missing (cf. the omission of McHenry in 25956 and of Caines in 29344). Nor is the policy consistent, for three volumes of Caines' Term Reports are given separate entries (29344, 32323, 32324), as are the two volumes of Chitty (25064, 25065). When an index of the Shaw-Shoemaker list is prepared, therefore, certain volumes, authors, and printers may not be represented in certain years as accurately as they should be.