William Caslon

For other uses or meanings of Caslon, see Caslon (disambiguation).
William Caslon

William Caslon I in an engraved portrait by John Faber the Younger
Born 1693
Cradley, Worcestershire
Died 23 January 1766 (aged 7273)
London, England
Occupation Gunsmith and type designer

William Caslon I (1692/1693 – 23 January 1766), also known as William Caslon the Elder,[1] was an English typefounder. The distinction and legibility of his type secured him the patronage of the leading printers of the day in England and on the continent. His typefaces transformed English type design and first established an English national typographic style.[2]

Life

Caslon was born in Cradley, Worcestershire in 1692 or 1693[1] and trained as an engraver in nearby Birmingham.[3] In 1716, he started business in London as an engraver of gun locks and barrels and as a bookbinder's tool cutter.[4] Having contact with printers, he was induced to fit up a type foundry, largely through the encouragement of William Bowyer.[1]

He died on 23 January 1766, and was buried in the churchyard of St Luke Old Street, London, where the family tomb is preserved (bearing his name and others).

Typefaces

A specimen sheet of typefaces and languages, by William Caslon I, letter founder; from the 1728 Cyclopaedia

Though his name would come to be identified with an enduring style of Latin alphabet, Caslon's first typefaces were what contemporary typefounders called "exotics." His first design was an Arabic made at the English size (14pt), commissioned by the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge before 1725, followed by a Hebrew created for William Bowyer in 1726, and a Coptic for Wilkins first used in 1731. His first Latin typefaces were a roman and italic cut in the pica size (12pt), of a style that was fully realized by the publication of his foundry's specimen sheet in 1734.[5]

Caslon's typefaces were inspired by the Dutch Baroque types, the most commonly used types in England before Caslon's faces. His designs influenced John Baskerville and are thus the progenitors of the transitional and Didone typeface classifications.

Caslon typefaces were immediately popular and used for many important printed works, including the first printed version of the United States Declaration of Independence. Caslon's types became so popular that the expression about typeface choice, "when in doubt, use Caslon," came about. The Caslon types fell out of favour in the century after his death, but were revived in the 1840s. Several revivals of the Caslon types are widely used today.

The Caslon family tomb in the churchyard of St Luke Old Street, London

Caslon Foundry

William Caslon founded the Caslon Foundry in 1739 (previously Godfrey Head's 1685–1700). The other half was purchased by John James, son of Thomas James. John James also purchased at around 1716–1764, which became the leading English typefoundry of the 18th and early 19th centuries. He acquired moiety of half of Robert Mitch Jacob Ilive in 1840 and later an important purchase was the foundry of Thomas Grover in 1758 - ultimately combining under his direction nine old English Foundries (according to Talbot Reed's "The Old English letter Foundries"). John James, William Caslon I and Baskerville as the only three representatives of the trade in the country. William Caslon I had two apprentices in his Sheffield Foundry, Thomas Cottrell and Joseph Jackson. They started a foundry of their own in direct competition to their employer in 1757. In 1759 Jackson entered the Navy leaving Cottrell to carry on alone. Jackson left the navy in 1763 and continued to be employed in Thomas Cottrell, Neveil's court 1759–1785 Foundry for a short time. He commenced business in a separate Foundry with two fellow workman who helped to find the capital 1764  1792. When Jackson died in 1792 it was William Caslon I's grandson, William Caslon III who purchased the foundry in Salisbury Square.

After the death of William Caslon I, his son William Caslon II took over the Caslon Foundry business 1764–1778. In 1792, William Caslon III sold his share of Caslon Foundry to his mother and his sister-in-law, the widow of his brother Henry. Mrs William Caslon II and Mrs Henry Caslon continued to run the original main Caslon business. In the same year, William Caslon III purchased the Salisbury Square foundry from the estate of the recently deceased Joseph Jackson, and renamed it to W Caslon & Son. In 1807, W Caslon & Son was passed to William Caslon IV. In 1819, William Caslon IV sold Caslon & Son to the new Sheffield foundry of Blake, Garnett & Co. In 1837, the Salisbury Square Caslon Foundry became the property of Stephenson, Blake & Co. The main Caslon Foundry was still running. In 1795 the company proprietors were Mrs Henry Caslon & Nathaniel Catherwood 1795–1821; Henry Caslon II & F. F. Catherwood 1809–1821; Henry Caslon II H. W. Caslon M. W. Livermore (Caslon, Son, and Livermore) 1821–1840; Caslon & son 1840–1850; H. W. Caslon and co. 1850–1873 when H. W. Caslon died and the Foundry was acquired by T. W. Smith and partnersthe Company name remained. H. W. Caslon and Co., Ltd continued running until 1937, when Stephenson Blake acquired the remaining H. W. Caslon & Sons foundry.[6]

H. W. Caslon and Company Limited

In 1998, Justin Howes reestablished the Caslon foundry, under the name H. W. Caslon & Company Limited, with an expanded version of ITC Founder's Caslon as the company's initial product. However, following the death of Justin Howes in 2005, the revived H. W. Caslon & Company was no longer in business, and the expanded Founders Caslon is no longer offered in the retail market.

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 Mosley, James (2008). "Caslon, William, the elder (1692–1766), typefounder". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Online ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/4857. Retrieved 2014-10-12.
  2. Luna, Paul; Ould, Martyn (2013). "The Printed Page". In Gadd, Ian. Beginnings to 1780. History of Oxford University Press. 1. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 515–516. ISBN 0199557314. Retrieved 2014-10-12.
  3. Hill, Joseph (1971) [1907]. The Book Makers of Old Birmingham: Authors, Printers, and Book Sellers. New York: B. Franklin. pp. 56–57. ISBN 0833717065.
  4. "History of Printing", British Printing Society Retrieved on 29 April 2014.
  5. Updike, Daniel Berkeley (1922). Printing Types: Their History, Form, and Use, Vol. II. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. pp. 102–103. ISBN 1584560568.
  6. Description in the font collection

References

Further reading


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