Object Details
maker
R. Hoe & Company
Smith, Peter
Description (Brief)
This Smith press with Washington frame was made by R. Hoe & Company after 1835. It is missing its original toggles, finials, and maker’s plate. The press has a height of 68 inches a width, at cheeks, of 31 inches and a length of 65 inches; its platen measures 19 inches by 25 inches.
Peter Smith, brother-in-law and partner to the more famous Robert Hoe, designed this press about 1822 in answer to John Wells’s iron press, but Smith died in 1823 just after the introduction of his press. The first Smith presses included cast-iron, acorn-shaped frames. In 1835 Hoe acquired the rights to the Washington press, his presses' strongest rival, and thereafter built the Smith toggles into the upright frame of his Washington presses. The Smith press was still manufactured as late as 1880, although it was always a runner-up to the Washington.
This press resided in the Government Printing Office’s branch in the U.S. National Museum for many years before its title was transferred to the Smithsonian in 1939.
Transferred from the Government Printing Office, 1939.
Citation: Elizabeth Harris, "Printing Presses in the Graphic Arts Collection," 1996.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
after 1835
ID Number
2018.0122.01
accession number
2018.0122
catalog number
2018.0122.01
Object Name
press, printing
Object Type
relief
Physical Description
wood (overall material)
metal (overall material)
Measurements
overall: 68 in x 31 in x 65 in; 172.72 cm x 78.74 cm x 165.1 cm
place made
United States: New York, New York
Related Publication
Harris, Elizabeth M.. Printing Presses in the Graphic Arts Collection
See more items in
Work and Industry: Graphic Arts
Communications
Printing Presses in the Graphic Arts Collection
Data Source
National Museum of American History
Link to Original Record
Record ID
nmah_1893908