The Daily Herald began as a temporary bulletin during the London printers' strike of 1910-11.
Benjamin Franklin and others write that Pierce was conflated with a London printer of the same name.
One of these letters, written to George Standring, a London printer and publisher, also an author, will serve as an example.
In 1613 Edward Winslow was apprenticed to a London printer.
The exhibition was supported by leading London printers, publishers, booksellers, antiquarians and scholars, and attracted wide public interest.
The issue was ultimately printed by a small London printer and went on to become the most-sold issue of The Ecologist ever.
The Licensing of the Press Act is passed, restricting London printers to a total of 24.
Peter Short (died 1603) was a London printer of the later Elizabethan era.
By early January, 1787, Adams had rushed the first installment of his effort to a London printer.
He tried to get some London printers and booksellers to take up the idea.