Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Nuthead had two children by her first husband, William and Susannah.
Some new nuthead idea dredged out of the depths of what you call your brain?
Within a year, the government moved to Annapolis, and Nuthead moved her press there as well.
While Dinah Nuthead was illiterate, she would often help her husband in operating the printing press.
Only five blank forms attributed to Nuthead's Annapolis press are extant.
Many sources indicate that Nuthead was illiterate.
Knothead was Nuthead and Splinter was a boy.
Following her husband's death in 1695, Nuthead appeared before the Prerogative Court and requested that she be appointed administrator of his estate.
Nuthead was the first woman to run a printing press outside of Massachusetts and the first woman to be licensed as a printer in the colonies.
Her husband, William Nuthead, established the second colonial printing business in Jamestown, Virginia, in 1682.
A quantity of lead print type (for printing words), indicating that the site where it was found was the documented William Nuthead Printing House.
Moving to St. Mary's City in 1678, William and Dinah Nuthead became the first printers in Maryland.
Nuthead petitioned the Maryland General Assembly on May 5, 1696, to grant her a license to print blank forms for the province's public offices as well as writs, bonds, bills, and warrants of attorney.