In 1749 North Carolina's provincial government brought James Davis
from Virginia to become the colony's public printer and establish the
first printing press in the then-capital city of New Bern. Prior to
Davis's arrival, printing jobs had been sent to Williamsburg, Va., or
Charleston, S.C. While North Carolina was the ninth of the 13 colonies
to establish a printing operation, it did so 110 years after the
colonies' first press appeared in Massachusetts. A number of factors
contributed to North Carolina's relatively late entrance into the world
of type. The lack of a press had helped the provincial government
control the distribution of information. As late as 1671, Lord Proprietor
Sir William Berkeley expressed his relief that North Carolina had "no
free schools and no printing, and I hope we shall have none these
hundred years." Also, many of the American colonies' earliest presses
had started in large urban centers such as Boston (1639), Philadelphia
(1685), and New York (1693). North Carolina, a primarily agricultural
province, did not have the population density of large cities to help
support a printer. The province's closest neighbors, Virginia and South
Carolina, only established presses a decade before North Carolina.
The N.C. Assembly brought Davis to New Bern to help with the
distribution of their proceedings and laws. Prior to his establishment
as the public printer, multiple copies of such documents were made by
hand for key officials. Davis's first New Bern publication was the Journal of the House of Burgesses of the Province of North Carolina,
printed in 1749. He also issued the first collection of public laws
printed in North Carolina as authorized by the Assembly of 1747, titled A Collection of All the Public Acts of Assembly, of the Province of North Carolina: now in Force and Use, etc. (1751). Davis published later editions of the acts of the Assembly and also started North Carolina's first newspaper, the North-Carolina Gazette, in New Bern in 1751. He remained active as a printer until his death in 1785.
Other printers made significant contributions to the early history of
North Carolina. Andrew Steuart, a native of Ireland, established the
second printing operation in North Carolina in Wilmington
near the end of 1763 (or possibly in early 1764). Steuart supported
himself by establishing the colony's second newspaper, also called the North-Carolina Gazette.
Adam Boyd, a native of Pennsylvania, purchased Steuart's press and type
after Steuart's death in 1769 and established himself as a printer in
Wilmington. That year he started the Cape-Fear Mercury, which proved to be successful. Abraham Hodge, a native of New York, worked as a printer for Samuel Loudon during the American Revolution. Around 1785, Hodge moved to Halifax
to establish a printing office. He was appointed North Carolina state
printer in 1785, after Davis's death. Hodge worked in partnership with a
number of different printers and established printing offices in
Edenton, Fayetteville, and New Bern in addition to Halifax. He served as
public printer for 15 years, started three newspapers, and printed almanacs.
His career helped establish a broader publication base within North
Carolina. Other early luminaries in the North Carolina printing industry
include Joseph Gales, François-Xavier Martin, and John Christian Blum.
From Johann Gutenberg's printed Bible to colonial newspapers, the art
of printing had made little progress. Impressions were made from the
inked type onto paper by a slow process dating back several centuries.
Ink was made of linseed oil and lampblack. The process of hand-setting
the type letter by letter was tedious and limited printers in styles and
sizes. In 1820, however, the all-metal "Washington" press came on the
market. It was still operated by hand but was much faster than the
ancient "screw-style" press. North Carolina's larger cities got the
first of these presses for newspaper and circular printing.
In the last quarter of the nineteenth century printers were still
composing type by hand. This changed in 1890 with the invention of the Mergenthaler Linotype.
This metal casting machine produced type in a solid lead casting, one
line at a time. When the type was no longer needed the line of type was
remelted to form new lines. A milestone development for North Carolina
printers, although not as obvious as the new presses or Linotype, was
the publication of the Franklin Price Book, a cost-setting
reference guide that assured a profit from each printing job. Developed
in the 1920s, this book remains a vital tool for public printers.
The technology of printing once again changed dramatically as new
offset printing presses and related electronic typesetting came on the
market in the early 1950s. Soon afterward, the introduction of computers
revolutionized the printing industry. Even a one-person print shop
could produce very professional work through computer imagery and
specialized programs. North Carolina printing companies
grew to serve the needs of a variety of customers, with firms such as
Edwards & Broughton and Seeman among the leaders. One of the largest
commercial printing firms in the nation, Meredith-Burda, established a large plant in Newton in the 1960s. This firm prints Better Homes & Gardens magazine and many advertising tabloids with press runs in the millions of copies.