Hamilton Wood Type Printing Museum
Posted on June 08, 2009 by admin
A highly recommended visit in Two Rivers, Wisconsin. The Hamilton Wood Type and Printing Museum is dedicated to the preservation and printing of wood type printers blocks. They have over 1.5 million individual pieces of wood type and the collection covers well over 1,000 different font styles and sizes. No doubt one of the best collections of wood type in the world today. There is s spectacular 145-foot wall displaying the world's largest wall of wood type. More than 1,000 different styles and patterns, ranging in sizes from 1/4-inch to 48-inches, all are housed in cabinet after cabinet, in drawers and on shelves.
Our “Western” affair with wood type began in 1827 by Darius Wells of New York. He created a process to draw the letter on a wood block and then carve around the letter with hand tools. He later introduced the basic invention of a Lateral Router. Along with the Pantograph introduced by William Leavenworth in 1834, they now had the essential materials for mass-producing wood type.
Following his initial presentation of wood type in 1827, other designers and manufacturers began producing wood type blocks.
In 1868 James Edward Hamilton moved to Two Rivers, Wisconsin and went to work in a chair factory. An editor at the Two Rivers Chronicle needed letters for a rush project. Time did not allow him to order and have them made. He then asked Hamilton if he could make them for him. Hamilton made them on his mothers back porch using a foot-powered scroll saw.
The blocks printed so well, Hamilton went on to establish the J. E. Hamilton Hollywood Wood Type Company, later to become Hamilton Wood Type Factory. Within twenty years they became the largest wood type provider in the United States and they produced more than one-thousand styles and sizes.
Today the original Hamilton factory in Two Rivers, Wisconsin has become the Hamilton Woodtype Museum.






