I can't tell you how many of those little
blocks I've had to set in the past... Not
quite for something as large as a printing
press, tho. This photo brings back the
nightmare of when I spilled the whole typset
tray once. That was fun. No, really...
Posted 43 months ago.
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The Ramage was an ancient printing press.
Here then without further ado is the
histrionic history of that historical press:
The Historic Ramage Press Researched and Sorted by Floyd D. P.
Øydegaard
The legend and the facts about this relic
are interesting to sort out. It was nicknamed
as many times as it was transported from one
place to another. Lagoda Press after the ship
that brought it from Hawaii to Monterey
(Hoyt: 201). The Zamorano Press for the
Spaniard-Mexican printer, Augustin V.
Zamorano, who purchased it. The California
Ramage, Mexican War Press, Old Monterey
Press, Old Monterey War Press, and other
variations of these names by different
authors.
Massachusetts to Hawaii
Record's show that on May 20th 1833 the
Ramage was purchased by a ship's purchasing
agent (Captain Thomas Shaw of the Pocahontas)
in Boston for a missionary group in Honolulu,
Sandwich Islands. It was already a used and
worn press when it arrived. It did have some
type that had been produced by the Boston
Type and Stereotype Foundry. (Bretnor forward
in Kemble:15). The Hawaiian paper had already
bought another press and so sold the Ramage
press to the government of California.
Hawaii to California (Monterey)
Zamorano is also mentioned as the purchaser
($460) in California as well as the first
printer. No record shows, which type, came to
Monterey although others mention that the
press had bourgeois Type. It arrived sometime
between June and August 1834 (Hoyt: 200).
Kemble believed wrongly the year was 1832
(Bretnor forward in Kemble:15). The first
known printing was a small single sided
sheet, "Notice to the
Public."(Aviso al Publico) Near the
bottom was printed, "Monterey
1834." The press supposedly printed a
few government documents and maybe some
official papers. Zamorano returned to Mexico
by 1835 or 1834 (Wheat: 4)
The press was supposed to have printed
"Mariano Chico's" (Alvarado's)
proclamation of solidarity with Mexico's
fight with Texas in 1836. (Kemble: 53-55)
Monterey to Sonoma
General Vallejo moved the press to the
northern Military Department of Province at
Sonoma (Sonoma Barracks?) where it was stored
for some time. (Hall: 625)
Sonoma to Monterey
It was moved back to Monterey in 1842 and
stored in the Customs House(?) (Wheat: 4)
Two weeks after American's occupied
California in 1846, the Ramage printed the
first newspaper "between Oregon and the
Equator", on August 15, the Californian.
(Kemble: 57) Set up in the barracks as part
of the pacification program. (Kemble: 13, 64)
The editors were; a chaplain from the U.S.
Frigate Congress, Walter Colton and Doctor
Robert Baylor Semple. (Kemble: 55) The first
issue (August 15, 1846) was on an 11-3/4 by
10-1/4 inch sheet; one side English and the
other side Spanish. A shortage of paper
caused the printers to search for a
substitute. "None could be found except
what is used to envelope the tobacco smoked
by the natives." (Colton's; Three Years
in California, via Kemble: 57)
Colton left the newspaper, as its main
writer, April 24, 1847. (Kemble: 63)
Monterey to Yerba Buena
The Press and paper were moved to Yerba
Buena after publication of the May 6, 1847,
issue. These papers printed the advantages of
living in Benicia. The Californian was in
competition with the California Star, which
was printed by Mormon interests; Samuel
Brannan and Edward C. Kemble. (Kemble: 10)
They Used an R. Hoe & Co. press and their
first issue was January 9, 1947. (Kemble: 68)
The gold rush halted these papers for many
weeks and the Californian didn't start up
again until July 15, 1848. (Bretnor forward
in Kemble: 28) When the two papers merged,
(Star & Californian - soon to be called
the Alta California), the Old Press was sent
to Sacramento.
San Francisco to Sacramento City (Sutter's
Fort)
The Ramage was shipped in 1849 to the new
town of Sacramento City aboard the sailing
ship Dice mi Nana. Off loaded at Webster,
below Sutterville and carried overland to
Sutter's Fort. A makeshift newspaper office
was set up in an open roofed adobe, located
outside the walls of the fort. The first
issue of the Placer Times appeared April 28,
1849. It measured 13x18 inches. "bearing
a crude heading carved with a jack knife from
a handy piece of wood." (Kemble: 137)
The editor was Edward C. Kemble. Fact is he
did the whole thing alone. In July 1849 the
press went to the City Hotel, Sacramento
City. It made another move within the city.
Sacramento City to San Francisco
The old press was moved back to San
Francisco in late November or December of
1849. (Kemble:169)The publishers of the Alta
California wanted to preserve the Old Press
and build a museum for it. However an
Englishman, H.H. Radcliffe, convinced the
owners to sell the press to him, in January
1850. He wanted to start a newspaper in
Stockton. They sold it on the condition that
it could be repurchased when the owner bought
a more modern press. (Kemble: 169)
San Francisco to Stockton
Radcliffe's paper was the Stockton Times
and Tuolumne City Intelligencer from mid 1850
to April 1851. The newspaper was destroyed by
fire that April and somehow the Ramage
escaped this first attempt on its ancient
structure. The press was then passed on to
the Sonora Herald. (Kemble: 179)
Stockton to Sonora
The Sonora Herald was first published in
Stockton July 4th, 1850. Then a few days
later it was transported to Sonora.
Apparently the "original" type was
still being used. (Wheat:10-11) The
"first seven numbers printed on
Foolscap, and were sold for 50 cents a
copy." (Heckendorn: 37)
"Sunday, August 11, 1850 - On
Wednesday afternoon, July 3, after having
worked off the first edition of the Sonora
Herald in the (Placer) Times office at
Stockton, the proprietor solicited me to take
horse and start immediately for Sonora,
seventy-five or eighty miles distant, in
order that the papers might be
distributed.....we have but two or three
cases of old type, a wooden "stick"
manufactured by my own hands with a
jackknife, and a Ramage press."
(Christman: 169)
Sonora to Columbia
By Oct 1851 the press was sold by Dr. Gunn,
owner of the Herald, to George Washington
Gore and moved to Columbia. The first issue
by Gore as editor was called the Columbia
Star and was dated October 25th, 1851.
"The first copy that was struck of this
paper, sold for an ounce, and is now (1856)
in the possession of Mrs. DeNoielle."
(Heckendorn: 7)
Gore couldn't pay the balance of $360 for
the press and a sheriff's sale gave it back
to Gunn, November 12, 1851. The press had
then been disassembled for transport and the
largest part left on the porch, over night.
This portion had been dragged into the street
that night by unknown vandals and set on
fire. The damage was minimal and it survived
its second attempt on its old structure. The
Sonora Herald printed a nasty story about the
total destruction of the press while the
citizens of Columbia cheered. The reality was
that it eventually went back to Sonora.
Columbia to Sonora
The charred frame of the press was brought
back to the office of the Sonora Herald and
put on display. The intent was, it would be
held until a museum for California was
constructed, and it could have a place of
honor. Alas the end of the Old Press was
actually in Sonora as Kemble noted, "the
Ramage had been lost in one of the many
Sonora fires before 1858." (Kemble: 184)
Posted 42 months ago.
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ManWithCamera says:
"Benjamin Franklin would have
California's first printing press
old Ramage, with massive wooden
capable of supporting a house."
--
Excellent photo, Thomas!
Posted 43 months ago. ( permalink )