Merrymount Press

Merrymount Press
StatusDefunct (1949)
Founded1893
FounderDaniel Berkeley Updike
Country of originUnited States
Headquarters locationBoston, Massachusetts
Publication typesBooks, Ephemera

Merrymount Press was a printing press in Boston, Massachusetts, founded by Daniel Berkeley Updike in 1893. He was committed to creating books of superior quality and believed that books could be simply designed, yet beautiful. Upon his death in 1941, the Press was taken over by his partner John Bianchi, but ceased operations in 1949. Updike and his Merrymount Press left a lasting impression on the printing industry, and today Updike is considered one of the most distinguished printers of the twentieth century. Stanley Morison, the typographer responsible for creating the ubiquitous Times New Roman, had this to say of the Merrymount Press after Updike's passing: “The essential qualities of the work of the Merrymount Press...may be said without exaggeration…to have reached a higher degree of quality and consistency than that of any other printing-house of its size, and period of operation, in America or Europe.”[1]

  1. ^ Updike, Daniel Berkeley (1934). Notes on the Merrymount Press & its Work. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. pp. 273–280.

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