Isaac Collins (printer)

Isaac Collins

Engraving portrait of Collins at 60 years of age by John Wesley Jarvis, 1806[1]
Born February 16, 1746
Centerville, Delaware
Died March 21, 1817 (aged 71)
Burlington, New Jersey
Residence Burlington, New Jersey
New York City
Occupation printer, publisher
Parent(s) Charles Collins and Sarah Hammond
A "beater" inking the printing press
A "puller" operating a printing press
Isaac Collins house in Burlington

Isaac Collins was a printer, publisher, bookseller and merchant of the early American period. He published the New Jersey Gazette and New Jersey Almanac. He is noted for his bible, the first family bible published in America.

Early life

Collins was born in Centerville, Delaware, on February 16, 1746.[2][3] He was the descendant of English immigrants that died early in their lives.[4] His father was Charles Collins, a wine cooper from Bristol, England,[3] who was an orphan and had immigrated to America in 1734 at the age of nineteen.[2] When Collins's father immigrated to American he debarked at New Castle, Delaware, an area with a large population of Quakers.[2] Collins' father became a farmer in that area (Brandywine Hundred) near the Pennsylvania border and married Sarah Hammond, an English immigrant from Chester County, Pennsylvania.[4][5] Collins had a sister (Elizabeth) who never married and was his only sibling.[5] They were close throughout their lives.[5]

Collins had his primary schooling at the Center Meeting House in Centerville and at Friends' school in Wilmington, Delaware. His upbringing was among the local Quakers, who had a type of religion called "Inner Light".[6] Collins and his sister listened to religious works of authors like Robert Barclay, William Penn, and Isaac Pennington - if they followed the traditions of the local Quakers.[5]

Collins's father had married again in 1760, since Collins's birth mother had died sometime before this date.[7] Shortly after this, his father died and his stepmother remarried and moved to another neighborhood.[7] At this time Collins was put under the guardianship of her brother, John Hammond, who was living in Wilmington.[7] He became indentured under the printer James Adams of Franklin and Hall (Benjamin Franklin's old Philadelphia printing firm, run by his former foreman David Hall) in 1761 to work as a journeyman in the printer trade for five years.[8] Since Adams was his master he furnished Collins with not only printing skills (i.e. inking, closing the press) but was also obligated to furnish him in basic schooling in such subjects as reading, writing and arithmetic.[9]

Adams let go of Collins in early 1766 due to an economic slowdown, when he was twenty years old, completing only four years of his apprenticeship.[10] Collins completed his last year of the 5 year indenture with William Rind, a printer of the Virginia Gazette in Williamsburg.[3][10] He was twenty-one years old in 1767 when he finished his apprenticeship.[11] Collins soon after his birthday moved to Philadelphia to start work as a journeyman printer.[11] He obtained work with William Goddard in the Spring of 1767.[3][12] Collins was accepted as a member of the Philadelphia Monthly Meeting in 1770.[13] In this year he formed a business partnership with Joseph Crukshank.[3][13]

Mid life

Collins decided to do some exploratory trips to Burlington, New Jersey, in the later part of 1770 to check out the feasibility of opening up a print shop there.[14] He decided to move there and became a resident printer, however kept his citizenship ties to Philadelphia.[15] Collins succeeded James Parker as New Jersey's official government printer to King George III.[3][16][17] In that city he started publishing the New Jersey Almanac in 1771 and printed it for twenty-six years continually each year thereafter.[3] He starting publishing the New Jersey Gazette in 1777 being the state's first regular newspaper.[18] [19] [20][21] Collins moved his printing equipment and family to Trenton, New Jersey in 1778 and continued to publish the New Jersey Gazette. Trenton was a more strategic location - a town between New York City and Philadelphia.[22]

Collins was a firm believer in the freedom of the press and had even refused to reveal his source of a pseudonymous article even though the legislative council demanded it.[18] He stood on his grounds as a faithful guardian of the liberty of the press and would not reveal his source unless the source gave him permission.[18] He wrote many persuasive articles on the principle of freedom of the press, including one of particular interest in March of 1781 to his friend Governor William Livingston.[18] However Collins had a journalist's viewpoint similar to Benjamin Franklin's in that a publisher had a public responsibility as a "Guardian of his Country's Reputation, and refuse to insert such Writings as may hurt it."[23]

Family

Collins began a courtship relationship with Rachel Budd of Philadelphia in the early part of 1771. As was the Quaker traditions they declared their intentions to get married at monthly meetings, which was done in March and April of 1771. They were officially married May 8, 1771.[24] They had fourteen children: Rebecca, Charles, Rachel, Sarah, Elizabeth, Thomas, Susannah, William, Benjamin, Anna, Isaac, Stacy, Mary, and Joseph.[25][16]

Later life

Collins and his wife Rachel moved their family and business to New York City in 1796.[18][26] Their address in the city was on Pearl Street, the location of newspaper publishers John Lang, Archibald McLean, and John Tiebout.[27] Others associated with the printing industry on Pearl Street that Collins patronized were William Durell (paper merchant), John Roberts (engraver), John Bowen (ink-maker), and Peter Meiser (bookbinder).[28] Collins lived in New York City for twelve years.[16] Rachel, his first wife, died in 1805 of yellow fever after it had originally struck New York City at the end of the eighteenth century.[29] Collins moved back to Burlington in 1808. His second marriage was in 1809 to the widow of Benjamin Smith.[16] Her name was Deborah.[16]

The printing firm that Collins started on Pearl Street in New York City was continued by his sons and grandsons.[18] It was claimed for years after Collins left to be the oldest printing firm in New York City.[18] Historian Isaac Thomas claims that Collins was paid 25% more than other printer journeymen because of his acute attention to detail.[4]

Death

Collins died in Burlington, New Jersey, March 21, 1817.[18] He was 71 years old.[30]

Isaac Collins's 1791 bible, the first American "family bible" published
The History of the Revolution of South Carolina printed by Isaac Collins in 1785
Journal of Job Scott (1797)
English money notes of Three Shillings printed by Isaac Collins in 1776
Wikimedia Commons has media related to American print shop, typical of eighteenth-century.

Family bible

It was required in the early part of the 18th century in many of the American colonies that every family have a bible.[3] Most families went by the colony law requirements until the beginning of the American Revolutionary War.[3] Up until this time bibles came from Europe but could no longer be supplied because of hazards of the war.[3] The Continental Congress obtained bids from Collins for producing copies of the bible for the colony families.[3] He published 5000 copies of a quarto edition family bible consisting of 925 pages.[16][18] Collins was paid about four Spanish dollars per bible for the printing.[18] It was the largest publishing job every done in America up to that point.[16] Three thousand bibles were pre-sold with a 25% deposit even before the print job was started.[31]

Collins's bible used higher quality printing types and better techniques than conventional printing of the time period.[16] His bible was proofread up to eleven times before being published.[16] Bible scholars note that it was one of the most textual accurate bibles ever printed.[16][18][21][32] It was the first American family bible published.[33][34][35][36][37]

Works

Some of the works Collins printed and published are:

Newspapers and Almanacs

Government, other than money notes

Religious publications

History volumes

Pamphlets and broadsides

Books

See also

Other colonial printers:

Notes

  1. Hixson 1968, p. 175 Collins sat for the artist John Wesley Jarvis at his Nassau Street studio on several occasions in 1806.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Hixson 1968, p. 3.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 3.9 3.10 White 1926, p. 190.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Thomas 1874, p. 316.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Hixson 1968, p. 4.
  6. Collins 1893, p. 41.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Hixson 1968, p. 5.
  8. Hixson 1968, p. 10.
  9. Angoff 1931, p. 358-359.
  10. 10.0 10.1 Hixson 1968, p. 11.
  11. 11.0 11.1 Hixson 1968, p. 14.
  12. Hixson 1968, p. 16.
  13. 13.0 13.1 Hixson 1968, p. 18.
  14. Hixson 1968, p. 23.
  15. Hixson 1968, p. 24.
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 16.4 16.5 16.6 16.7 16.8 16.9 Blake 1859, p. 302.
  17. Hixson 1968, p. 34.
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 18.3 18.4 18.5 18.6 18.7 18.8 18.9 18.10 White 1926, p. 191.
  19. Hixson 1968, p. 69.
  20. Thomas 1874, p. 364.
  21. 21.0 21.1 Suarez & Woudhuysen 2010, p. 623.
  22. Hixson 1968, p. 75, 115.
  23. Hixson 1968, p. 109.
  24. Hixson 1968, p. 39.
  25. Hixson 1968, p. 159, 160.
  26. Hixson 1968, p. 155.
  27. Hixson 1968, p. 160.
  28. Hixson 1968, p. 163.
  29. Hixson 1968, p. 168, 169.
  30. Thomas 1874, p. 317.
  31. "Christian Heritage Museum". Christian Heritage. 2013. Retrieved 19 January 2014.
  32. Hixson 1968, p. 152.
  33. "The Collins: Bible of Colonial America". www.greatsite.com. Greatsite. 1997–2014. Retrieved 19 January 2014.
  34. "This is a very rare Isaac Collins Bible, the first "Family Bible" of Colonial America, dated between 1791 and 1824.". Anomalos Publishing. 2009. Retrieved 19 January 2014.
  35. New England Historic Genealogical Society 1892, p. 274.
  36. Drake 1879, p. 208.
  37. "History of the Bible Timeline". About.com. "A.D. 1791 - The Isaac Collins Bible, the first family Bible (KJV), is printed in America". Retrieved 19 January 2014.

Bibliography

External links