's magazine,
Bradley, His Book By the late 1880s, there were some 34 foundries in the United States. In 1892, 23 foundries were brought together to form the American Type Founders Company. The Chicago Tribune (February 12, 1892) listed the 23 foundries as: • MacKellar, Smiths, & Jordan, Co. (Philadelphia), • Collins & M’Leester (Philadelphia), • Pelouse & Co. (Philadelphia), • James Conner's Sons (New York City), • P. A. Heinrich (New York City), • A. W. Lindsay (New York City), • Charles J. Carey & Co. (Baltimore), • John Ryan Co. (Baltimore), • J. G. Mengel & Co. (Baltimore), • Hooper, Wilson & Co. (Baltimore), • Boston Type Foundry (Boston), • Phelps, Dalton & Co. (Boston), • Lyman & Son (Buffalo), • Allison & Smith (Cincinnati), • Cincinnati Type Foundry (Cincinnati), • Cleveland Type Foundry (Cleveland), • Marder, Luse, & Co. (Chicago), • Union Type Foundry (Chicago), • Benton, Waldo & Co. (Milwaukee), • Central Type Foundry (St. Louis), • St. Louis Type Foundry (St. Louis), • Kansas City Type Foundry (Kansas City), and • Palmer & Rey (San Francisco). Other foundries joined later. The key to the success of this merger was the inclusion of
MacKellar, Smiths, & Jordan Co. of
Philadelphia, with assets of over $6 million, the
Cincinnati Type Foundry of
Henry Barth, which brought with it the patents to his
Barth Typecaster, and Benton, Waldo Foundry of
Milwaukee, which included
Linn Boyd Benton and his all-important Benton Pantograph which engraved type matrices directly instead of using punches and allowed the optical scaling of type. With the inclusion of the Barth Caster and the Benton Pantograph, ATF immediately became the largest and the most technologically advanced foundry in the world. Under Benton's direction, the company embarked on a program of developing historical revivals, including ATF's versions of
Bodoni and
Garamond, as well as the development of new typefaces such as
Century and (most successfully)
Cheltenham, which for the first time were organized systematically into "type families" with a schedule of styles such as weight or width. Another key player at the ATF Co. at this time was the advertising manager (and informal company historian)
Henry Lewis Bullen, who in 1908 began assembling a library of historical typography and type specimen books for designers to draw upon. This collection was turned over to
Columbia University's Rare Book and Manuscript Library in 1936, and acquired by the university in 1941. The books form the core of the book arts collection at Columbia. There is also an archive of ATF materials in Columbia's special collections. In 1901, Nelson consolidated casting operations in a purpose-built factory in
Jersey City and the branches remained only as distribution centers. By the 1920s, ATF had offices in 27 American cities and
Vancouver,
British Columbia, where it sold not only type, but pressroom supplies and printing presses (their own Kelly line and those of other manufacturers) as well. It printed large specimen books, with many examples of good layout as examples for the advertising market. In 1923, at a cost of $300,000, ATF produced its largest and most superlative type catalog. The first paragraph of its preface boasted: The printing of 1923 is greatly superior to that of 1900. It has better style, more attractiveness and greater power and dignity...This great improvement has not come to pass without direction. There has been, in fact, very deliberate direction. There has been constant and forward thinking on behalf of the printing industry by the American Type Founders Company, which has a well defined policy with regard to the types it is making and has been making during the last quarter century. In what position, may we ask, would the printing industry be to-day without the great type families, known to fame as Cheltenham, Century
[long list follows] and others? Are there anywhere any other type families? Would not your typography be barren in appearance and much less profitable to the advertisers if these great type designs had not been developed? There can be but one answer. == Letterpress manufacturing ==