After ratification of the United States Constitution on June 21, 1788, the competition over the public printing contract for the newly established government became stringent among the leading printers in New York. Along with Childs, there was
Samuel Loudon,
Thomas Greenleaf, Archibald McLean, and
John Fenno who all submitted applications for this important contract. Childs and Swaine submitted a joint petition to the House of representatives on May 15, 1789, and were awarded the contract. On June 9, 1789, Childs and Swaine jointly addressed
Samuel Allyne Otis, Secretary of the United States Senate, and
John J. Beckley, Librarian of the United States Congress, as follows: "We will engage to print the Laws of Congress on the following terms": "For every sheet of letter press, including six hundred copies, two dollars and a half," "The paper to be furnished at the expense of the United States". The Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of the House signed an agreement on June 29 that Childs and Swaine were to be jointly employed in the printing of the Laws of Congress. On July 2 Childs and Swaine were also commissioned "to print the laws of the United States until further order of Government". Their printing contract with the government was promptly announced in the July 3 issue of their newspaper,
The New York Daily Advertiser: ""Gentlemen who wish to be supplied with copies of the Laws of the United States, are requested to make their application to Francis Childs and John Swaine, printers in New York, who are entrusted, by Congress, with the printing of the same". The price of the laws was set at one dollar. The laws were to be printed on "fine paper and a new type".
Legal works printed • Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States, 1789 • Laws passed in the Territory of the United States North-West of the River Ohio, 1791 • Report of the Secretary of State, on the subject of the cod and whale fisheries • Report of the committee appointed to examine into the state of the Treasury Department, 1794 • An act providing for the relief of such of the inhabitants of Saint Domingo, resident within the United States, 1794 • An act for the remission of the duties arising on the tonnage of sundry French vessels which have taken refuge in the ports of the United States, 1794 ==See also==