HMSO was established as a new department of
HM Treasury on 5 April 1786, when
John Mayor was appointed as its first superintendent. The creation of the office was a result of the advocacy of
Edmund Burke for reforms of the corrupt, expensive and inefficient Royal Household and the Civil Service. Before the establishment of HMSO, the Crown would grant patents (exclusive rights) for the supply of stationery; the patentee could buy these supplies cheaply and then charge highly inflated prices. At first, HMSO was the agent for various government departments In 1986, HMSO celebrated its bicentenary. Since 1947, it has printed 86 million copies of
The Highway Code. It is one of the biggest publishers in the world, having published 9,300 titles last year and holding 49,000 titles in stock. It produces nearly 600 pages of
Hansard and other parliamentary papers overnight, as well as Bills, Acts,
white papers, 2.3 million passports a year, 28.2 million pension and allowance books a year, and all sorts of other publications from the
British Pharmacopoeia to guides to long-distance footpaths. In the 1980s, the Stationery Office also supplied 1,500 million envelopes a year (at a cost of £11 million) as well as 18 million ball-point pens and 188 million paper-clips. Most of its publishing functions were privatised in 1996 as a separate company known as
The Stationery Office (TSO), but HMSO continued as a separate part of the Cabinet Office. Prior to 1996, it was the publisher of virtually all government material, such as
command papers, legislation and official histories. After 1996, the Controller of HMSO remained Queen's Printer of Acts of Parliament and retained the role of administering
Crown copyright. The privatisation was not the final stage in HMSO's changing role. As part of the implementation of the
European Union directive on the re-use of public sector information, it was decided that there was a need for a dedicated body to be the principal focal point for advising on and regulating the operation of public sector information re-use. That new body, created in 2005, is the OPSI. ==Published works (examples)==