Early history R.R. Donnelley & Sons Company was founded in Chicago in 1864 by Richard Robert Donnelley. His son, Reuben H. Donnelley, founded the otherwise unrelated company formerly known as
R. H. Donnelley. Richard Robert Donnelley established his company in downtown Chicago, which in 1870 became the Lakeside Printing and Publishing Company. The
Great Chicago Fire of 1871 destroyed Donnelley's business, but quickly re-established operations after rebuilding. After a series of reorganizations and expansions, Donnelley built the
Lakeside Press Building on Plymouth Court, and in 1902 began construction of the
R.R. Donnelley and Sons Co. Calumet Plant on 21st Street and Calumet Avenue. The company aimed to produce books and periodicals with impressive modern design and mass printed commercial and reference materials. Lakeside Press produced
Encyclopædia Britannica,
Time Magazine,
Life Magazine, promotional literature for the
Model T Ford, catalogs for
Sears Roebuck, among others. The Press produced high quality collectible editions for the Chicago
Caxton Club and the
Limited Editions Club. Donnelley was the official printer for the 1933–1934
World's Fair, "A Century of Progress", which took place on the Lake Michigan lakefront just to the east of the plant. The company designed and printed official tickets, postcards, posters, brochures, and magazines which displayed the company's distinctive modernist design. " The company eventually became a global provider of printing and print-related services. From 1922 to 1945, the Director of Design and Typography was
William A. Kittredge, who commissioned other well-regarded artists and designers, such as
Rudolph Ruzicka, Edward A. Wilson, and
W.A. Dwiggins.
The Four American Books Campaign Donnelley launched a "Four American Books" campaign in 1926 which culminated with their publication in 1930. The aim was to establish that the company's modern commercial machinery could produce illustrated books to rival high-quality presses in Europe and to establish a reputation as a printer of fine trade editions in order to enter the mass-market book industry. The choice of American authors reflected a growing pride in and market for American literature. C. G. Littell, vice president and treasurer, and William A. Kittredge, head of the department of design and typography, organized the campaign. Kittredge approached
William Addison Dwiggins, who was a well-established designer of magazine and newspaper advertisements. After he turned down several suggestions, Dwiggins agreed to illustrate the
Tales of
Edgar Allan Poe. The Press considered his fee of $2,000 low for an illustrator of his commercial power. Edward A. Wilson illustrated
Richard Henry Dana's mid-19th century sea-adventure
Two Years Before the Mast and Rudolph Ruzicka
Henry David Thoreau's
Walden. The best known of the publications in the series was
Rockwell Kent's edition of
Herman Melville's novel,
Moby-Dick, which at that point was not yet accepted as an American classic. Kittredge commissioned Kent to perform the design and illustrations in 1926, and the book appeared four years later in a three-volume limited edition of one-thousand copies issued in an aluminum slipcase. Kittredge called it "the greatest book done in this generation" and declared that "we will all go jump in the lake" if "it is not the greatest illustrated book ever done in America." (In fact, the book is considered one of the finest of the 20th century.)
Random House quickly issued a one-volume trade edition, which was also printed by Lakeside Press, bound in black cloth with silver print and decorations. The book's cover and the first advertisements both featured Kent's name but did not mention Melville's. Kent's design, especially in the
Modern Library edition of 1943, helped the novel to find a wider audience. Kent's illustrations give the impression of being woodcuts but are in fact ink and wash. Kent counselled Kittredge that the "whole book is a work that should be read slowly, reflectively; the large page and type induce such reading. The character of the type should be homely, rather than refined and elegant, for homeliness flavors every line that Melville wrote." He wrote that he had thought of using a fourteen-point
Caslon type-face, and he did make the pages rather large. The artist considered his illustrations "literary woodcutting, not engraving", and added that the illustrations show the "midnight darkness enveloping human existence, the darkness of the human soul, the abyss, -- such is the mood of
Moby-Dick." In 1992, the
Library of Congress held an exhibition devoted to the Four American Classics series.
Late 20th century in 1978 R.R. Donnelley's
cartographic production facility grew to be one of the largest custom mapmaking companies in the
United States. In the early 1990s, the division successfully integrated routing technology with its digital map databases and launched a separate company, Geosystems, which several years later became
MapQuest. The Calumet Plant was closed in 1993, following the cancellation of the
Sears catalog. Donnelley's handling of the closing generated a lawsuit, which went all the way to the US Supreme Court, concerning alleged discrimination against black employees. Donnelley settled the lawsuit in 2003.
21st century Throughout its history, particularly in the 1990s and 2000s, R.R. Donnelley purchased a number of other companies outright, steadily increasing in size. In February 2004, R.R. Donnelley
merged with Moore Wallace Inc., keeping the name R.R. Donnelley as the name of the combined company. Donnelley went on to purchase OfficeTiger, a major publishing and financial outsourcing company, as well as printing company
Banta Corporation in 2007. In 2005, it acquired Hong Kong based Asia Printers Group from
CVC Capital Partners. Asia Printers Group consists of South China Printing, which was acquired by Asia Printers Group in 2002. In 2006, it acquired
Canadian Bank Note Company's financial printing business, consisting of documentation for initial public offerings. In May 2007, R.R. Donnelley also acquired book and educational materials printer Von Hoffmann (and creative/ pre-press subsidiary Anthology Inc.) from Visant Corporation. R.R. Donnelley also purchased Perry Judd's Holdings Inc., a private catalog and magazine printer, at the beginning of 2007. Also in 2007, R.R. Donnelley was also named as an interested party in an attempt to purchase
Quebecor World. In May 2009, the company tendered an unsolicited bid to purchase Quebecor World. At the beginning of 2008, RRD also announced the acquisition of Pro Line Printing, Inc. In July 2008, the company established a multi-year contract with
F+W Publications Inc., which allowed Donnelley to print a large amount of F + W's
book and
magazine publications. The contract was valued at about $80 million. In 2010 and 2011, R.R. Donnelley acquired
Bowne & Co., San Francisco-based Nimblefish Technologies, Helium.com, and Austin-based LibreDigital. During the Labor Day weekend in September 2011, R.R. Donnelley announced it would close its
Bloomsburg printing plant where
Penguin Classics and paperbacks in the best-selling Twilight and
Idiot's Guide series were printed. In March 2012, RR Donnelley closed their plant in
Windsor, Connecticut and in May of the same year, the company closed their plant in
Danbury, Connecticut. On August 15, 2012, R.R. Donnelley acquired
EDGAR Online. In 2013, R.R. Donnelley acquired Consolidated Graphics. In August 2015, the company announced it would split into three different companies. One would keep the name R.R. Donnelley & Sons whereas the other two would be titled
LSC Communications and
Donnelley Financial Solutions. The separation was completed in October 2016. The company left the Brazilian market in 2019. In September 2021, R.R. Donnelley announced it would be closing the company's plant in
Lewisburg in November 2021. In October 2021, R.R. Donnelley announced that it had entered into a definitive agreement to be acquired by
Chatham Asset Management for $7.50 per share in cash. After a bidding war with
Atlas Holdings, Chatham increased their offer to buy R.R. Donnelley's remaining shares for $10.85 per share in cash, for a value of nearly $900 million. The acquisition completed in February 2022. In July 2024, R.R. Donnelley finalized the acquisition of digital print and marketing businesses from Vericast Corp. Also in 2024, R.R. Donnelley acquired
Williams Lea. ==Lakeside Press==