Early on, Hoe added the production of steel saws to his business and introduced improvements to their manufacture. In 1837, he visited England and obtained a patent for a better process of grinding saws. In connection with his factory, Hoe established an apprentice's school where free instruction was given. Type was placed on a revolving cylinder, a design that could print much faster than the old flatbed printing press. It received in 1847, and was placed in commercial use the same year.
Arunah Shepherdson Abell, publisher of
The Sun in Baltimore, was among the first to buy it and put it into use. In its early days, it was variously called the "Hoe
lightning press," and "Hoe's Cylindrical-Bed Press." In 1870 Hoe developed a rotary press that printed both sides of a page in a single operation, what he called the "Hoe web perfecting press." Hoe's press used a continuous roll of paper five miles long, which was put through the machine at the rate of a minute. As the roll emerged, it passed over a knife which cut pages apart; they were next run through an apparatus which folded the pages for the mail or for carriers. These completely printed and folded newspapers were delivered as quickly as the eye could follow them. It produced 18,000 papers an hour and was used the first time by the
New York Tribune. Hoe was a
Freemason. He died while traveling in 1886 in
Florence, Italy. His nephew,
Robert Hoe (1839–1909), wrote a notable
Short History of the Printing Press (1902). He also made further improvements in printing. Although Hoe was known for his rotary printing press, he also had much practice before, since he took on his fathers work after he retired, he perfected many cylinder presses, and he continued to improve, eventually creating his prize invention, the hoe lightning press. ==Brightside estate==