Establishment of the Government Printing Office The Government Printing Office was created by
congressional joint resolution () on June 23, 1860. It began operations March 4, 1861, with 350 employees and reached a peak employment of 8,500 in 1972.
Environmentally conscious initiatives The GPO first used 100 percent recycled paper for the
Congressional Record and
Federal Register from 1991 to 1997, under Public Printers Robert Houk and Michael DiMario. The GPO resumed using recycled paper in 2009.
Official histories The GPO has release several books over years that recount its history. One of the first books,
History of the Government Printing Office (at Washington D. C.), was released in 1881.
100 GPO Years 1861–1961 was first released in 1961 on the centennial of the office's creation describing its first hundred years of existence,. and reprinted in 2010. In March 2011, the GPO issued a new illustrated official history celebrating 150 years, titled
Keeping America Informed. A revised version was release five years later in 2016. A picture book,
Picturing the Big Shop, was released in 2017.
Name change and shift to digital publishing With demand for print publications falling and a move underway to digital document production and preservation, the name of the GPO was officially changed to "Government Publishing Office" in a provision of an omnibus government funding bill passed by Congress in December 2014. Following signature of this legislation by President
Barack Obama, the name change took place on December 17, 2014. File:Government Printing Office, restaurant - Washington, D.C..jpg|Government Printing Office, the restaurant in 1922 File:Machine shop in the Government Printing Office.jpg|Machine shop in the Government Printing Office File:Printing unemployment census questionnaires. Washington, D.C., Oct. 7. Scene at the Government Printing Office where 3,000,000 unemployment census questionnaires are being printed daily. LCCN2016872423.jpg|Scene at the Government Printing Office where 3,000,000 unemployment census questionnaires are being printed daily in 1937 File:Ready for postman. Washington, D.C., Oct. 7. After they are printed and folded for mailing at the Government Printing Office, the unemployment census questionaires are dumped into a mail LCCN2016878021.jpg|The mailroom in 1937 File:Unemployment census blanks prepared for mailing. Washington, D.C., Oct. 7. As rapidly as the presses in the Government Printing Office print the unemployment census blanks, workers trim and LCCN2016872425.jpg|As rapidly as the presses in the Government Printing Office print the unemployment census blanks, workers trim and mail. ==GPO directors of the United States==