During the late 1640s Robert Leybourn's press in Monkswell Street near
Cripplegate, London was occupied with books and pamphlets of a political, martial and
millenarian nature. He printed
John Arrowsmith's sermon to the houses of parliament, ''England's Eben-ezer
in 1645, and his Great Wonder in Heaven
in 1647. In 1646 he published a pamphlet A Defence of Master Chaloner's Speech
, and an early edition of The Marrow of Modern Divinity
attributed to Edward Fisher: in 1648 appeared The Differences in Scotland stil on foot
, and from 1648 an almanack or Moderate Intelligencer
of military affairs entitled Mercurius Republicus''. Robert Leybourn gave the apparently fraudulent ascription to Sir
William Davenant of
Edmund Bolton's historical poem
London, King Charles his Augusta, or City Royal of 1648. He printed
Joseph Mede's sermon on St. Peter's prediction of the apocalypse, and a work called
The Englishe Catholike Christian by one Thomas de la More, minister, followed in 1649. Into his industrious hands William Leybourn introduced the second year of his astronomical almanac,
Speculum Anni for 1649, and also the important astronomical work he had written with
Vincent Wing, their
Urania Practica, together with their reply to the criticisms of Julian Shakerley. From this time forth the Leybourn press found its direction in the works of William Leybourn, and of Vincent Wing, and for a wide range of serious works of astronomy, mathematics, surveying, military matters, and the like. In 1650 was printed
Richard Elton's
The Complete Body of the Art Military, John Wybard's
Tactometria, seu Tetagmenomentria: or, the geometry of regulars practically proposed, John Chatfield's
The Trigonall Sector: the description and use thereof and the two parts of
Thomas Rudd's
Practical Geometry, and also John Spencer's Catalogue of the Library of Sion House, as well as Leybourn's own
Planometria, or the Whole Art of Surveying Land under the pseudonym 'Oliver Wallinby'. In 1651 William Leybourn entered into a business partnership with Robert Leybourn as a printer and seller of books. The press closed in 1666, following the
Great Fire of London (in which almost the entire second edition of Wing's
Geodætes Practicus, 1666, was incinerated), after which William moved to Northcott in
Southall,
Middlesex. ==Career as an author==