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Category: History of the Book

a broadside

Early American Paper: The Kindling of the Revolution

Posted by: Patrick Hastings

Because only a few paper mills were established in Colonial America between 1690 and the Revolution, the growing American print industry was largely dependent on an imported supply of paper. In the 1760s, Britain exploited this vulnerability by placing taxes on paper, sparking tensions that would lead to Revolution.

Black and white illustration of aurora australis. There is a mountain in the background with water in the foreground. There is a small ship in the water.

Polar Plunge: An Exploration of Antarctic Publishing

Posted by: Callie Beattie

In 1901, on a journey to reach the South Pole, the Discovery Expedition joined together to establish the first Antarctic journal. With illustrations, poetry, and field reports written by sailors and officers alike, the journal provided the crew with a creative outlet over the long polar winter. Six years later, members of that same crew embarked on a new expedition and set out to establish a floating print shop to create the first book ever published in Antarctica known as the Aurora Australis.