Publications of Henry Overton I
Note: The following printer, bookseller, or publisher lists are works in progress. They are generated from title page imprints and may reproduce false and misleading attributions or contain errors.
What does "printed by" mean? How to read the roles ascribed to people in the imprints.
In terms of the book trades, the lists below are sorted into up to four groups where: the person is designated in the imprint as having a single role:
- "printed by x"; or
- "sold by x"; or
- "printed for x" or "published by x";
or as having multiple roles in combination (which suggests a likelihood that the person is a trade publisher):
- "printed and sold by x"; "printed: and sold by x"; "printed for and sold by x"; or "printed by and for x" and so on.
On this last point, trade publishers such as Mary Cooper appeared in imprints as having "printed" or "published" the work, though they did not own the copyright. The lists below reflect only the information on the imprint, except where ESTC provides extra information.
Printers (owners of the type and printing presses, and possibly owners of the copyright) may be identified by the words printed by, but printed by does not universally designate a person who is a printer by trade. Booksellers may be identified by the words sold by, but sold by encompasses a number of roles. Booksellers or individuals who owned the copyright are generally identified by the words printed for, but nothing should be concluded in this regard without further evidence, especially since "printed for" could signify that the named person was a distributor rather than a copyright holder. Trade publishers, who distributed books and pamphlets but did not own the copyright or employ a printer—and were not printers themselves—might be identified by the words printed and sold by. Furthermore, works from this period often display false imprints, whether to evade copyright restrictions, to conceal the name of the copyright holders, or to dupe unwitting customers. Ultimately, one must proceed with caution in using the following lists: designations in the imprints may not reliably reflect the actual trades or roles of the people named, and the formulas used in imprints do not consistently mean the same thing.
David Foxon discussed the "meaning of the imprint" in his Lyell Lecture delivered at Oxford in March 1976, with particular attention to "publishers" in the eighteenth-century context:
The fullest form of an imprint is one which names three people, or groups of people:
London: printed by X (the printer), for Y (the bookseller who owned the copyright), and sold by Z.
In the eighteenth century the printer's name is rarely given, at least in works printed in London, and the form is more commonly:
London: printed for Y, and sold by Z.
Very often in this period, and particularly for pamphlets, it is further abbreviated to:
London: printed and sold by Z.
It is this last form which is my present concern. Z is usually what the eighteenth century called 'a publisher', or one who distributes books and pamphlets without having any other responsibility—he does not own the copyright or employ a printer, or even know the author.
D. F. McKenzie coined the term "trade publisher" for these publishers in his Sandars Lectures, also in 1976, on the grounds that their principal role was to publish on behalf of other members of the book trade (Treadwell 100).
Michael Treadwell cautions that "In this period the imprint 'London: Printed and sold by A.B.' normally means 'Printed at London, and sold by A.B.' and must not be taken to mean that A.B. is a printer in the absence of other evidence." Further, "The imprint 'published by' occurs only rarely in Wing and is almost always associated with the name of a trade publisher" (104). While there are exceptions to the rule, it is "certain," he explains, "that anyone who made a speciality of distributing works for others will show a far higher proportion than normal of imprints in one of the 'sold by' forms" (116), which appear in the imprint as "sold by," "printed and sold by," or "published by" (104). Treadwell gives Walter Kettilby as an example of "a fairly typical copyright-owning bookseller" (106)—his role is almost always designated by the phrase "printed for" on imprints.
A final caution: publisher is a word that should be used with some deliberation. Samuel Johnson defines it simply as "One who puts out a book into the world," but "published by" rarely appears on the imprint until later in the eighteenth century, and then primarily associated with newspapers and pamphlets. Treadwell observes that John Dunton names only five publishers among the 200 binders and booksellers in his autobiographical Life and Errors (1705) wherein he undertakes "to draw the Character of the most Eminent [Stationers] in the Three Kingdoms" (100). Treadwell also remarks, however, that "in law, anyone who offered a work for sale 'published' it. In this sense every work had one or more 'publishers', and every bookseller, mercury, and hawker was a 'publisher'" (114).
See:
- Terry Belanger, "From Bookseller to Publisher: Changes in the London Book Trade, 1750–1850," in Book Selling and Book Buying. Aspects of the Nineteenth-Century British and North American Book Trade, ed. Richard G. Landon (Chicago: American Library Association, 1978).
- Bricker, Andrew Benjamin. "Who was 'A. Moore'? The Attribution of Eighteenth-Century Publications with False and Misleading Imprints," in The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 110.2 (2016).
- John Dunton, The Life and Errors of John Dunton (London: Printed for S. Malthus, 1705).
- John Feather, "The Commerce of Letters: The Study of the Eighteenth-Century Book Trade," Eighteenth-Century Studies 17 (1984).
- David Foxon, Pope and the Early Eighteenth-Century Book Trade, ed. James McLaverty (Oxford University Press, 1991).
- Samuel Johnson, Dictionary of the English Language, (printed for J. and P. Knapton; T. and T. Longman; C. Hitch and L. Hawes; A. Millar; and R. and J. Dodsley, 1755).
- D.F. McKenzie, The London Book Trade in the Later Seventeenth Century (Sandars lectures in bibliography, 1977).
- Michael Treadwell, "London Trade Publishers 1675–1750," The Library sixth series, vol. 4, no. 2 (1982).
Printed for Henry Overton I
- Bernhard. A true and brief relation of the bloudy battell fought foure dayes, and foure nights together: betweene Duke Bernard van VVimeren, victour: and Iohn de Weerdt, with the Duke Savelli, both imperiall generalls, vvho were utterly overthrowne and beaten. Translated out of authentick letters, as well out of the Duke of Wimeren his owne letter, as another written to a great lord from Basill. London: printed by E. G[riffin]. for Henry Overton: and are to be sold at his shop in Popes-head Alley, neere Lumbard-street, 1638. ESTC No. S245. Grub Street ID 146839.
- Whitaker, Tobias. The tree of humane life, or, The bloud of the grape. Prouing the possibilitie of maintaining humane life from infancy to extreme old age without any sicknesse by the use of wine. By Tobias Whitaker Doctor in Physick of London. London: Printed by I[ohn] D[awson] for H[enry] O[verton] and are to be sold at his shop in Popes-head Ally, 1638. ESTC No. S119853. Grub Street ID 139491.
- August 3. 1642. The copie of a letter sent from a speciall friend in Coventry, wherein is related the several passages betweene the Right Honourable the Lord Brook and the Earle of Northampton, three miles beyond Banbury, upon the conduct of certaine peeces of ordnance to VVarwick-Castle. [London]: Printed for H[enry]. Overton, in Popes-head Alley, 1642. ESTC No. R212431. Grub Street ID 88031.
- Certaine informations from severall parts of the kingdome, for the satisfaction of all sorts of people that desire to bee truly informed. London [England]: Printed for Henry Overton, 1643-1644. ESTC No. P1247. Grub Street ID 55079.
- Well-willer to King and Parliament.. A nevv plea for the Parliament: and the reserved man resolved: From the serious considerations of the state of the controversie, between the King and the Parliament. Together with severall answers to some common objections about this subject. With advice to those who are yet unsetled in their thoughts hereabout. By a well-willer to King and Parliament. Printed at London: for Henry Overtone, 1643. ESTC No. R188946. Grub Street ID 76680.
- Williams, Roger. A paraenetick or humble addresse to the Parliament and assembly for (not loose, but) Christian libertie. Perused and allowed according to order. London: printed by Matthew Simmons for Henry Overton in Popes-Head-Alley, 1644. ESTC No. R10999. Grub Street ID 59324.
- The workes of several authors upon that way of church=government commonly called (Independent.) Wherein all the chief points in controversie betwixt them and the Presbyterian brethren, are cleerly discussed, and all the most important materiall objections against the sai way of Independency fully answered. Unto which is added the practise of primitive times for preserving truth, and suppressing heresie and schisme. The titles of the said works, are printed on the next leaves following. Licensed and printed according to order. London: Printed by M. S[immons]. for H. Overton, are to be sold at his shop, at the entring into Popes-Head-Alley, out of Lombard-Street, 1646. ESTC No. R186869. Grub Street ID 75367.
- Goodwin, John. A post-script, or appendix to a treatise lately published by authority, intituled, Hagio-Mastix, or, The scourge of the saints displaid in his colours of ignorance and blood. Being an explication of the third verse of the thirteenth chapter of the prophecie of Zacharie; the tenour whereof is this: and it shall come to passe, that when any shall yet prophecie, then his father and his mother that begat him, shall say unto him, thou shalt not live, for thou speakest lies in the name of the Lord: and his father and his mother that begat him, shall thrust him through when he prophecieth. According to the analogie of the Sriptures [sic], the scope and exigency of the context, and the sence of the best expositors upon the place. By John Goodwin a servant of God and men, in the Gospel of Jesus Christ. London: printed for H: Overton, and are to be sold at his shop in Popes-head Ally, [1647]. ESTC No. R201432. Grub Street ID 78856.