
audiobook
THE BOOKBINDER in Eighteenth-Century Williamsburg
The Bookbinder in Eighteenth-Century Williamsburg
AN ANCIENT “ART AND MYSTERY”
BOOKS CAN BE BEAUTIFUL
TELLTALE TOOLS
EARLY IMPRESSIONS
THE BINDING BUSINESS
BINDING TO THE CUSTOMER’S ORDER
MASS PRODUCTION BY HAND
OTHER WILLIAMSBURG BINDERS
In the bustling colonial town of Williamsburg, a vanished library once housed over three hundred volumes belonging to Governor Lord Botetourt. Though the original books were lost at sea, a modern recreation based on the 1770 inventory lets listeners explore the intellectual world of a man whose interests spanned history, law, literature, and politics. The narrative weaves together the stories these volumes tell about their owner with the tactile beauty of their eighteenth‑century leather bindings, inviting you to imagine the scent of calfskin and the gleam of gold leaf on a spined treasure.
Beyond the collection, the book delves into the craft of the era’s bookbinders—men like William Parks, John Stretch, and Thomas Brend—who practiced a centuries‑old hand‑binding tradition that barely changed since medieval monasteries. Their meticulous techniques, from blind tooling to the use of leather hinges, reveal a devotion to an art that prized skill over machines. Listeners will come away with a vivid sense of how books were made, protected, and cherished in a world on the cusp of modernity.
Full title
The Bookbinder in Eighteenth-Century Williamsburg An Account of His Life & Times, & of His Craft An Account of His Life & Times, & of His Craft
Language
en
Duration
~53 minutes (51K characters)
Series
Williamsburg craft series
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2018-07-30
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Best known for lively, accessible books on colonial trades, this writer helped bring the working world of eighteenth-century Williamsburg to life for modern readers. His short histories blend careful research with a strong feel for everyday craft, tools, and people.
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