Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,253 pages of information and 244,496 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Robert Harrild (1780-1853)

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Robert Harrild (1780-1853) of Harrild and Sons

1780 January 1st. Born in Bermondsey the son of Horton Harrild and his wife Sarah Johnston

1801 July 14th Married in Camberwell to Elizabeth Billing

1829 Rescued the spire of Wren’s St. Antholin’s Church after the church was destroyed in a storm and installed it on a plinth in his garden at Sydenham[1]

1851 Living at Round Hill, Dartmouth Road, Lewisham: Robert Harrild (age 72 born Bermondsey), Printers' Composition Roller Manufactuer. With his wife Elizabeth Harrild (age 70 born Newington Butts) and their son Robert Harrild, Junior (age 42 born St. Clement, East Cheap), Printers' Composition Roller Manufactuer - Widower. Also his sister-in-law Mary Carless (age 58 born Newington Butts), unmarried. Two servants.[2]


DNB 1885-1900.[3]

HARRILD, ROBERT (1780–1853), inventor, was born in Bermondsey, London, on 1 Jan. 1780.

He commenced life as a printer, and in 1809 began business as manufacturer of printers' materials and 'printers' engineer. From that date he is mainly identified with an important improvement in the inking of types an invention indispensable to good and rapid printing by introducing 'composition' rollers instead of the ancient method by 'balls,' which had continued from the days of Caxton. This improvement was only effected by dint of combined energy and tact on the part of Harrild, so persistent was the opposition of the workmen and others till they began to understand their proper interests.

After 1810, when he first began to manufacture the composition rollers and balls for the trade, his method speedily became widely known, and was at last adopted universally. Before those inking rollers were introduced only from one hundred and fifty to two hundred copies of a newspaper were printed in an hour.

Harrild's factories in London were visited by printers and compositors from all parts of England, and he came to be considered one of the heads of the trade, the more so that his character as an energetic and philanthropic citizen gained him much esteem. Antiquaries have to thank Harrild for the preservation of the Benjamin Franklin printing-press, which is still to be seen in the patent office at Washington, U.S.A. Rendered obsolete by the introduction of the Blaew press, which itself was soon superseded by the Stanhope, the machine which Franklin when an unknown journeyman had worked in London in 1725-6 was kept by Harrild till 1841, when he presented it to Mr. J. B. Murray, an American, who removed it to the United States. Before being shipped from England it was exhibited in public, and the money accruing was handed over to Harrild for the London Printers' Pension Society, in which he took an active interest.

He was one of the first parish guardians appointed after the passing of the Poor Law Act, and retained that office for many years. At Sydenham, where his last years were spent, he largely contributed towards the conversion of what had previously been a wild common into a populous and wealthy neighbourhood.

Harrild died at Sydenham on 28 July 1853, leaving £1,000. by his will to the Printers' Society to endow a 'Franklin pension.'


See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. Design, Winter 2020
  2. 1851 Census
  3. Wikisource