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* 1839 ''Perkins Bacon and Co'' is asked to make plates and dies for stamps. (Penny Black was their first stamp).
* 1839 ''Perkins Bacon and Co'' is asked to make plates and dies for stamps. (Penny Black was their first stamp).


<br /> There is an overlap of ''Perkins, Bacon & Perch'' and ''Perkins, Bacon and Co'', not all business ventures included all partners and percent ownership is detailed as changing as shares were bought and sold between partners, and money was loaned to partners from the company. Additionally, Charles Heath had many other individual business ventures, as did Perkins. Heath and Perkins had numerous talents, and successes, however, they routinely had financial problems. Fortunatly, the accounting was very good. Charles Heath has professional relationships with several people that span decades.
<br /> There is an overlap of ''Perkins, Bacon & Perch'' and ''Perkins, Bacon and Co'', not all business ventures included all partners and percent ownership is detailed as changing as shares were bought and sold between partners, and money was loaned to partners from the company. Additionally, Charles Heath had many other individual business ventures, as did Perkins. Heath and Perkins had numerous talents, and successes, however, they routinely had financial problems. Fortunatly, the accounting was very good. Charles Heath had professional relationships with several people that span decades.


== History ==
== History ==

Revision as of 13:18, 17 January 2011

Messrs. Perkins, Bacon & Co was a printer of books, bank notes and postage stamps, most notable for printing the Penny Black, the first stamps, in 1840.

Origins

The firm had its origin in 1819 with Jacob Perkins, who had emigrated to the United Kingdom from Boston, Massachusetts with a process for replicating line engravings involving the use of soft steel that was hardened before use. He and engravers Gideon Fairman and Charles Heath formed "Perkins, Fairman, and Heath", and they produced 1-pound notes for English banks. [1]

Brief Timeline

  • 1808-1810 Jacob Perkins and Gideon Fairman produce the first known books in the USA to use steel plates.
  • ~1816 Jacob Perkins has "soft steel" plates to engrave on, and a method to harden the plates, and a process.
  • 1818 (April 15), Heath discussed the American bank notes printed by Perkins at the Society of Arts Committee on Forgery.
  • Bank of Englad was offering a L 20,000 prize for unforgable notes.
  • 1819 (May 31) Perkins sets sail for England after communicating with Charles Heath.
  • 1819 (June 29) Perkins arives in Liverpool, England.
  • 1819 (July) Sir Joseph Banks met with Perkins.
  • 1819 (December 20) The Heath's join Perkins and Fairman forming Perkins, Fairman and Heath.
  • 1819 George Heath provides some financial backing only.
  • 1820 (Feb) Bank of England choses another solution, but other business follows, including L 1 notes and stamps.
  • 1820 (Feb) Perkins among other ventures, goes into the book publishing business with the Heaths and Fairman.
  • 1820 (summer) Perkins Fairman and Heath move to 69 Fleet Street, London.
  • 1820 (September) Perkins had sold 1,000 plates he had intended to use on the Bank of England project.
  • 1822 Perkins and Heath
  • 1829 Perkins and Bacon. Joshua Butters Bacon ( Perkin's son in law), buys Heaths interest.
  • 1834-1852 Perkins, Bacon & Perch (Henry Perch was an engraver, who was also made a partner).
  • 1839 Perkins Bacon and Co is asked to make plates and dies for stamps. (Penny Black was their first stamp).


There is an overlap of Perkins, Bacon & Perch and Perkins, Bacon and Co, not all business ventures included all partners and percent ownership is detailed as changing as shares were bought and sold between partners, and money was loaned to partners from the company. Additionally, Charles Heath had many other individual business ventures, as did Perkins. Heath and Perkins had numerous talents, and successes, however, they routinely had financial problems. Fortunatly, the accounting was very good. Charles Heath had professional relationships with several people that span decades.

History

England was offering a prize of L 20,000 for a note which was impossible to forge. Heath contacted Perkins and convinced him to come to England and Perkins arrived in Liverpool in 1819. They produced samples to Sir Joseph Banks, President of the Royal Commission on Forgery, and it appeared that they would win. They did not. Perkins started showing signs of financial distress and was in a minor debt to the Heaths. They did manage to secure smaller contracts for smaller L 1 notes, and later get more goverment contracts, but in the meantime they started publishing. George Heath, Charles Heath, Jacob Perkins, and Gideon Fairman had multiple parterships, and individual projects going on at the same time. George Heath was a financial backer only. Charles Heath was an engraver, a book publisher. Jacob Perkins was an inventor who made steel book plates practical (but not cheaper). Fairman had produced a book with Perkins in the USA. Financial difficulties of one or the other partners had at least one of them in debt to the company at any moment in time, and the accounting records from these guys is confusing, but very business like. Their percentage of profits of any venture, changed often.

By 1822 it was known as "Perkins & Heath", then in 1829, after a complicated transaction in which Heath gave up his shares and Joshua Butters Bacon (Perkin's son in law) bought in, as "Perkins & Bacon". Henry Petch joined in 1835, and thus the firm printing the first stamps was actually known as "Perkins, Bacon & Petch". The Penny Black printing plates are curently on display at the British Library. When Petch died in 1852, the firm became just "Perkins, Bacon".

In 1861 they (temporarily) lost the contract to print stamps as a punishment for giving copies of new issues away to friends of the management without permission from the governments involved. Although, Heath had won another court battle which gave engravers the right to retain 8 impressions of any engraving, this right did not extend to currency or stamps.

They completed their printing contract for the line-engraved stamps on 31 December 1879, losing subsequent business to competitor De La Rue.

In addition to British stamps, Perkins, Bacon printed for a number of the colonies, including the first stamps of the Cape of Good Hope, which were printed in 1853.

In 1935 the firm went out of business and its records were acquired by Charles and Harry Nissen and Thomas Allen. The records were subsequently transferred to the Royal Philatelic Society London where Percy de Worms organised them for publication.[2]

A Penny Black, with a red cancellation that was hard to see and easily removed

Further reading

  • de Worms, Percy. Perkins Bacon Records, Royal Philatelic Society London, 1953. (Two volumes published posthumously. Ed. John Easton and Arnold Strange)
  • Basil Hunnisett, Engraved on Steel, Ashgate, 1998
  • Basil Hunnisett, Steel-engraved book illustration in England, David R. Godine Publisher,

References

  1. ^ Hunnisett, Basil. Steel-engraved book illustration in England, David R Godline Publishing, 1980
  2. ^ de Worms, Percy. Perkins Bacon Records, Royal Philatelic Society London, 1953, Introduction by John Easton, p.xv.