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Benjamin Fawcett

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Benjamin Fawcett
County Seats of The Noblemen and Gentlemen of Great Britain and Ireland (1870)

Benjamin Fawcett (December 1808, in Bridlington, East Riding of Yorkshire – January 1893) was an English nineteenth century woodblock colour printer.

Life

The son of a ship's master, Fawcett was apprenticed at age 14 for seven years to William Forth, a Bridlington bookseller and printer. In 1831 he started his own business in Middle Street, Driffield, as music seller, bookbinder and printer, bookseller and stationer. He married Mary Ann Woodmansey in 1830, with whom he had two sons before her death in 1834. He was married again in 1848, to the scientific illustrator and artist Martha Porter,[1] and raised a large family of four daughters and six sons.

Benjamin Fawcett died in January 1893, a few weeks before his associate Francis Orpen Morris.[citation needed]

Works

His early works were mostly children's books published by Webb & Millington of Leeds. In about 1845 he formed a close working association with Francis Orpen Morris. This relationship would last nearly 50 years and have a profound effect on British ornithology. Morris wrote the text for books which were financed and printed by Fawcett, and were engraved by Alexander Francis Lydon (1836–1917), who had started his career as Fawcett's apprentice. Colour printing was a major change from the much-admired monochrome work of Thomas Bewick (1753–1828). At first wood-engraving illustrations were coloured by hand, but later a system of colouring from multiple wood blocks was used.[citation needed]

"White-headed Woodpecker", wood-engraving by Fawcett, drawing by T. W. Wood

Hand-coloured wood engraving started with an accurate painting of the subject. This picture was then carved on a wooden block, standing proud in order to pick up the ink. The block was then placed in a printing press to give a black-and-white print, which was then hand-coloured. The wooden print blocks were carved with great attention detail. Pear and boxwood were sufficiently hard and fine-grained, making them durable and capable of showing fine detail. Most of the joint works of Fawcett and Lydon were published by Groombridge, of London.[citation needed]

Fellow engraver W. D. Ridley wrote: "Benjamin Fawcett was undoubtedly a born genius in the best sense of the word; for in a remote country town in the early days of railway facilities, when it must have been difficult to buy high-grade colour inks, he brushed all difficulties aside, purchased his own boxwood shipped direct from Turkey, matured it, sawed it in slices, surfaced it accurately, drew the whole of his work, Morris's British Birds, upon these blocks himself, and with the aid of his clever wife, actually produced the first edition so far as the blocks were concerned, ...."[citation needed]

"If there was a secret which produced the fine results it would have been... Benjamin Fawcett engraving every one of the three hundred and sixty plates for this work on wood with his own hand ... making the inks himself from the costliest powders and the most expensive varnishes procurable....and each specimen plate for the colourers painted by his wife. This, I believe, is an achievement without parallel in book production. The very best materials were used."

[citation needed]

Fawcett colourised the etched copper plates which were created by bryologist Frances Elizabeth Tripp to accompany her two-volume guide British Mosses.[2]

Selected books printed by Fawcett

  • A Natural History of British Birds. The Rev. Francis Orpen Morris (1850–1857) 6 vols., 8vo, Groombridge.
  • British Fresh-water Fishes. The Rev. William Houghton (Two volume set). Benjamin Fawcett [printer], A F Lydon [artwork], Publisher William Mackenzie: [1879]: London. First Edition xxvi, 202pp (380 x 290 mm), Illustrated with 41 full page colour plates as well as vignette head pieces, brick-red cloth, with piscatorial emblems. 41 tissue-guarded colour-printed xylograph plates by Benjamin Fawcett of Driffield after A.F.Lydon, and another 64 woodcuts by Lydon.
  • Parrots in Captivity. William Greene.
  • Alpine Plants. David Wooster.
  • County Seats of The Noblemen and Gentlemen of Great Britain and Ireland. The Rev. Francis Orpen Morris (1870). William Mackenzie, Ludgate Hill.

References

  1. ^ "Fawcett, Martha". Stuttgart Database of Scientific Illustrators 1450–1950. Retrieved 4 September 2018.
  2. ^ A social and biographical history of British and Irish field-bryologists. "From the time that the Tr". yumpu.com. Archived from the original on 29 October 2021. Retrieved 3 April 2021.

Further reading

  • Paragon Review
  • Memoir written by Francis Orpen Morris' son, the Rev. M.C.F. Morris : "Benjamin Fawcett Colour Printer & Engraver". (Oxford University Press 1925)