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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Sarah_Griffin
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Sarah Griffin
rdfs:comment
Sarah Griffin was a professional printer who worked in London in the seventeenth century. She ran her own business from 1652 when she inherited the printing house of her husband, Edward. By 1668 she was operating two presses and employed one apprentice and six workmen. Her varied output included multiple editions of Rose's Almanac for the Stationers' Company along with works in Latin and French. Along with her son Bennett she printed the first published work by the poet Thomas Traherne, a work of Church history called Roman Forgeries (1673).
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dbc:Year_of_death_missing dbc:English_printers dbc:Year_of_birth_missing dbc:17th-century_English_businesswomen
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Sarah Griffin was a professional printer who worked in London in the seventeenth century. She ran her own business from 1652 when she inherited the printing house of her husband, Edward. By 1668 she was operating two presses and employed one apprentice and six workmen. Her varied output included multiple editions of Rose's Almanac for the Stationers' Company along with works in Latin and French. Along with her son Bennett she printed the first published work by the poet Thomas Traherne, a work of Church history called Roman Forgeries (1673).
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