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See also: English printer, was See also: born on the 5th of See also: July 1752 in St Mary's parish,ENorwich
.
He was educated at See also: Boston grammar school, and was apprenticed to See also: Stephen See also: White, a Norwich printer
.
As soon as his apprenticeship had expired
See also: Hansard started for See also: London with only a See also: guinea in his See also: pocket, and became a compositor in the office of See also: John Hughs (1703-1771), printer to the
See also: House of See also: Commons
.
In 1774 he was made a partner, and undertook almost the entire conduct of the business, which in 1800 came completely into his hands
.
On the See also: admission of his sons the See also: firm became 'See also: Luke Hansard & Sons
.
Among those whose friendship Hansard won in the exercise of his profession were Robert See also: Orme, Burke and Dr See also: Johnson; while
See also: Porson praised him as the most accurate printer of See also: Greek
.
He printed the See also: Journals of the House of Commons from 1774 till his See also: death
.
The promptitude and accuracy with which Hansard printed See also: parliamentary papers were often of the greatest service to government—notably on one occasion when the proof-sheets of the report of the Secret Committee on the French Revolution were submitted to Pitt twenty-four See also: hours after the draft had See also: left his hands
.
On the union with See also: Ireland in 18o1, the increase of parliamentary printing compelled Hansard to give up all private printing except when parliament was not sitting
.
He devised numerous expedients for reducing the expense of See also: publishing the reports; and in 18o5, when his workmen struck at a See also: time
9z8
of See also: great pressure, he and his sons themselves set to See also: work as compositors
.
Luke Hansard died on the 29th of See also: October 1828,
His son, TsoMAs CURSON HANSARD (1776-1833), established a See also: press of his own in Paternoster See also: Row, and began in 1803 to See also: print the Parliamentary Debates, which were not at first See also: independent reports, but were taken from the See also: newspapers
.
After 1889 the debates were published by the Hansard Publishing Union Limited
.
T . C . Hansard was the author of Typographic, an See also: Historical Sketch of the Origin and Progress of the See also: Art of Printing (1825)
.
The See also: original business remained in the hands of his younger See also: brothers, See also: James and Luke
See also: Graves Hansard (1777-1851)
.
The firm was prosecuted in 1837 by John See also: Joseph Stockwell for printing by See also: order of the House of Commons, in an official report of the inspector of prisons, statements regarded by the See also: plaintiff as libellous
.
Hansard sheltered himself on the ground of See also: privilege, but it was not until after much litigation that the security of the printers of See also: government reports was guaranteed by See also: statute in 1840
.
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