New Titles on Chronicling America

Several new titles were added to Chronicling America recently. They are:

Bolivar Bulletin 1865-81, Fayetteville Observer 1877-80, Jackson Whig and Tribune 1871-76, Loudon Free Press 1852-55, Milan Exchange 1874-84, Daily Nashville Patriot 1855-62, Daily Nashville True Whig 1855, and Pulaski Citizen 1866-76.

Milan Exchange. May 07, 1881.
Fayetteville Observer. December 13, 1855.
Pulaski Citizen. July 17,1868.

Pressmen’s Home

Pressmen’s Home, located near Rogersville, Tennessee,  was the headquarters for the International Printing Pressmen and Assistants Union of North America, as well as a sanitarium, trade school, and home for retired pressmen.

“For sixty-five years the union maintained its headquarters at Pressmen’s Home in Hawkins County. The Pressmen’s Home Community, located in the mountains of northeastern Tennessee, was a 2,700-acre complex with its own phone system, post office, electrical system, and farm. In addition to its headquarters, the union maintained a retirement home, a sanatorium, and a printing trades school at the site.

The East Tennessee location of the IPPAU-NA headquarters was the dream and accomplishment of George L. Berry, president of the IPPAU-NA from 1907 until his death in 1948. Berry was a dominant and controversial president, and the union’s progress and growth were intertwined with Berry’s life. The IPPAU-NA moved its headquarters to Pressmen’s Home from Cincinnati in 1911 because Berry and the union leadership believed the location (originally a mineral health resort known as Hale Springs) was suitable both as a tuberculosis sanatorium and as a technical trade school for retraining pressmen in the new offset printing methods.

The school eventually became the largest trade school of its kind in the world. While pressmen were also trained on letterpress at the school, its main function was to retrain letterpressmen and educate young printers in the offset craft. The training of thousands of printers at the technical school, along with the correspondence courses the school established, enabled the union to meet the demand for offset printers  following  World War II.

In 1916 the tuberculosis sanatorium opened and played an important role in combating the disease, the principal cause of death among union members. Besides the physical facilities at Pressmen’s Home, the union undertook an extensive campaign to educate the membership about tuberculosis and methods to prevent contamination. By 1961, the year the sanatorium closed, the union facility took credit for saving hundreds of lives through the treatments offered to its members.”

Source: Jack Mooney, Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture