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The Jersey City Free Public Library (JCFPL) is the municipal library system of Jersey City, New Jersey, serving the residents of Hudson County.The library was established in 1889, opened in 1891, and had its first dedicated building, the main library, by 1901.
The Five Corners Branch of the Jersey City Free Public Library is sited on the intersection itself. The (original) Jersey City High School , now William L. Dickinson High School , at 2 Palisade Avenue 40°43′48″N 74°3′16″W / 40.73000°N 74.05444°W / 40.73000; -74.05444 ( Jersey City High School) ) is
The Joint Committee on Printing is a joint committee of the United States Congress devoted to overseeing the functions of the Government Publishing Office and general ...
The Jersey City Museum dates back to 1901, when its collection was housed on the fourth floor of the Jersey City Free Public Library on Jersey Avenue, in the Van Vorst Park section of downtown. It closed in 1953 for lack of funding and re-opened in 1975. [1] Jersey City historian J. Owen Grundy served five times as the museum president. [2]
The Kelly Style B Press, a three-roller, two-revolution, flat-bed cylinder press with automatic feeder and jogger was introduced in 1914 to great success. By 1923 more than 2,500 Kelly Presses had been sold and the next year production was shifted from Jersey City to a large new factory in Elizabeth, New Jersey .
Korea Minting and Security Printing Corporation (KOMSCO) 1951 Government of South Korea [1] Spain: Fábrica Nacional de Moneda y Timbre (FNMT) 1893 (1940) Ministry of Economy [1] Sri Lanka: De La Rue Lanka Currency & Security Print (Pvt.) Ltd. 1986 (1987) Government of Sri Lanka [Note 9] [6] Sudan: Sudan Currency Printing Press (SCPP) 1994
Brandtjen and Kluge is a US manufacturer of platen foil stamping, embossing & diecutting presses along with modular folder-gluers. Together John and Henry Brandtjen and the Kluge brothers developed the world's first successful automatic feeder for open platen printing presses (such as those manufactured by Chandler & Price), and in November 1919, Brandtjen & Kluge was formed in St. Paul ...
The first printing press arrived in the colonies in 1638. It belonged to Elizabeth Glover and was operated by Stephen Daye [e] and was part of the founding of Harvard University. This press was established to allow the printing of religious works without fear of interference from Parliament.