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A Guide to Printers' Row in Philadelphia

Spreading the news of independence since 1776 …

Foto door M. Kennedy voor Visit Philadelphia

Colonial American news spread very slowly compared to modern methods. Printers’ Rowwhich stretched along the 100 to 400 block of today’s Market Street in Old City — served as a vital connection between government leaders and the people living across the original 13 colonies of our nascent country. 

Pamfletten en kranten waren de communication tools of the 18th century, and the printers producing these materials set up shops in the busiest part of town, near the Delaware River. At this time, print shops were decidedly partisan — Patriot or Loyalist — showing through print which political parties they favored in the new government. 

Today’s visitors can find historic plaques marking the spots where these businesses once stood, including the spot where printers made copies of the Declaration of Independence to spread the word to the countryside that America had severed ties with Great Britain. 

Locatie en contact:
318 Market Street
Philadelphia, PA 19147
138 Market Street
Philadelphia, PA 19147
106 Market Street
Philadelphia, PA 19147
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What can I expect to see on Printers’ Row?

Market Street holds the memories of these important businesses through historic plaques, including one for Irish immigrant John Dunlap’s shop (near 138 Market Street), where the original Declaration of Independence first hit the presses.

As Dunlap also published the country’s first successful newspaper — The Pennsylvania Packet — it’s fitting that the Society of Professional Journalists honored the printer and his role in securing American independence by installing the plaque during the city’s Bicentennial celebration in 1976.

A bronze historical market commemorating the site where John Dunlap first printed and distributed the Declaration of Independence is embedded into the side of a white building. A bronze historical market commemorating the site where John Dunlap first printed and distributed the Declaration of Independence is embedded into the side of a white building.

  - Foto door Visit Philadelphia

On the same block, find a blue historic marker commemorating Robert Aitken (106 Market Street), known for printing the country’s first complete copy of the Bible in English and for helping to spread Thomas Paine’s words in The Pennsylvania Magazine.

In addition to viewing the historic markers, visitors can also head to the Franklin Court Drukkerij and watch park rangers set type and crank the arm of a (reproduction) 18th-century press — all while answering questions.

Reproduction 18th-century wooden printing presses are displayed inside the Franklin Court Printing Office. Reproduction 18th-century wooden printing presses are displayed inside the Franklin Court Printing Office.

Franklin Court Printing Office, reproduction presses   — Foto met dank aan National Park Service

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What’s the history behind Printers’ Row?

Business owners chose the Market Street location to set up shop because of the area’s proximity to the Delaware River, allowing access to a steady stream of papermaking supplies and a method of delivery for finished products. The prime location also made it easy for the Founding Fathers to spread the word of historic happenings.

History holds that in the evening hours of July 4, 1776, Benjamin Franklin took the handwritten, freshly inked copy of the Declaration to Dunlap’s shop. Franklin ordered hundreds of copies, and the printer and his staff worked through the night to copy the document.

Copies of the Declaration would then find their way throughout the colonies, with the first public reading of the words happening on July 8, 1776 in front of the Pennsylvania State House (today’s Independence Hall) and the last happening in Savannah, Georgia in August 1776.

What else do I need to know?

Visit the historic plaque and marker any time of day, as both are freely accessible to the public.

No tickets are necessary to visit the Franklin Court Printing Office, but check ahead for hours and days of operation.

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