William Parks (publisher)
William Parks was an 18th-century printer and journalist in England and Colonial America. He was the first printer in Maryland authorized as the official printer for the colonial government. He published the first newspaper in the Southern American colonies, the Maryland Gazette. He later became authorized as the official printer for the colonial government of Virginia. Parks was also the publisher and printer of the first official collection of the authentic 1733 set of Virginia's laws, and the first colonial publisher and proprietor of The Virginia Gazette newspaper. During his lifetime Parks established four new newspapers in the colonies. He also worked with Benjamin Franklin on several projects related to printing, most notably, the establishment of a paper mill in Virginia, the first such mill south of Pennsylvania.
Reconstruction of Parks' print shop and post office at Colonial Williamsburg
Colonial Williamsburg printing press
Inking the press types
Printing work replicated
The Gazette, founded in 1727 as The Maryland Gazette, is one of the oldest newspapers in America. Its modern-day descendant, The Capital, was acquired by The Baltimore Sun Media Group in 2014. Previously, it was owned by the Capital Gazette Communications group, which published The Capital, Bowie Blade-News, Crofton-West County Gazette, and Capital Style Magazine.
Anne Catharine Hoof Green - portrait by Charles Willson Peale
Maryland Gazette September 5, 1765. A skull and crossbones was displayed where the stamp should have been affixed.
The opponents of Samuel Chase described him as "a foul-mouthed and flaming son of discord" in The Maryland Gazette.