William Hunter | |
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Colonial Williamsburg shop sign
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Born | early 1700s Yorktown, Virginia |
Died | August 14, 1761 |
Resting place | Williamsburg, Virginia |
Residence | Colonial Williamsburg |
Occupation | printer |
Known for | publisher in the Colony of Virginia |
Children | William Hunter Jr. |
Parent(s) | William Hunter (Sr.) Mary Ann Hunter |
William Hunter (died August 14, 1761) was a colonial American newspaper publisher, book publisher, and printer for the colony of Virginia.
Hunter was born in Yorktown, Virginia at an unknown date in the early eighteenth century. His parents were William Hunter Sr. (d. 1742), a merchant of Elizabeth City County, and Mary Ann Hunter (d. 1743). Shortly after the deaths of Hunter's parents, his sister Elizabeth married John Holt, a merchant, printer, and the mayor of Williamsburg (1752—1753). Since all of Hunter's sisters were minor children and had no parents, they moved in with Elizabeth and her new husband at his house. Hunter and his sisters lived in the large house of the "Ravenscroft property" (two half-acre lots) owned by Holt from 1745 to 1754 at the corner of Nicholson and Botetourt Streets in Williamsburg. Hunter was then the owner of the property after Holt's death in 1754, until his death in 1761.
Hunter was a journeyman apprentice under Virginia's first "public printer" ("printer to the public") William Parks. He was an adult in 1749 and was the foreman of Parks' print shop. Upon Parks’ death in 1750, Hunter took over his position as the official government "public printer" for the colony of Virginia. He was the "public printer" for the House of Burgesses in the colony of Virginia from 1751 to 1761. Hunter's salary was increased from Parks' last salary of £280 per year to a yearly salary of £300 when he became the official "public printer" for Virginia in 1751. His salary was increased to £350 per year in 1759. Hunter's print shop foreman was Joseph Royle.
The print shop where Hunter did his daily work for Parks on Duke of Gloucester Street was only about a block away from where he lived at the "Ravenscroft property" at the time he was an apprentice working for Parks. Hunter did the printing of the Virginia Gazette and took over the newspaper upon Parks' death on April 1, 1750. He remained publisher of the Virginia Gazette from January 3, 1751 until his death in April 1761. Hunter started his own identity of the Gazette with "no. 1" in February 1751. It contained news of the Virginia colony, neighboring colonies, and news from England and parts of Europe. Hunter bought out Parks' print shop in 1753 for £288 for the printing presses and associated equipment.