Cast Iron Book Binder's Nipping Press — 1893 Columbian Exposition Award View Watchlist >
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Lot # G524
System ID # 30366912
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Cast Iron Book Binder's Nipping Press — 1893 Columbian Exposition Award
A heavy cast iron wheel-driven book binder's nipping press, manufactured circa 1890, built for pressing bound volumes flat during the binding and finishing process. A large spoked flywheel turns the central steel screw, driving the upper platen down against the fixed lower bed to apply even, controlled pressure across the book block. The arched top yoke carries traces of original gilt scrollwork decoration — acanthus-leaf scrolls cast into the iron — and the four corner posts are capped in brass finials. The upper platen bears a painted maker's roundel reading "Columbian Exposition — The Highest Award — 1893," a distinction conferred at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago.
Presses of this pattern were standard equipment in commercial binderies and print shops from the 1880s through the early twentieth century. The ornamental casting, surviving gilt decoration, and brass finials mark this as a presentational shop-floor example rather than a plain utility press — the kind a bindery would have placed front-of-house to signal the quality of its operation. The book opening measures a generous 15 inches wide, suited to pressing large ledgers and volumes. The press is fully functional; the screw travels smoothly and the platens seat cleanly.
Significance & Rarity
The World's Columbian Exposition of 1893 — held in Chicago to mark the 400th anniversary of Columbus's arrival in the Americas — was the most consequential world's fair of the nineteenth century, drawing 27 million visitors and serving as the proving ground for American industry, technology, and design. Exhibitors competed in hundreds of trade categories judged by international juries, and a "Highest Award" medal was the top distinction a manufacturer could earn — roughly equivalent to a gold medal in today's competition structure. Book press and bindery equipment manufacturers who entered the fair's Liberal Arts and Manufactures divisions were competing directly against British, German, and French makers at the height of the trade. A press that earned the Highest Award in that field was recognized as best-in-class on a genuinely international stage. That the manufacturer chose to cast and paint the award roundel directly onto the platen — permanently and prominently — indicates this was a prestige model intended to carry the distinction into every shop it entered.
CONDITION
Good overall and fully functional. Surface rust, oxidation, and paint loss are present across the iron platens and base edges, consistent with age and working use; the underside platen edge shows heavier corrosion and pitting. Original gilt scrollwork decoration survives in traces on the arched yoke. Screw and flywheel operate smoothly with no binding.
DIMENSIONS / SPECIFICATIONS
- Overall: 13½" H × 20" W × 11" D
- Book Opening: 3.25" H × 15" W × 10" D
- Weight: 77 lbs
- Date of Manufacture: c. 1890
- Material: Cast iron with brass finials
- Maker Mark: "Columbian Exposition — The Highest Award — 1893"
- Campbell's Soup Can (4" H) Shown for Scale — Not Included