Panel, Control
Identifier:
2011.41.2
Description:
Control panel for printing press machine. Has four buttons reading: Safe, Ready, Inch and a large yellow Stop button. The buttons are mounted on a metal panel that once once attached to a printing press machine.;This control panel, which allowed operators to "stop the presses!", was installed in the Grand Rapids Press printing facility at the northeast corner of Michigan Street and Monroe Avenue in downtown Grand Rapids. This central printing facility was established by the Press in the 1960s, and it was where the local newspaper was printed for almost 50 years. In 2004 the printing portion of the newspaper business was moved out to a larger facility in Walker. In 2010 the twenty-two 42,000 pound rollers and accompanying printing equipment at the downtown location were dismantled and sold.;Front buttons read: Safe, Ready, Inch and Stop. Back reads specific electrical information for each button, also states: Made in USA.;The Grand Rapids Press has been printed as an evening daily newspaper since the 1890s.
Date:
circa 1960
Materials:
Metal, Plastic
Dimensions:
4.5" h 4" w 13" d
Current Location Status:
On Exhibit
Source:
Gift Of Grand Rapids Press
Links:
http://blog.mlive.com/exposure/2010/06/post_65.html
Exhibit/Program:
Be Curious (October 1 2013 – March 1 2015)
Rotating display of recently accessioned artifacts.
Related Entities:
Grand Rapids Press (donor)
Alternate names:
Evening Press, Evening Press and LeaderThe history of the Grand Rapids Press began in 1890 when William J. Sproat published the first issue of Morning Press. In 1892, George G. Booth purchased both the Morning Press and the Grand Rapids Evening Leader and in December of that year, the Evening Press and Leader was formed by joining the two papers. In early 1893, the name was shortened to the Evening Press and was used until 1913 when the name changed to the Grand Rapids Press. The Grand Rapids Herald merged with the Press in 1959.
The Grand Rapids Press had five locations in the West Michigan area prior to moving production to Ohio in 2020. The first was at 63 Pearl Street, Grand Rapids, Michigan on the second floor of the Metropolitan building. These offices were used by the Press from 1890 to 1892 until they moved to offices on the southeast end of the Pearl Street Bridge. This location, often referred to as the "by the bridge" location, was the first to include a printing press owned by the newspaper. After a remodel in 1893 due to a spring flood, the tanbark gymnasium, dedicated as the Newsboys Assembly Hall in 1894, was built for the newsboys after their original space became home to a second printing press. In 1906 the Evening Press moved to the corner of Fulton and Sheldon in Grand Rapids, Michigan to accommodate the growth of the business. Built specifically for the Press, the building was designed by Albert Kahn and consisted of four floors including an auditorium on the top floor and a pool in the basement. The Press stayed at this location until 1966 when they moved to a new, larger facility at 155 Michigan Street in Grand Rapids. They stayed at this facility until a move to Walker, Michigan in 2004. This was the final Michigan location of the Press prior to moving production out of state in 2020.
The Grand Rapids Press is part of Booth Newspapers, a media company in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Formed in 1914 by brothers George G. Booth, Ralph H. Booth, and Edmund W. Booth, it owned The Bay City Times, The Flint Journal, The Grand Rapids Press, Jackson Citizen Patriot, Kalamazoo Gazette, Muskegon Chronicle, The Saginaw News, and Advance Newspapers. Andrea Melvin (identified by)
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