Page:Plomer Dictionary of the Booksellers and Printers 1907.djvu/129

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HILLS— HODGKINSON.
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conjunction with John Field, q.v. a post he held until the Restoration. He was still living in 1684, when a broadside was issued entitled A View of part of the many traiterous, disloyal, and turn-about actions of H. H. senior, sometimes printer to Cromwell, to the Commonwealth, to the Anabaptists Congregation, to Cromwells Army, Committee of Safety, etc., [B.M. 816, m. 2 (60); Solly, E.; Henry Hills, the pirate printer; Antiquary, vol ii. April, 1885, pp. 151-154.] Amongst his publications was Ill-Newes from New England. By John Clark, 1652.

HIRONES, see Hierons.

HODGES (ROBERT), bookseller in London, 1649. Only known from the imprint to W. Prynne's Loyall vindication of the liberties of England, 1649. He may have been a descendant of George Hodges, who was publishing between 1621 and 1632. [Arber, v. 242.]

HODGKINSON (RICHARD), printer in London; Thames Street, near Baynard's Castle, 1624-68. Took up his freedom April 8th, 1616. [Arber, iii. 684.] In Sir John Lambe's notes he is said to have been the son of a printer, possibly Thomas Hodgkinson, who is mentioned in the Rasters between 1580 and 1597. Some time in 1635, Richard Hodgkinson was in trouble with the Star Chamber and his press and letters had been seized, but on the recommendation of the Commissioners they were restored to him. This, however, had not taken place at the time when Lambe made these notes. [Acts of the Court of High Commission, Domestic State Papers, Charles I, vol. 324, f. 307b] On March 21st, 1637, another entry in the State Papers shows that he had purchased type from Arthur Nicholls the type-founder, and some dispute as to payment resulted. [Domestic State Papers, Charles I, vol. 350, 53, 53 (1).] In the same year he was in trouble for printing Doctor John Cowell's Interpreter, but this did not prevent his being chosen as one of the twenty printers appointed under the Act. He was the printer of the first volume of Sir W. Dugdale's Monasticon, which, next to the Polyglott Bible, must be considered a "magnus opus" of the Commonwealth period. He was still a master printer in 1668, but as no return of his office is given with the rest, he would have appeared to have died or retired from business about that time.