Page:Plomer Dictionary of the Booksellers and Printers 1907.djvu/164

 imprint to a broadside entitled: ''Victories obtained &hellip; both by land and sea &hellip; London, Printed by James Moxon and Joseph Moxon for Tho. Jenner &hellip; 1647'' [January 23rd.] [B.M. 669, f. 10 (112).]

MOXON (JOSEPH), printer and typefounder in London, (1) Upper end of Houndsditch neere Bishop's Gate; (2) Atlas, by St. Michiel's Church in Corn-hil; (3) Atlas on Ludgate Hill neer Fleet Bridge; (4) Atlas in Warwick Lane; (5) Atlas, Russell Street, Westminster; (6) Westminster Hall, right against the Parliament Stairs. 1647-94. Born at Wakefield, in Yorkshire, August 8th, 1627, and brought up to the trade of a mathematical instrument maker. In 1647 he and, possibly a brother, were established in London as printers, for their joint names are found on a broadside entitled ''Victories obtained &hellip; both by land and sea &hellip; London. Printed by James Moxon and Joseph Moxon in 1647.'' In 1654 Joseph Moxon was living at the sign of the Atlas in Cornhill, and in 1659 he added typefounding to his other callings. He issued his first specimen sheet in 1669. His foundry was fitted with a large assortment of type, mostly from Holland, and included a fount of Irish type. His work as a printer was poor, and he is best remembered for his useful treatise on printing and typefounding, which formed the second part of the Mechanick Exercises, and is still a standard work on both these subjects. The date of Joseph Moxon's death is unknown.

MYN, or MYNNE (FRANCES) [sic], bookseller in London; St. Paul, Little Britain, 1663-65. Son of. Smyth in his Obituary, p. 69, records under date of October 12th, 1665, "Fran. Myn bookseller in Little Britain, son of Richard Myn, buried ex peste."

MYN, or MYNNE (RICHARD), bookseller in London; St. Paul, Little Britain, 1628-50. Took up his freedom June 30th, 1623. [Arber, iii. 685.] Mentioned in a list of secondhand booksellers who, in 1628, were required to send catalogues of their books to the Archbishop of Canterbury. Succeeded by his son, .

NEALAND (REBECCA), bookseller in London; Crown in Duck Lane, 1644. Was perhaps the widow of Samuel Nealand, bookseller, who was in business at the same address from 1618 to 1632. [Arber, iii. 623.] In 1644 she republished a controversial pamphlet entitled An Historicall Narration