Page:Plomer Dictionary of the Booksellers and Printers 1907.djvu/198

 (6)]; R. Heyrick's Queen Esthers Resolve, 1646; Deliberate resolution of the ministers of the gospel within the county of Lancaster, 1647; Solemn exhortation made to the &hellip; churches &hellip; within the province of Lancaster, 1649; R. Hollingsworth's Main points of church government, 1649.

SMITH (WILLIAM), printer in Kilkenny and Cork, 1649-67. In 1649 William Smith printed a Proclamation for the Duke of Ormonde at Kilkenny. In 1657 his imprint appears on The Agreement &hellip; of Associated Ministers at Cork, and in 1660 to James Davies' History of Charles II. As his name is found on Cork imprints as late as 1690, there may have been more than one printer of this name, perhaps father and son. [Information kindly supplied by Mr. E. R. McC. Dix.]

SMITHERS (RICHARD), (?) bookseller in London, 1641. His name occurs on the imprint to a pamphlet entitled An honourable and learned speech made by Mr. Waller, 1641. [E. 199 (42).] It may be a misprint for, q.v.

SMITHURST (RICHARD), (?) bookseller in London; Hosier Lane neer Pye Corner [Smithfield], 1641-48. Publisher of political pamphlets. [Hazlitt, ii. 103, 714.] He may be identical with .

SOWLE (ANDREW), printer in London, (1) Pye Corner Smithfield; (2) Crooked Billet, Holloway Lane, Shoreditch, 1653-67. Son of Francis Sowle, of the parish of St. Sepulchres, yeoman. Born in 1628. Apprenticed on July 6th, 1646, to, q.v., for seven years. [Apprenticeship Register, Stationers' Hall.] Although his name is not found in an imprint before 1683, there is no doubt that he was the printer of most, if not all, of the early Quaker literature. In the obituary notice of him that appeared in Piety Promoted, Part I, p. 192, it was stated that he engaged himself freely in printing Friends books, and that his printing materials were several times seized and broken to pieces, and on one occasion a thousand reams of printed books were taken from him. On another occasion he was taken before Sir Richard Browne, who threatened to send him "after his brother Twyn," who had been executed in 1664 for printing a seditious book. Andrew Sowle's daughter, Elizabeth, married in 1685 her father's apprentice, William Bradford, who emigrated to America and set up his press in Pennsylvania, and afterwards in New York. Another daughter, Tace Sowle, succeeded her father in his business, and ultimately married Thomas Raylton. Andrew Sowle died in 1695, aged 67.