Historic Bibles Exhibit and Display

    Improve listing Presented by

The Museum of Printing has an extensive collection of rare Bibles and many will be on display during March and April.

The Museum has one leaf from every Bible printed in Colonial America, including the first Bible printed in America. It was the Eliot Bible of 1663 in the Algonquin Indian language.

(leaf from an original 1663 Eliot / Algonquin Bible)

 

Because the King James Bible had typographical errors. King James ordered a new printing. The 1762 Baskerville Bible was the result. It is considered one of the most beautiful Bibles and the typeface designed for it is named for its designer, John Baskerville, and still used to this day.

(cropped image from an original Baskerville Bible)

 

 

There are giant Folio-sized Bibles and pocket-sized Bibles. The so-called Pony Express Bible was small enough to travel with the mail riders racing across the Western Plains.

A replica of the Gutenberg Bible allows visitors to see the work that started the process of printing. Leaves from Luther’s German translation are on display and they changed the world of religion forever.

The Book of 1,000 Tongues has a Bible passage set in every language known in 1939. Many of those languages have disappeared.

See it all and take one of the handouts (while available) that tells the story of the printed Bible throughout history.

 

Exhibit is ongoing at the Museum until the end of April 2021.  Hours are Saturdays, 10AM-4PM, or weekdays by Appointment.

info@museumofprinting.org

museumofprinting.org

 

Make sure to check us out on our social media on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook!