Sarah Griffin was a professional printer who worked in London in the seventeenth century. She ran her own business from 1652 when she inherited the printing house of her husband, Edward. [1] By 1668 she was operating two presses and employed one apprentice and six workmen. [2] [3] Her varied output included multiple editions of Rose's Almanac for the Stationers' Company along with works in Latin and French. [4] Along with her son Bennett she printed the first published work by the poet Thomas Traherne, a work of Church history called Roman Forgeries (1673).
Sarah Griffin was a professional printer who worked in London in the seventeenth century. She ran her own business from 1652 when she inherited the printing house of her husband, Edward. [1] By 1668 she was operating two presses and employed one apprentice and six workmen. [2] [3] Her varied output included multiple editions of Rose's Almanac for the Stationers' Company along with works in Latin and French. [4] Along with her son Bennett she printed the first published work by the poet Thomas Traherne, a work of Church history called Roman Forgeries (1673).