Page:Plomer Dictionary of the Booksellers and Printers 1907.djvu/159

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
MILLER—MILLS.
129

MILLER (GEORGE), junior, printer in London, 1665. His imprint is found in John Webster's The White Devil, 1665. [b.m. 644 f. 76.] He was probably the son of George Miller, printer at Blackfriars.

MILLER (JAMES), bookseller at Edinburgh, (1) In the Cowgate, at the sign of S. John the Divine, at the foot of the Colledge-wynd', 1665; (2) On the North side of the street against the Crosse, at the sign of S. John the Divine, 1671. (1665–72). One of the six booksellers who in 1671 appealed against A. Anderson. Will registered August 2nd, 1672. [[[Author:H. G. Aldis|H. G. Aldis]], List of Books, p. 117.]

MILLER (SIMON), bookseller in London; Star in St. Paul's Churchyard, 1653–84. Son of George Miller. Apprenticed April 24th, 1645, to Andrew Crooke. Four books published by him are advertised at the end of Parivale's Historie of the Iron Age, 1659.

MILLER (WILLIAM), bookseller in London; Gilded Acron [acorn] in St. Paul's Churchyard, near the little north door, 1661–98. Believed to be the son William mentioned in the will of George Miller, printer at Blackfriars, who died in 1646. William Miller was an important bookseller throughout the reign of Charles II and James II. [Arber, Term Catalogues, vols. i. and ii.]

MILLESON (JOHN), bookseller In Cambridge; Over against Great St. Maries, 1642. Only known from the imprint to a pamphlet entitled A Protestants account of his orthodox holding in matters of religion, 1642. [Bowes, Cambridge Books, p. 29, no. 79.]

MILLION (JOHN), bookseller in London; Man in the Moon, in the Little Old Bayly, 1666. Only known from the imprint to Elkanah Settle's Mare Clausum: Or a Ransack for the Dutch, 1666, printed by Peter Lilliecrap, q.v. He appears to have been succeeded by Henry Million, possibly a son. [Arber, Term Catalogues, i., pp. 57, etc.]

MILLS (RICHARD), bookseller in London; Pestel and Mortar without Temple Bar, 1665–74. Last entry in Term Catalogues, Easter, 1674. [Arber, Term Catalogues, i. 171.]