Robert Wiebking
was born in Schwelm, Germany in 1870, the oldest son of Herman Wiebking,
an engraver. In 1881 the family came to Chicago and Herman began doing
engraving for several companies. He had been using engraving machines
as early as 1875 and brought all of his equipment and tools with him
from Germany. Matrice engraving for typefaces was part of his work
and he cut matrices for the Marder & Luse type foundry as early
as 1882.
Shortly after arriving in Chicago Robert
got a job as a basket weaver, but in 1884, when he was 14 years old,
he went to work for C. H. Hanson, an engraving company. By 1893 he
had set up his own engraving business and was cutting matrices for
both the Crescent and Independent Type Foundries. In 1900 he formed
the Advance Type Foundry with H. H. Hardinge, whose job was to make
the type manufacturing process more efficient. Together the two men
designed various pieces of machinery including precision tools for
matrice fitting, an air driven automatic tool to break the casting
sprues or jets off type bodies, and an automatic casting and finishing
machine for type. The improvements allowed Wiebking to cut the matrices
for the 14 point size of Frederick Goudys Kennerley type, then
cast and finish 400 lbs. of the type in 41 hours. Roberts abilities
to work on the machines came from his father who had improved some
of the machines he used, and had designed an engraving machine of
his own, manufactured and sold it.
Hardinge left the partnership in 1914
when Wiebking merged Advance with the Western Type Foundry (not the
Great Western Type Foundry which later became Barnhart Brothers &
Spindler). Five years later the Western Foundry merged into Barnhart
Brothers & Spindler (BB & S). Several years later, Wiebking
went independent again and set up a small shop where he cut several
matrices for F. W. Goudy, the original Centaur matrices for Bruce
Roger as well as matrices for the Barnhart Brothers & Spindler
foundry, the American, Inland and Keystone Type Foundries, and for
John Haddon and Co. and Stephenson & Blake in England. Later he
cut matrices for Ludlow Typograph and built several matrice cutters
for them as well as trained their staff to use them. Among the people
he trained to cut matrices were Frederick W. Goudy and Robert Hunter
Middleton.
Wiebking passed away in 1927. One of
the reasons for the lack of recognition for his achievements, despite
Nicholas J. Woerner calling him the finest engraver in the world,
was his shyness. Wiebking was an intensely retiring person who avoided
the limelight.
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One
of the supreme examples of Wiebkings work is the original matrices
for Bruce Rogers' Centaur typeface. The drawings Rogers created are
not the fine crafted forms one would expect, but more a record of intent.
Rogers, like Goudy, trusted Wiebking to craft the forms as Rogers wished
without needing the exacting drawings a lesser craftsman would require.
Rogers original drawings for Centaur, along with Frederick Warde's
drawings for the Arrighi typeface, are in the Wing Collection of the
Newberry Library in Chicago, Illinois.
Wiebkings typefaces:
- · Artcraft & Bold & Italic,
1911-13
(BB & S, Ludlow) Wiebking's
house face
- · Caslon Clearface & Italic, 1913 (BB
& S)
- · Engraver's Litho Bold & Condensed, 1914
(BB & S)
- · Advertiser's Gothic & Condensed , 1917
(Western Typefoundry)
- · Bodoni Light & Italic (Ludlow)
- · Caslon Catalog, 1925 (BB & S)
- · Collier Old Style
- · Engraver's Roman
- · Munder Venezian [Laclede Oldstyle], 1924-7
(BB & S)
- · Steelplate Gothic Shaded (BB & S)
Matrices cut by Wiebking:
- · Centaur (Bruce Rogers)
- · Pabst & Pabst Italic (ATF)
- · Village type (F. W. Goudy)
- · Boston News Letter type (Barron's )
- · Norman capitals (N. T. A. Munder)
- · Kennerley & Italic (F. W. Goudy)
- · Sherman (F. F. Sherman)
- · Goudy Lanston (F. W. Goudy)
- · Goudy Roman (F. W. Goudy)
- · Klaxon (Lovell & McConnell)
- · Hadriano (F. W. Goudy)
- · Goudy Open (F. W. Goudy)
- · Goudy Modern & Italic (F. W. Goudy)
- · Collier Old Style (Procter & Collier)
- · Nabisco (National Biscuit Co.)
- · Goudy Newstyle (F. W. Goudy)
- · Marlboro (F. W. Goudy)
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