His Wonderful Dream

The board of directors of the International Printing
Pressmen and Assistants' Union meets at the Cincinnati
headquarters in July 1907. At center is George L. Berry,
the 24-year-old newly elected president.
The International Printing Pressmen and Assistants' Union of North America (IPPAU-NA),
was organized in 1889, when disgruntled pressmen and press feeders left the
International Typographical Union (ITU) and, with the combined membership of
thirteen locals, formed a new pressmen's union. At its peak, with a
membership of more than 125,000, the IPPAU-NA became the largest printing
trades union in the world.
For sixty-five years the union maintained its headquarters at Pressmen's
Home in Hawkins County. The Pressmen's Home Community, located in the
mountains of northeastern Tennessee, was a 2,700-acre complex with its own
phone system, post office, electrical system, and farm. In addition to its
headquarters, the union maintained a retirement home, a sanatorium, and a
printing trades school at the site.
The East Tennessee location of the IPPAU-NA headquarters was the dream and
accomplishment of George L. Berry, president of the IPPAU-NA from 1907 until
his death in 1948. Berry was a dominant and controversial president, and the
union's progress and growth were intertwined with Berry's life. The IPPAU-NA
moved its headquarters to Pressmen's Home from Cincinnati in 1911 because
Berry and the union leadership believed the location (originally a mineral
health resort known as Hale Springs) was suitable both as a tuberculosis
sanatorium and as a technical trade school for retraining pressmen in the
new offset printing methods.
The school eventually became the largest trade school of its kind in the
world. While pressmen were also trained on letterpress at the school, its
main function was to retrain letterpressmen and educate young printers in
the offset craft. The training of thousands of printers at the technical
school, along with the correspondence courses the school established,
enabled the union to meet the demand for offset printers following World War
II.
In 1916 the tuberculosis sanatorium opened and played an important role in
combating the disease, the principal cause of death among union members.
Besides the physical facilities at Pressmen's Home, the union undertook an
extensive campaign to educate the membership about tuberculosis and methods
to prevent contamination. By 1961, the year the sanatorium closed, the union
facility took credit for saving hundreds of lives through the treatments
offered to its members.
In 1966 the union's board of directors decided that the changing times and
conditions dictated the removal of the headquarters to a more cosmopolitan
location; the following year, the headquarters moved to Washington, D.C. The
technical school also closed with the relocation, although the union
continued the correspondence courses from its new headquarters.
The IPPAU-NA disappeared from the union registry in 1973, when the union
merged with the International Stereotypers', Electrotypers', and Platemakers'
Union of North America (ISE&PU) to form the International Printing and
Graphic Communications Union (IPGCU). In 1983 the IPGCU merged with the
Graphic Arts International Union to become the Graphic Communications
International Union (GCIU).
Jack Mooney, East Tennessee State University
Suggested Reading(s): Jack Mooney, "The Establishment and Operation of the
Technical Training School of the International Printing Pressmen and
Assistants' Union in Tennessee, 1911-1967," Tennessee Historical Quarterly
48 (1989): 111-22 and "The Sanatorium of the International Printing Pressmen
and Assistants' Union of North America, 1910-1961, at Pressmen's Home,
Tennessee," ibid., 162-73.
Text copyright© 1998 by the Tennessee Historical
Society, Nashville, Tennesseee.
Online Edition copyright© 2002
The University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville, Tennessee. All Rights
Reserved.
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