George-Édouard-Amable Desbarats (5 April 1838 – 18 February 1893) was an influential Canadian printer and inventor.
Life and career
The Desbarats were an established printing family. The first of the family to settle was Joseph Desbarats from Auch in France, and who arrived in with the Régiment de la Sarre in New France in 1756.[1]
Joseph's son Pierre-Édouard co-purchased the Nouvelle Imprimière (New Printing Office) from William Vondenvelden in 1798; the printer was responsible for printing the Lower CanadianStatutes, and also published newspapers such as the Quebec Mercury and other publications. Pierre-Édouard's third son George-Paschal Desbarats took over the business in 1828 and was named Queen's Printer in 1841.[2]
On his father's death Desbarats became co-Queen's Printer with Malcolm Cameron for the Province of Canada.[3][4] Desbarats had the Desbarats Block building constructed in Ottawa when the city was chosen as capital of the newly confederated Dominion of Canada. The building housed printing and binding equipment and employed up to a hundred people. Numerous government publications were among the works published there.[5] It was burned down by arson in 1869;[2] among the losses were the lithographic plates for a scholarly on Samuel de Champlain that his grandson Peter Desbarats stated was to have been his "monument as a publisher".[6]
Prime MinisterJohn A. Macdonald made Desbarats the first official printer[3][4] of the Dominion of Canada that year;[2] this made him an official government employee, as per the Act Respecting the Office of the Queen's Printer and the Public Printing effected 1 October 1869.[5] He stepped down the next year when he found it too difficult to run businesses in both Ottawa and Montreal; he then returned to Montreal.[2]
Desbarats and Leggo were responsible for a number of pioneering printing, including the photoelectrotyping process Leggotype, the first halftone photography reproduction in commercial printing, and photolithographic techniques at a time when the technology was still rare.[7] They employed these techniques[8] when they published the Canadian Illustrated News from 1869 to 1883,[3][4][9] which printed illustrations by artists such as Henri Julien; and L'Opinion publique from 1870 to 1883.[10] They founded the New York Daily Graphic in 1873, the first daily illustrated paper.[3][9] While it was a pioneering effort, it was not a financial success, and Desbarats returned to Montreal.[11] In 1888 George-Édouard went into business with his son William-Amable, and as Desbarats & Son they published the Dominion Illustrated.[3]