Misplaced Pages

Lewis Cohen (cardmaker)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
American cardmaker
The topic of this article may not meet Misplaced Pages's notability guideline for biographies. Please help to demonstrate the notability of the topic by citing reliable secondary sources that are independent of the topic and provide significant coverage of it beyond a mere trivial mention. If notability cannot be shown, the article is likely to be merged, redirected, or deleted.
Find sources: "Lewis Cohen" cardmaker – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Lewis I. Cohen (1800–1868) was a major manufacturer in the playing card business during the nineteenth century.

Lewis was born in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, but moved to London, England in 1814. Here he was apprenticed to his half-brother Solomon Cohen who had a business manufacturing pencils. In 1819 he returned to the USA on the barque Mary and Susan.

As he arrived in New York he noticed a schooner from Florida loaded with cedar logs. Noticing that this timber did not have any knots, he promptly bought the entire shipment for £30, paying a fraction per log of what his brother, Solomon, was paying per foot in London. He persuaded Captain Champlin of the Mary and Susan to transport the load back to London as ballast, meaning without cost.

Lewis I. Cohen then went on to make a name for himself as the first American to make lead pencils and for introducing steel pens to the US, in place of old-type quill pens. However, Cohen's greatest achievement was in developing playing card manufacture through mechanized colour printing. Alongside George Baxter (1836) and Thomas de la Rue (1831) he pioneered printing four colours in one pass, registering his colour-printing machine in 1835.

He formed his business, L. I. Cohen, New York, publishing his first deck of playing cards in 1832. He used an Eagle perched atop the spade symbol, enshrined by thirteen shining stars, as insignia on the Ace of Spades of each deck. In 1845 he retired, issuing a gold embossed deck of playing cards. His son, Solomon L. Cohen, and his nephew, John M. Lawrence took over the firm and in 1850 the stationery side of the business was sold. On December 5, 1871, Lawrence and Cohen turned the business into a stock company together with three new partners: Samuel Hart, Isaac Levy and John J. Levy. Together, they would form the New York Consolidated Card Company.

References

Playing cards
Standard
52-card deck
Playing card suits (French)
Ranks
Specific decks
Other packs
and decks
Cards
Other suits
German
Swiss
German and Swiss
Latin (Italian/Spanish/Portuguese)
Chinese (Money)
Manufacturers
and brands
Manufacturers
Brands
Defunct
Notable people
Groups and
organisations
Skat
Card manipulation
and cardistry
Tricks
  • The Acme of Control
  • Ambitious Card
  • Blackstone's Card Trick Without Cards
  • The Circus Card Trick
  • The Four Burglars
  • Out of This World
  • Rising Card
  • Spelling Bee
  • Twenty-One Card Trick
  • Art and media
    Paintings
  • The Acrobats
  • The Bezique Game
  • The Card Players
  • The Card Players II
  • Card Players in a Rich Interior
  • The Card Sharp with the Ace of Diamonds
  • Cardplayers in a Sunlit Room
  • The Cardsharps
  • Dogs Playing Poker
  • Still Life with a Poem
  • Violin and Playing Cards on a Table
  • Film and television
    {{Historical card games}} {{Non trick-taking card games}} {{Trick-taking card games}} {{Patience and solitaire games}} {{Poker}} {{Tarot and Tarock card games}} {{Occult tarot}}
    Categories: