Identity area
Reference code
Title
Date(s)
- 1950-01-01 - 1979-12-31 (Creation)
Level of description
Medium
Format
Status
Context area
Name of creator
Administrative history
A government printer was first appointed on February 1836 as a minor office within the Governor's establishment.
In 1870, Richard Pether was appointed Government Printer, as part of the newly established Government Printing Office (ref: Government Gazette, 2 August 1870).
Until 1901, the Government Printing Office was under the Colonial Secretary's Office and between 1901 and 1922 the office was under Treasury. When it became a sub-branch of the Premier's Department in 1920, the functions of the Government Lithography Department, including those of the government photographer, were amalgamated with the Government Printing Office (ref: "Amalgamation of Photo-Litho and Printing Departments", Premier's Department file 1919/0389, Record Series No. 36, Consignment 1496).
The position of Government Photographer, which was administered under the Premier's Department from within the Government Printing Office, was gazetted in 1929 (ref: Government Gazette, 26 July 1929, p. 1716). There were only ever two appointments; John Balmer, 1929-1961, and Ray Penrose, 1961-1985.
Following a functional review of the operations of the Government Printing Office in the 1980s, it re-emerged as the State Printing Division within the Department of Services in September 1986. In 1995 the operations were privatised although as part of the privatisation process, the Government retained a small part of the printing operation and established the State Law Publisher. The role of the State Law Publisher was to continue servicing the overnight document reproduction needs of Parliament, and for the publishing and dissemination of legislation and statutory information including publication of the Government Gazette.
Repository
Archival history
Content and structure area
Scope and content
Volumes listing photographic negatives received by the Government Printing Office. Each volume has an alphabetical prefix, e.g. H or TB, and negatives are assigned a register number in running number sequence within each prefix. Each prefix relates to a specific series or sequence of negatives.
The prefix TB stands for Tourist Bureau and PWMF for Public Works Mitchell Freeway.
The negatives and prints from the Government Printing Office are held in the Battye Library