G. Peignot et Fils is founded in 1898 in Paris, after absorption of the Veuve Routier et Peignot foundry, itself heir of the foundry "Veuve Routier" and foundry of Pierre Leclerc.
Foundry of Pierre Leclerc (1842)
In 1842, Pierre Leclerc, a craftsman, creates a fixed spaces foundry in Paris. "He can be considered as the genuine creator of the fixed spaces industry", says the magazine La fonderie typographique in 1899. These fixed spaces between words and lines, margins, etc., require great precision. He invents a new process, instead of cutting fixed spaces, pouring them into molds, which increases accuracy. In 1856, after his death, the company management is entrusted to a friend of his widow, Clémentine Dupont de Vieux Pont. She then settles beside her his son, Gustave Peignot, engineer of Arts et Métiers school.
Veuve Routier (1865) and Veuve Routier et G. Peignot (1867) foundries
In 1865, the foundry of Pierre Leclerc is sold by auction to Peignot. The new company is called "Veuve Routier", which is the name of the lessor having made possible the purchase by Gustave Peignot. In 1867, Gustave Peignot and the lessor merge in a company which takes the name of "Veuve Routier et Peignot." In 1869 the company moved to Boulevard de Montrouge, at no. 66-68, where a building is constructed. In 1875, the debt to the Veuve Routier is cleared, and Gustave Peignot becomes sole owner of the company and the building. From 1875 to 1898, Gustave Peignot continues to make great profits with fixed spaces production, not amputated this time by refunds to the Veuve Routier. "In this lead will Thou find gold", used to say his mother. At this time, Gustave Peignot becomes first President of the Chambre syndicale des maîtres fondeurs typographes. He marries Marie Laporte, and is a father of 8 children.
G. Peignot et Fils Foundry (1898)
In 1898, Gustave Peignot distributes to his children an equal parts of stocks and appoints Georges Peignot, his second son, as co-manager. The company's name changes for "G. Peignot & Fils". He dies in 1899. Georges Peignot continues the production of fixed spaces, causing significant growth in sales, and launches studies for new typefaces. The quality of fonts puts foundry G. Peignot et Fils at the forefront. In 12 years, Georges Peignot creates many typefaces: Grasset, Auriol, Cochin, Garamond-Peignot, Bellery-Desfontaines, Naudin, Guy-Arnoux. He also publishes a Specimen, great typefaces catalog. In 1904, to address growth of sales, G. Peignot et Fils built a new plant at the corner of Cabanis and Ferrus streets. In 1911-1912, Georges Peignot sends in South America his two young brothers, Lucien and Rémy, looking for distributors. The company is at its peak. But war brakes out in 1914. Volunteer for the front, Adjudant Georges Peignot is killed by a bullet to the forehead at the head of his section, Sept. 28, 1915, near Givenchy. His four brothers also die. The legacy of Georges Peignot is taken hostage by infighting: in 1919, his own mother, Marie Laporte-Peignot, requires its children or their widows the payment of a substantial sum in the form of a capital increase to its competitor Deberny, owned by Charles Tuleu. In 1923, G. Peignot et Fils foundry disappears, victim of the merger between Deberny foundry and G. Peignot & Fils foundry. The new company's name relegates Peignot's name in background: the new entity is indeed called "Deberny et Peignot" and commonly called "Deberny". Against all logic, the manager of the small Deberny foundry, Robert Girard, under whom the old foundry Deberny had collapsed, takes the reins of the new entity. In 1922, the Commission de l’enseignement et des beaux-arts suggests honoring the story of Peignot: it transports the awls of the foundry in the building of the Imprimerie nationale, near Gutenberg street in Paris. And it proposes that the continuation of this street would be baptized "rue des Quatre-Frères-Peignot" in memory of Georges, André, Lucien and Rémy who died between September, 1914 and June, 1916, snatched by the World War I.
Typographical creations
G. Peignot & Fils foundry is the heart of important typographic creations, including: