Thia Typo
Thia Typo
Miss Thia Typo (1848–1917) was an English typesetter employed in the newspaper district of Fleet Street during the late nineteenth century. Although remembered publicly for an extraordinary number of printing errors attributed to her, historians of the Royal Society of Everyday Phenomena argue that many of these incidents represented the earliest documented examples of Typographic Drift.
Thia Typo has since become one of the most frequently cited figures in editorial folklore and is commonly associated with unexplained textual anomalies.
Early life
Little is known of Typo's early life. Surviving employment records indicate that she entered the London printing trade while still in her teens, developing a reputation as one of Fleet Street's fastest compositors.
Career
Contemporary accounts describe Typo as meticulous in preparing type, yet newspapers employing her repeatedly published unexpected spelling mistakes, misplaced punctuation, and altered names. Witnesses consistently reported that handwritten copy submitted to the composing room had been correct.
Printers gradually began referring to any inexplicable printing mistake as "another Thia Typo", a phrase that entered common newsroom vocabulary by the closing years of the nineteenth century.
The Great Comma Incident
Typo's career became inseparable from the Great Comma Incident, an event that attracted the attention of scholars studying recurring editorial anomalies.
Although official investigations failed to establish a cause, later researchers proposed that the event represented an unusually concentrated occurrence of Typographic Drift.
Legacy
Modern historians regard Thia Typo as the symbolic beginning of the academic study of editorial folklore.
Her name survives in publishing circles as a humorous explanation for otherwise inexplicable typographical errors.