William Bulmer was born in 1757 as one of the youngest children of Thomas Bulmer in Newcastle-upon-Tyne. He was apprenticed to the printer Mr. Thompson, at Burnt House Entry, St. Nicholas' Churchyard. During his apprenticeship he formed a friendship with Thomas Bewick, which lasted throughout his life
In the spring of 1790, William Bulmer established The Shakespeare Press at 3 Russell Court, off Cleveland Row, St. James's and the first part of the Shakespeare appeared in January 1791 comprising "Much Ado About Nothing" and "Richard III".
In 1796 Bulmer published a quarto edition of Somerville's "Chase". All the engravings but one in this volume were designed by John Bewick, and engraved by his brother Thomas Bewick. Other books followed, including Thomas Frognall Dibdin'sTypographical Antiquities of Great Britain, Bibliographical Decameron, and the Bibliotheca Spenceriana.[2]
Museum Worsleyanum by Sir Richard Worsley. 2 vols. (1794 &c.); the date 1794 is on both title-pages, but the book was issued serially in six fascicles; part one issued 1798 (costing £2,887 4s), part one issued 1802.[3]