| MINIMUMWAGE | First-of-type subject of a 1912 Massachusetts law |
| OATES | Captain Lawrence ---, Antarctic explorer who died on the return leg of a 1912 expedition to the South Pole (5) |
| TABLET | Portable computer in chart, first of type (6) |
| TITANIC | Passenger ship in a 1912 calamity |
| TIPPERARY | Irish town in a 1912 song |
| EPSTEIN | New York-born sculptor whose works include a 1912 Oscar Wilde memorial (7) |
| JACOB | New York-born sculptor whose works include a 1912 Oscar Wilde memorial (5) |
| JIMTHORPE | Pennsylvania town named for a 1912 Olympic gold medalist |
| THELOSTWORLD | A 1912 novel by Arthur Conan Doyle about an expedition to the Amazon basin in South America (3,4,5) |
| SEVENDWARFS | Group whose members were named Blick, Flick, Glick, Snick, Plick, Whick, and Quee in a 1912 play |
| GUTTER | Space between two facing pages of an open book, columns of type or stamps in a pane; a duct for diverting rainwater; or, a channel at either side of a bowling alley (6) |
| BATTER | A striker in cricket; a mixture of eggs, flour and milk as the basis of Breton galettes, crepes, crumpets, drop scones and pancakes; or, a damaged piece of type in a forme (6) |
| SLUG | Land mollusc or limax studied in limacology; a draught or gulp of liquor; a line of type in Linotype printing; or, a counterfeit coin used in a slot machine (4) |
| EDITION | In publishing, the total number of copies of a book or newspaper printed at a time from the same setting of type (7) |
| KERN | In the Middle Ages, a light-armed Irish or Highland infantryman; a band of such; or, a projecting part of type (4) |
| EM | The square of a body of any size of type. |
| FONT | A receptacle in a church for baptismal water / a set of type with face or size |
| PIE | A bakemeat with a pastry crust; the "maggie", conjectured to collect miscellaneous objects; a confused pile of type; or, any jumbled mixture (3) |
| OTTER | Aquatic animal of type that enjoys river, first of all (5) |
| CLARENDON | A form of type having a heavy face (9) |