What was advertised in a revolutionary American newspaper 250 years ago today?

“FOUR PENCE per pound will be given for the best Sort of good, dry, clean LINEN RAGS.”
Colonial printers regularly inserted advertisements offering cash for rags in their newspapers. They collected linen rags to supply to paper mills to transform into paper that they could then use to print more newspapers (with more calls for rags) or sell to consumers for other purposes. Such notices seemed to multiply during the Revolutionary War. Colonizers already participated in nonimportation agreements that reduced the amount of imported paper and then the war further disrupted trade. Some printers briefly suspended their newspapers or resorted to smaller sheets amid the disruptions.
Two calls for rags appeared in the June 24, 1776, edition of the New-York Gazette and Weekly Mercury, just days after similar notices ran in the Freeman’s Journal, published in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, Dunlap’s Maryland Gazette and the Maryland Journal, both published in Baltimore, and John Dixon and William Hunter’s Virginia Gazette, published in Williamsburg. Other newspapers in New England, the Middle Atlantic, and the Chesapeake also carried calls for rags. In the Lower South, James Johnston published the last known issue of the Georgia Gazette in Savannah on February 7, 1776, and John Wells suspended the South-Carolina and American Gazette from May 31 to August 2, 1776, when the British fleet approached Charleston, leaving the entire region without any newspapers and, as a result, no notices offering cash for rags.
In the New-York Gazette and Weekly Mercury, John Keating ran a short advertisement with a headline that proclaimed, “LINEN RAGS.” He promised four pence per pound for “the best Sort of good, dry clean LINEN RAGS, and so in Proportion for those of an inferior Quality.” Many readers likely knew that Keating operated a “Paper Manufactory” since he frequently advertised in the various newspapers published in New York. On many occasions he went into greater detail in his efforts to encourage the public to assist him in that enterprise by supplying rags from their households. He depicted doing so as a patriotic duty and a way that everyone, especially women, could demonstrate their political principles. He was much more constrained in his latest notice.

Hugh Gaine, the printer of the New-York Gazette and Weekly Mercury, ran an advertisement with identical copy except he substituted his name for Keating’s name. Gaine likely collected rags to supply to Keating, perhaps receiving a discount on paper in return. He distinguished his own advertisement with an elaborate border composed of printing ornaments, a line of decorative type that separated the headline from the body of the advertisement, and printing his name in a larger font. Gaine’s advertisement ran on the first page along with notices for patent medicines that he peddled as an alternate revenue stream. Immediately below his call for linen rags, the printer informed readers that he “HAS FOR SALE, AMERICAN MANUFACTURED WRITING PAPER, Of Excellent Quality, BY the Quire of Ream,” as well as writing supplies and a variety of other goods. The rags that he collected might become broadsheets for printing the news or writing paper for letters that carried news that might eventually appear in the public prints.


























