Who was the subject of an advertisement in a revolutionary American newspaper 250 years ago today?

“A likely healthy NEGRO MAN … Enquire of the printer. 3 5”
Benjamin Dearborn published the third issue of the Freeman’s Journal on June 8, 1776. Among the various advertisements that appeared in that issue, one announced, “TO BE SOLD, (for want of employ) A likely healthy NEGRO MAN, aged about twenty five, and understands farming business well.” For interested parties who wanted to know more, the notice instructed them to “Enquire of the printer” at his printing office in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. The previous issue of the Freeman’s Journal featured an advertisement in which Samuel Hall described Seneca, an enslaved man who liberated himself by running away from his enslaver on May 29, and offered a reward for his capture and return. In the course of the first three issues, Dearborn went from proclaiming “the most sacred rights of a free people” in an address to readers to encouraging the surveillance of Black men in a notice placed for the purpose of capturing a fugitive from slavery to actively participating in the slave trade as a broker and proxy for an anonymous advertiser.
Notations in both advertisements suggests that each met with success. Hall’s advertisement concerning Seneca concluded with “2–4,” a notation intended for the compositor who set type rather than for readers. It indicated that Hall’s advertisement should appear in issue “No. 2” through issue “No. 4.” However, Hall’s advertisement did not run in any subsequent issue, suggesting that Seneca had been captured and returned and, in turn, the notice withdrawn. The anonymous “enquire of the printer” advertisement concluded with a similar notation, “3 5.” It first appeared in issue “No. 3” and should have appeared in the next two issues as well. It did not run the following week, but a note from the printer promised that “Advertisements &c. omitted, will be in our next.” The advertisement did indeed appear in issue “No. 5” the following week, with the notation revised to “3 6” to allow for the week it did not run. That meant that it should have appeared in the third (June 8), fifth (June 22) and sixth (June 29) issues of the Freeman’s Journal. The advertisement did not run again, suggesting that someone had indeed enquired of the printer and completed the transaction. Dearborn commenced advertising the “Books so much admired, entitled COMMON SENSE,” the most influential political pamphlet advocating for the colonies to declare independence, on June 22, the last issue that carried the advertisement offering the enslaved man for sale. Dearborn deployed the power of the press to promote the liberty of some Americans while restricting the liberty of others.





























