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

“A new and correct Edition, of that justly esteemed Pamphlet, called COMMON SENSE.”
As Robert Bell, the publisher of the first edition of Thomas Paine’s Common Sense, hawked an unauthorized second edition and William Bradford and Thomas Bradford, the printers who collaborated with Paine to publish a new edition with additional content prepared that edition for press, an advertisement for the first edition of Common Sense published beyond Philadelphia appeared in the February 7, 1776, issue of the Constitutional Gazette in New York. John Anderson, the printer of the Constitutional Gazette, ran a notice announcing, “Tomorrow will be published, & sold by the Printer hereof, A new and correct Edition, of that justly esteemed Pamphlet, called COMMON SENSE; ADDRESSED TO THE INHABITANTS OF AMERICA.” His advertisement did not go into greater detail about the contents. Anderson knew very well that other advertisements in the Constitutional Gazette and other newspapers published in New York provided an overview of the sections in Bell’s first edition. The “justly esteemed Pamphlet” required no further introduction.
Only four weeks passed between Bell’s advertisement promoting the publication of Common Sense in the January 9, 1776, edition of the Pennsylvania Evening Post and Anderson informing readers in New York that they could purchase a local edition. His newspaper carried the first advertisement for Common Sense in New York, listing William Green, a bookseller, as Bell’s local agent for distributing the pamphlet. Anderson likely acquired a copy from Green, either purchasing it or accepting it in lieu of payment for the advertisement. His advertisement for his “new and correct Edition” did not mention the dispute and controversy around the publication of Bell’s unauthorized edition that unfolded in Philadelphia in newspaper advertisements there, though he had likely seen some of those notices. After all, printers carefully perused newspapers printed in other cities to select content to reprint in their own newspapers. Anderson focused solely on giving the public greater access to Common Sense (and generating revenue in his printing office). His local edition met with sufficient success that he eventually published a second edition.



















