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

“All Watch and Clock Maker’s please to stop the above mentioned Watch.”
What happened to Alexander Shaw’s watch? In an advertisement in Dunlap’s Maryland Gazette, he reported that it had been “STOLEN out of the house of James Carson, in Gay-street” in Baltimore on March 12, 1776. He did not give other details about the circumstances, instead focusing on a description of the “SILVER WATCH.” It could be identified as “No. 178, the make’s name Daniel Hubert, White Frier’s, London,” though Shaw did not indicate whether those details had been engraved on the watch or appeared on a watch paper that protected the face of the watch when stored. Other identifying characteristics included: “siler faced, with a pinchbeck chain, and a seal stamped King George’s head.” Shaw offered a reward of forty shillings to anyone who returned the watch to him.
He also took an opportunity to enlist the aid of watchmakers and clockmakers in recovering his stolen watch. In a nota bene, he requested that they “stop the above mentioned Watch, if given to be cleaned or offered for sale.” Artisans and shopkeepers sometimes placed advertisements to alert readers that they “stopped” or confiscated items that they suspected had been stolen and presented to them for repairs, for sale, or to barter. Thieves, burglars, and shoplifters participated in what Serena Zabin has called an “informal economy” that gave them access to consumer culture in early America, though not everyone who possessed stolen goods had taken them. Instead, consumers active in the “informal economy” purchased items that had been fenced, sometimes knowingly and sometimes unknowingly. Shaw seemed less concerned with capturing whoever had stolen his watch than with recovering it, perhaps realizing that anyone who took it to a watchmaker or clockmaker to have it cleaned or to sell it had not necessarily stolen it. He hoped that the reward would encourage members of that trade to be vigilant in examining watches brought to their shops, increasing the chances of recovering his precious keepsake. Many newspaper notices promoted goods to consumers, but Shaw used this advertisement to recover an item previously in his possession.



























