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

“He finds himself obliged to raise the subscription to Fifteen Shillings a year instead of Ten.”
As Dunlap’s Maryland Gazette; or, the Baltimore General Advertiser neared the end of its first year of publication, John Dunlap, the printer, ran a notice addressed “TO THE SUBSCRIBERS.” In the April 16, 1776, edition, just a couple of weeks shy of the anniversary of establishing the newspaper, that notice appeared first among the advertisements. Dunlap exercised his discretion as printer to give his notice a privileged place.
“AS the price of Printing Paper is greatly encreased since the first Publication of the Maryland Gazette, and the labor an expence of Publishing and delivering it to the Subscribers much more than the Printer expected” he explained, “he finds himself obliged to raise the subscription to Fifteen Shillings a year instead of Ten.” Dunlap happened to commence publication a couple of weeks after the battles at Lexington and Concord. The Continental Association, a nonimportation agreement devised by the Second Continental Congress in protest of the Intolerable Acts, already disrupted the supply of paper. The outbreak of war meant even more shortages, causing some printers in New England to make adjustments or to suspend publication. Printers in other regions also commented on the scarcity of paper and its impact on their newspapers. To make matters even more complicated, Dunlap continued publishing Dunlap’s Pennsylvania Packet in Philadelphia and entrusted his printing office in Baltimore to James Hayes, Jr. They experienced other difficulties, including the theft of newspapers intended for delivering in Elk Ridge, Annapolis, and Alexandria in the summer of 1775.
Now Dunlap found it necessary to increase the annual subscription significantly, raising it from ten shilling to fifteen. “Those who do not approve of this advance,” he advised, “are desired to call and pay off as speedily as possible.” Those customers presumably dealt with Hayes in the printing office on Market Street in Baltimore rather than directly with Dunlap. He also called on “they who think him not unreasonable in his Demands … to pay up their former subscriptions, which will prevent confusion hereafter.” Whatever their decision about whether to continue receiving Dunlap’s Maryland Gazette, the printer wanted subscribers to check in to confirm their decision and, just as importantly, to pay what they owed for the past year. Printers often allowed generous credit to subscribers and depended on advertising revenue to make their newspapers viable ventures. Dunlap did brisk business in advertising, but he apparently wished for more security than those paid notices provided. The issue that carried his notice also featured resolutions passed “In CONGRESS” in Philadelphia and a “Proclamation … by his Excellency General Washington, on his taking possession of the town of Boston.” If subscribers wished to continue receiving such news, they needed to share the cost with advertisers by paying more for their subscriptions.

























