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

“FREEBETTER’s New-England ALMANACK, To be Sold by T. GREEN.”
Timothy Green, the printer of the Connecticut Gazette, needed something short to complete the first column on the last page of the March 29, 1776, edition of his newspaper. Most of the column consisted of news from Williamsburg, Philadelphia, New York, and Providence, but those updates did not quite fill the column. He seized the opportunity to insert an advertisement for “FREEBETTER’s New-England ALMANACK” available at his printing office in New London. It was late to advertise an almanac. After all, one quarter of the year already elapsed, yet readers would still find many of the contents useful or entertaining.
Throughout the colonies, advertisements for almanacs usually began appearing as fall arrived. They increased in number and frequency as the new year approached before tapering off during the winter months. When they had surplus copies, some printers continued advertising their almanacs into March, though they often ran less elaborate notices than those they used to promote the popular pamphlets when they first came off the press. Green, for instance, ran a much longer advertisement for “FREEBETTER’s New-England ALMANACK, For the Year of Our LORD, 1776,” in December 1775, encouraging readers to acquire their copies before the new year began. That advertisement featured an overview of the contents, including reference material like “Feasts and Fasts of the Church of England; Time of High-Water [or high tide]; Courts; Roads; [and] useful Tables” and “useful and entertaining Pieces” like “A cheap, easy, and tried Remedy for the Bloody Purging” and an essay “On the Folly of those who vex themselves with fruitless Wishes.”
Green devoted much more space in his newspapers to the advertisement he ran in early December than to the one in late March. He likely realized that he had much better prospects for selling almanacs before the first of the year, yet he still thought he had a chance to make some sales in early spring. Still, the placement and length of his latest advertisement suggests that he decided to insert it, at least in part, because he needed to fill the space at the bottom of a column and not solely because he prioritized marketing the remaining copies of the almanac.

































