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

“A NEW and CORRECT EDITION … of that justly esteemed PAMPHLET, called COMMON SENSE.”
A month after Robert Bell published the first edition of Thomas Paine’s Common Sense in Philadelphia on January 9, 1776, readers of the New-York Journal certainly knew about the pamphlet, even if they had not read it or heard much about its contents. Just reading the newspaper would have been enough to get a sense of the pamphlet’s popularity. After all, the February 15 edition of the New-York Journal carried four advertisements for Common Sense!
Some of them would have looked familiar to regular readers of that newspaper. William Green, a bookbinder in Maiden Lane and Bell’s agent in New York, once again advertised the unauthorized “Second Edition of COMMON SENSE” that Bell published in Philadelphia. It was the third consecutive week his notice ran in the New-York Journal. Also appearing for the third time, another advertisement informed readers that William Bradford and Thomas Bradford would soon publish a “NEW EDITION, (with LARGE and INTERESTING ADDITIONS …) OF COMMON SENSE,” an edition undertaken “by appointment of the Author.” After a falling out with Bell, Paine approached the printers of the Pennsylvania Journal to publish a new edition. The Bradfords set about advertising that expanded edition in both Philadelphia and New York.
A variation of one of the other advertisements ran in the previous issue of the New-York Journal. In it, John Anderson, the printer of the Constitutional Gazette, announced publication of a local edition of “that justly esteemed PAMPHLET, called COMMON SENSE.” The previous version ended with the title of the pamphlet. The new one included two elements often included in other advertisements for Common Sense: the section headings that outlined the contents and an epigraph from “Liberty,” a poem by James Thomson. The addition material in Anderson’s advertisement may have helped draw attention to it …
… but the final advertisement dwarfed all the others. For the first time, Bell advertised directly in the New-York Journal rather than indirectly through Green. In doing so, he transferred to New York the feud that he and Paine had waged in advertisements in the Pennsylvania Evening Post and other newspapers published in Philadelphia. Compared to the Bradfords’ new edition “In the PRESS, and will be published as soon as possible,” Bell’s unauthorized second edition was “Out of the Press” and on sale. His notice included the section headers and epigraph by Thomson as well as an address “To the PUBLIC” that first appeared in the Pennsylvania Evening Post on January 27 and an even longer diatribe “To Mr. ANONYMOUS” that first appeared in the Pennsylvania Evening Post on February 1. While the Bradfords’ advertisement hinted at discord between Bell and Paine, this advertisement put the argument on full display for readers in New York. Perhaps that helped generate interest in the pamphlet. For readers who had not yet perused Common Sense themselves, those four advertisements may have encouraged them to acquire a copy to find out more about all the hullabaloo.























