April 1

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

Maryland Gazette (April 1, 1773).

“Every Subscriber shall have his Name and Title printed in the Title Page, in a Label adapted for that Purpose, as in the above Scheme, provided their Signature come timely to Hand.”

For several weeks in the winter and spring of 1773, subscription proposals for Elie Vallette’s Deputy Commissary’s Guide within the Province of Maryland ran in the Maryland Gazette.  When the advertisement first appeared in the February 25 edition, it filled an entire column.  An excerpt from the preface accounted for approximately half of the space required to publish the notice.  Vallette and the printers, Anne Catharine Green and Son, eventually revised the notice, eliminating the excerpt.

The advertisement retained its most distinctive feature: a “scheme” or depiction of a label to include the name, title, and county of the subscriber.  Vallette and the Greens hoped that personalizing the title page would help in selling more books, but warned that only subscribers who placed their orders early would qualify for the labels.  Those labels, however, do not seem to have been part of the book when it went to press.  Instead, subscribers (and others who eventually purchased copies or received them as gifts) received something that they likely considered even better: an engraved title page that included a blank banner.

Curious to learn more about the proposed label, I examined the four copies of the Deputy Commissary’s Guide in the collections of the American Antiquarian Society.  None of them featured the label depicted in the advertisements in the Maryland Gazette, but each of them did include a title page engraved by Thomas Sparrow.  Annotations made by catalogers and curators indicated that Sparrow also engraved currency that circulated in Maryland in the early 1770s.  In addition, those annotations also stated that the Deputy Commissary’s Guide was the first book with an engraved title page printed in America, certainly a premium for subscribers and other readers who acquired copies.

Title pages engraved by Thomas Sparrow (Elie Vallette, The Deputy Commissary’s Guide, 1774). Courtesy American Antiquarian Society.

The engraved title page certainly enhanced the book.  The blank banner allowed colonizers to further enhance their copies in whatever manner they wished to personalize the title page.  The banners in two of the copies at the American Antiquarian Society remain empty.  One has the words “TO MR. J: MACNABB* *1775*” clumsily stamped within the banner.  A handwritten note on another page reads, “The Gift of Elie Vallette to his Friend John McNabb.”  The other copy has the name “R. Tilghman” gracefully written inside the banner.

Vallette and the Greens did not supply the personalized labels that they promoted in the subscription proposals for the Deputy Commissary’s Guide.  That probably did not matter to most subscribers when they discovered the ornate and expensive engraved title page that they received instead.  The author and the printers substituted an even better premium than the one they marketed to prospective subscribers.

Slavery Advertisements Published April 1, 1773

The Slavery Adverts 250 Project chronicles the role of newspaper advertising in perpetuating slavery in the era of the American Revolution. The project seeks to reveal the ubiquity of slavery in eighteenth-century life from New England to Georgia by republishing advertisements about enslaved people – for sale as individuals or in groups, wanted to purchase or for hire for short periods, runaways who liberated themselves, and those who were subsequently captured and confined in jails and workhouses – in daily digests on this site as well as in real time via the @SlaveAdverts250 Twitter feed, utilizing twenty-first-century media to stand in for the print media of the eighteenth century.

The project aims to provide modern audiences with a sense of just how often colonizers encountered these advertisements in their daily lives. Enslaved men, women, and children appeared in print somewhere in the colonies almost every single day. Those advertisements served as a constant backdrop for social, cultural, economic, and political life in colonial and revolutionary America. Colonizers who did not purport to own enslaved people were still confronted with slavery as well as invited to maintain the system by purchasing enslaved men, women, and children or assisting in the capture of so-called “runaways” who sought to free themselves from bondage. The frequency of these newspaper advertisements suggests just how embedded slavery was in colonial and revolutionary American culture in everyday interactions beyond the printed page.

These advertisements also testify to the experiences of enslaved men, women, and children, though readers must consider that those experiences have been remediated through descriptions offered by enslavers rather than enslaved people themselves. Often unnamed in the advertisements, enslaved men, women, and children were not invisible or unimportant in early America.

These advertisements appeared in colonial American newspapers 250 years ago today.

Maryland Gazette (April 1, 1773).

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Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (April 1, 1773).

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Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (April 1, 1773).

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Virginia Gazette [Purdie and Dixon] (April 1, 1773).

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Virginia Gazette [Purdie and Dixon] (April 1, 1773).

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Virginia Gazette [Purdie and Dixon] (April 1, 1773).

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Virginia Gazette [Purdie and Dixon] (April 1, 1773).

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Virginia Gazette [Rind] (April 1, 1773).

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Virginia Gazette [Rind] (April 1, 1773).

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Virginia Gazette [Rind] (April 1, 1773).

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Virginia Gazette [Rind] (April 1, 1773).