November 30

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

Essex Gazette (November 30, 1773).

“He will sell by Wholesale and Retail … at so cheap a Rate as he doubts not will give Satisfaction to every Purchaser.”

George Deblois inserted a lengthy advertisement in the November 30, 1773, edition of the Essex Gazette, the sort of advertisement that regularly appeared in newspapers from New England to Georgia.  The merchant announced that he recently imported a “fine Assortment of ENGLISH and HARD-WARE GOODS” and provided a list of some of that merchandise to demonstrate the range of choices customers would encounter at his shop in Salem.  Deblois carried everything from “check’d and stampt linen Handkerchiefs” and “men’s, women’s and boys worsted Gloves” to “a very large assortment of horn and metal coat and breast Buttons” and “brass and iron Candlesticks” to “steel and iron plate Saws of all sorts and sizes” and “Locks, Hinges, Latches, [and] Bolts.”  Even those extensive lists did not exhaust Deblois’s inventory.  He finished one paragraph with “&c. &c.”  Repeating an abbreviation for et cetera suggested that he stocked much more.  A nota bene at the end of the advertisement concluded with “&c. &c. &c.”

Drawing another paragraph to a close, Deblois promoted “a great Variety of other Articles, too tedious to mention in an Advertisement.”  He also appended a note that “he assures his Customers and others, he will sell by Wholesale and Retail … at so cheap a Rate as he doubts not will give Satisfaction to every Purchaser.”  What are the chances that anyone actually noticed those final appeals among the preponderance of prose, most of it cataloging Deblois’s inventory?  Given eighteenth-century practices of intensive reading as well as consumers’ familiarity with standard advertising formats, many readers likely perused those final promises offered by Deblois, at least the first time they saw the advertisement.  Consider that the Essex Gazette, like most other colonial newspapers, was a weekly publication that consisted of four pages.  That limited the amount of content available to readers, increasing the likelihood that many would examine both news and advertisements carefully to glean information about what was happening in places far and near.  In addition, lengthy advertisements listing goods became so common that readers likely learned that even if they did not wish to read every item – all of those “iron Coffee-Mills” and “silk knee Garters” – they should skip to the end of each dense block of text to see if an advertiser inserted anything else, like the appeals Deblois made in this advertisement.  While such advertisements do not look especially attractive to modern eyes accustomed to other forms of marketing, eighteenth-century readers saw them so often that they learned to navigate them to identify the details they considered most important.

Slavery Advertisements Published November 30, 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.

Essex Gazette (November 30, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette and Country Journal (November 30, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette and Country Journal (November 30, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette and Country Journal (November 30, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette and Country Journal (November 30, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette and Country Journal (November 30, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette and Country Journal (November 30, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette and Country Journal (November 30, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette and Country Journal (November 30, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette and Country Journal (November 30, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette and Country Journal (November 30, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette and Country Journal (November 30, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette and Country Journal (November 30, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette and Country Journal (November 30, 1773).

November 29

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

Newport Mercury (November 29, 1773).

“THESE PILLS ARE NOW SOLD BY HUGH GAINE.”

Colonial printers often supplemented the revenues they generated from subscriptions, advertising, and job printing by selling books, stationery, blanks, … and patent medicines.  Hugh Gaine, the printer of the New-York Gazette and Weekly Mercury, and James Rivington, the printer of Rivington’s New-York Gazetteer, competed with each other and with apothecaries to sell “KEYSER’s FAMOUS PILLS,” a cure for syphilis and other maladies, in the fall of 1773.  Rivington also supplied William Bradford and Thomas Bradford, the printers of the Pennsylvania Journal, with pills that he imported.  As he perused newspapers printed in Philadelphia, Rivington noticed that Townsend Speakman and Christopher Carter, chemists and druggists in that city, advertised that they sold Keyser’s Pills acquired directly from James Cowper, “Doctor of Physick” and “the only legal proprietor” of that medicine in England.  Rivington sent the Bradfords a letter testifying that he received the pills he forwarded to them directly from the son of the late Keyser, residing in Paris.  The Bradfords promptly published that letter in an advertisement that ran immediately below the one placed by Speakman and Carter.

Rivington was not alone in his efforts to gain as much of the market beyond New York as he could.  Gaine looked to the north, advertising in the Newport Mercury.  His notice appeared at the top of the first column on the first page of the November 29 edition of that newspaper, a place of prominence that likely garnered some attention.  A headline in a larger font than anything else on the page except the title of the newspaper in the masthead also enhanced the visibility of the product that Gaine peddled.  This advertisement replicated the copy of Gaine’s notice in the New-York Gazette and Weekly Mercury a week earlier, though it did not retain the format.  Gaine’s advertisement in the Newport Mercury lacked a decorative border and the multiple manicules that pointed to each letter in “KEYSER,” though it still featured a representation of a “Seal” at the end of the transcription of the certificate of authenticity sent to Gaine by Keyser’s widow.  Gaine did not list Solomon Southwick, the printer of the Newport Mercury, or any other associates in Newport as local agents who sold Keyser’s Pills on his behalf.  He apparently expected that readers would submit orders to him in New York, an eighteenth-century version of mail order medications.

Slavery Advertisements Published November 29, 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.

Boston Evening-Post (November 29, 1773).

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Boston-Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Post-Boy (November 29, 1773).

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Newport Mercury (November 29, 1773).

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Newport Mercury (November 29, 1773).

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New-York Gazette and Weekly Mercury (November 29, 1773).

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Pennsylvania Packet (November 29, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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Supplement to the South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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Supplement to the South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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Supplement to the South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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Supplement to the South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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Supplement to the South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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Supplement to the South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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Supplement to the South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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Supplement to the South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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Supplement to the South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

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Supplement to the South-Carolina Gazette (November 29, 1773).

November 28

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

Pennsylvania Packet (November 22, 1773).

“The following advertisements … may serve as models for some of your correspondents.”

At a glance, they looked like authentic advertisements in the first column on the first page of the Pennsylvania Packet, but on closer examination readers discovered that an anonymous correspondent submitted a series of notices “extended to more of the different arts, professions, wants, losses, &c. of mankind.”  The author explained that he or she had recently read “a little essay upon NEWS-PAPERS” and realized “the public benefit of ADVERTISEMENTS” among “other advantages of these periodical papers.”  While some people engaged in “complaining of [advertisements] being so common in all business,” a testament to the dissemination of broadsides, handbills, trade cards, billheads, and catalogs in addition to newspapers, “S.T.” wished to see advertising applied to other purposes.  To that end, he or she composed nineteen advertisements “as models for some of [the printer’s] correspondents who have more leisure and inclination to pursue this valuable branch of public intelligence.”

Some of those advertisements commented on everyday events or misfortunes familiar to readers.  For instance, one declared, “WAS LOST, A MEMORY.  The person who met with this misfortune has received innumerable benefits which he cannot recollect so as to thank his benefactors for them.”  Readers could have interpreted that notice as bittersweet, but the one above it was certainly more pointed: “WAS LOST, A FRIEND.  He disappeared immediately after asking a favour of him.”

Others mocked or critiqued women.  Playing on both runaway wife advertisements and notices about enslaved people who liberated themselves, the headline for one proclaimed, “MADE THEIR ESCAPE.”  The remainder of the counterfeit advertisement explained, “AN husband’s affections.  They disappeared immediately after seeing his wife with her face and hands unwashed at breakfast.”  Another offered even more strident commentary about the role women were supposed to fill in the household.  “WERE LOST,” it alerted readers, “THE seven last years of a lady’s life.  They were seen frequently in the Play-house—in the stress—an in the Assembly room.”  Rather than tending to her home and family, this imaginary lady frivolously spent her leisure time at the theater and exposed to all sorts of vices on the street as she went from shop to shop and, perhaps worst of all, attempting to usurp the authority of husbands and fathers within and beyond the household by taking an active interest in politics.  Despite such denunciations, the roster of counterfeit advertisements included a lewd “WANTED” notice for “AN house-keeper for a batchelor—She must understand housewifery perfectly well, and be able to turn her hand to any thing.”  Readers could imagine for themselves what “any thing” meant.

Pennsylvania Packet (November 22, 1773).

 The last two advertisements trenchantly commented on the imperial crisis.  Modeled after formulaic runaway wife advertisements, the first one, signed by “LOYALTY,” addressed the public: “WHERAS my wife AMERICAN LIBERTY, hath lately behaved in a very licentious manner, and run me in debt; this is to forwarn all persons from trusting her, as I will pay no debts of her contracting from the date hereof.”  Women who were the subjects of actual runaway wife advertisements only occasionally had the resources to respond.  In contrast, “AMERICAN LIBERTY” published an even longer rebuttal than the allegations made in the first advertisement.  “WHEREAS my husband Loyalty hath, in a late advertisement, forwarned all persons form trusting me on his account,” the aggrieved American Liberty asserted, “this is to inform the public that he derived all his fortune from me; and that by our marriage articles, he has no right to proscribe me from the use of it.—My reason for leaving him was because he behaved in an arbitrary and cruel manner, and suffered his domestic servants, grooms, foxhunters, &c. to direct and insult me.”  Astute readers recognized the allegory and the parallels to the charges that colonizers made against Great Britain as Parliament attempted to take a more active role in regulating commerce throughout the empire.  Anticipating arguments that Thomas Paine would advance in Common Sense, American Liberty claimed that Loyalty (Great Britain) needed American Liberty (the colonies) more than American Liberty (the colonies) needed Loyalty (Great Britain).  The colonies represented the most significant of the empire’s (the marriage’s) “fortune.”  Furthermore, through charters and other practices, a long history of “marriage articles” gave colonies the right to oversee their own affairs.

These counterfeit advertisements ran in columns next to advertisements promoting “HAMILTON AND LEIPER, TOBACCONISTS,” “FRANCIS, DANCING MASTER,” “KEYER’s FAMOUS PILLS,” and “JAMES LOUGHEAD’s VENDUE” or Auction.  Other advertisements included one from Frederick Weaker instructing the public not to extend credit to his wife because she “eloped from him without any just cause” and another in which Samuel Finch described “a negro man called JACK” and offered a reward for his capture and return to enslavement.  The models proposed by the anonymous correspondence took formats quite familiar to readers of the Pennsylvania Packet and other newspapers, demonstrating that advertising was so widespread and many of its conventions so broadly recognized that colonizers could adapt advertising to deliver satirical and political messages about everyday life and current events.

November 27

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

Providence Gazette (November 27, 1773).

“The Introduction to the Royal American Magazine … will be published on the first Day of January next.”

Isaiah Thomas’s efforts to promote the Royal American Magazine in the public prints intensified in November 1773.  The Adverts 250 Project has traced his marketing efforts, starting with an announcement, in May, that he would soon publish proposals for the magazine and the first insertion of those proposals in Thomas’s newspaper, the Massachusetts Spy, at the end of June.  The printer ran ten advertisements in July, thirteen in August, fourteen in September, twenty in October, and forty-three in November.

Boston Evening-Post (November 1, 1773).

The month began with the Boston-Evening Post running Thomas’s “To be, or not to be” update for the first time and the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Post-Boy carrying it a second time on November 1.  Every newspaper then discontinued that notice, likely an acknowledgement of a note at the end of the version in the Boston Evening-Post: “by the appearance of the Subscription Papers in [Thomas’s] possession, there is great probability of [the magazine] going forward.”  Three days later, Thomas published an advertisement that appeared only three times, each time in his own Massachusetts Spy.  That brief notice called on local agents to send lists of subscribers to Thomas: “THOSE gentlemen, in this and the other provinces, who have subscription papers in their hands for the ROYAL AMERICAN MAGAZINE, are earnestly desired to return them.”

Massachusetts Spy (November 4, 1773).

An advertisement that made its first appearance in some newspapers in the final week of October accounted for most of the notices that ran in November.  That advertisement advised “gentlemen and ladies, who incline to encourage the publication of the ROYAL AMERICAN MAGAZINE” that “Subscription Papers will be returned to the intended Publisher in a few Days.”  That notice ran thirty-two times in November, supplementing its five appearances in October.  It became Thomas’s most widely disseminated newspaper advertisement for the proposed magazine.  The Maryland Gazette, published in Annapolis, carried the notice four times in November, the first time any of Thomas’s advertisements ran in the public prints that far south.  Previously, only newspapers in New England, New York, and Pennsylvania carried it.  The Norwich Gazette, a newspaper established in Connecticut in October, also ran the advertisement in late November.  It may have featured the advertisement earlier, but the first issues of that newspaper have not survived.  This advertisement did not appear in any newspapers published in Massachusetts.  Thomas relied on his other advertisements there.  Overall, the “Subscription Papers will be returned” advertisement ran in fourteen newspapers published in ten cities and towns in six colonies.

Thomas devised one more advertisement in November 1773.  It first appeared in the Massachusetts Spy, but by the end of the month the Boston-Gazette and the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Post-Boy both heeded Thomas’s plea for “PRINTERS of all the Public Papers in America … to insert this Advertisement.”  In it, Thomas stated that the first issue of the Royal American Magazine “will undoubtedly appear on the first of January next.”  He solicited essays to include in the new publication.  He also made another appeal to prospective subscribers to send their names “if they chuse not to be disappointed” by missing the first issue.

Launching the only magazine published in the colonies at that time was a significant undertaking.  That Thomas would eventually take the magazine to press was not inevitable.  He needed to cultivate a community of subscribers that extended beyond Boston.  To achieve that goal, he devised an extensive advertising campaign, one surpassed only by Robert Bell in his efforts to create an American literary market.

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Newspaper Advertisements for November 1773

To be, or not to be” Update

  • November 1 – Boston Evening-Post (first appearance)
  • November 1 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Post-Boy (second appearance)

“Subscription Papers will be returned” Update

  • November 1 – Newport Mercury (first appearance)
  • November 1 – Pennsylvania Chronicle (first appearance)
  • November 1 – Pennsylvania Packet (first appearance)
  • November 2 – Connecticut Courant (first appearance)
  • November 3 – Pennsylvania Journal (first appearance)
  • November 4 – Maryland Gazette (first appearance)
  • November 4 – New-York Journal (second appearance)
  • November 8 – Newport Mercury (first appearance)
  • November 8 – New-York Gazette and Weekly Mercury (first appearance)
  • November 8 – Pennsylvania Chronicle (second appearance)
  • November 8 – Pennsylvania Packet (second appearance)
  • November 9 – Connecticut Courant (second appearance)
  • November 10 – Pennsylvania Gazette (first appearance)
  • November 10 – Pennsylvania Journal (second appearance)
  • November 11 – Maryland Gazette (second appearance)
  • November 11 – New-York Journal (third appearance)
  • November 12 – New-Hampshire Gazette (second appearance)
  • November 12 – New-London Gazette (second appearance)
  • November 15 – Newport Mercury (second appearance)
  • November 15 – New-York Gazette and Weekly Mercury (second appearance)
  • November 15 – Pennsylvania Chronicle (third appearance)
  • November 18 – Maryland Gazette (third appearance)
  • November 18 – Norwich Packet (first known appearance)
  • November 20 – Providence Gazette (first appearance)
  • November 22 – New-York Gazette and Weekly Mercury (third appearance)
  • November 22 – Pennsylvania Chronicle (fourth appearance)
  • November 24 – Pennsylvania Gazette (second appearance)
  • November 25 – Maryland Gazette (fourth appearance)
  • November 25 – Norwich Packet (second appearance)
  • November 26 – New-Hampshire Gazette (third appearance)
  • November 27 – Providence Gazette (second appearance)
  • November 29 – Pennsylvania Chronicle (fifth appearance)

“subscription papers in their hands” Update

  • November 4 – Massachusetts Spy (first appearance)
  • November 11 – Massachusetts Spy (second appearance)
  • November 18 – Massachusetts Spy (third appearance)

“generous Patrons” Update

  • November 18 – Massachusetts Spy (first appearance)
  • November 22 – Boston-Gazette (first appearance)
  • November 22 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Post-Boy (first appearance)
  • November 26 – Massachusetts Spy (second appearance)
  • November 29 – Boston-Gazette (second appearance)
  • November 29 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Post-Boy (second appearance)

Slavery Advertisements Published November 27, 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 Journal (November 27, 1773).

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Maryland Journal (November 27, 1773).

November 26

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

Massachusetts Spy (November 26, 1773).

“THOSE who incline to ADVERTISE in said paper … may find it GREATLY to their ADVANTAGE.”

At the same time that Isaiah Thomas, printer of the Massachusetts Spy, set about launching the Royal American Magazine, he made plans to publish another newspaper, the Essex Journal, and Merrimack Packet: Or the Massachusetts and New-Hampshire General Advertiser.  For that endeavor, Thomas entered into partnership with Henry-Walter Tinges. Thomas planned to remain in Boston, overseeing his printing office there, while Tinges would manage the Essex Journal at the printing office in Newburyport.  The proposed publication would become only the second newspaper in Massachusetts printed outside of Boston, joining the Essex Gazette published in Salem since August 1768.

To incite interest in the Essex Journal, Thomas inserted an advertisement in the November 26, 1773, edition of the Massachusetts Spy, announcing that the first issue of a “New Weekly NEWS-PAPER” would be “distributed and given, GRATIS, to the Inhabitants of both Provinces,” Massachusetts and New Hampshire.  He hoped that the free issue would encourage those who received it to become subscribers.  Yet he did not focus solely on prospective subscribers.  The printer also advised merchants, shopkeepers, artisans, and others that they did not want to miss this opportunity to place their notices before the eyes of so many readers.  “THOSE who incline to ADVERTISE in said paper, in this or the neighbouring Towns,” Thomas proclaimed, “may find it GREATLY to their ADVANTAGE, especially the Merchants and Shopkeepers in BOSTON, as a very large Number will be printed off, and distributed throughout the Provinces of Massachusetts Bay and New-Hampshire.”  He reiterated that the inaugural issue would be “[Gratis],” underscoring that advertisers could expect many colonizers, even those who did not subscribe to other newspapers, to receive copies and peruse the contents.

Thomas accepted advertisements at his printing office in Boston.  Tinges also accepted them at his printing office in Newburyport.  The printer promoted “very reasonable prices” for placing notices in the new newspaper, but did not specify the rates.  When the first issue of the Essex Journal went to press, it included two dozen advertisements that accounted for slightly more than four of the twelve columns.  Thomas and Hinges placed a quarter of the notices, but they managed to attract several advertisers who sought the advantages interested in reaching readers who received free copies of the new newspaper.

Slavery Advertisements Published November 26, 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.

Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (November 26, 1773).

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Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (November 26, 1773).

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Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (November 26, 1773).

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New-London Gazette (November 26, 1773).

November 25

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

Rivington’s New-York Gazetteer (November 25, 1773).

“WATCHES justly valued for those who are about to buy, or swop elsewhere.”

John Simnet, who billed himself as the “only regular London watch-maker here,” regularly advertised in the newspapers published in New York.  As November 1773 came to a close, he inserted notices in the New-York Gazette and Weekly Mercury, the New-York Journal, and Rivington’s New-York Gazetteer.  Over the years, he gained a reputation for his cantankerous advertisements in which he feuded with his competitors.  Such aggressive strategies did not account for the only appeals that the watchmaker made to the public.  In many of his advertisements, he listed his prices, demonstrating the deals available at his workshop to prospective clients who did some comparison shopping.  Simnet asserted, for instance, that he performed “every particular in repairing [watches] at HALF the price charg’d by others.”  Furthermore, he “will keep them in proper order in future, gratis,” a valuable service for his customers.  He also did appraisals: “WATCHES justly valued for those who are about to buy, or swop elsewhere.”

Those appeals, along with his colorful personality, helped to distinguish Simnet’s advertisements from those placed by other watchmakers.  In the November 25 edition of Rivington’s New-York Gazetteer, another aspect of his advertisement attracted attention.  The watchmaker joined the ranks of advertisers who decided to have a decorative border enclose his notice.  In recent months, that became a style associated with New York’s newest newspaper.  Simnet ran the same copy that appeared in the New-York Journal on the same day and a few days earlier in the November 22 edition of the New-York Gazette and Weekly Mercury, but only his notice in Rivington’s New-York Gazetteer featured a border.  Simnet joined six other advertisers who opted for that visual element to enhance their notices and attract the attention of readers.  Like most other advertisers, he devised the copy on his own, but entrusted the format to the compositors in each printing office.  In this case, however, he apparently made a request to incorporate a border after observing so many other advertisements in that newspaper receive that treatment.  Considering how much Simnet craved attention, arguably even more than most advertisers, readers familiar with his reputation and his previous notices may have been surprised that it took him so long to run an advertisement with a visual element gaining in popularity.