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

“THE ORATION DELIVER’D BY THE Hon. JOHN HANCOCK, Esq; Will be PUBLISHED.”
Many colonizers commemorated events that were part of the American Revolution before the Revolutionary War began. For instance, residents of Boston acknowledged the anniversary of the “horrid Massacre on the 5th of March 1770” each year. That description of the Boston Massacre came from coverage of the fourth anniversary commemorations in the March 7, 1774, edition of the Boston-Gazette. Benjamin Edes and John Gill, the printers, reported that “the Freeholders and other Inhabitants of this Town met at Faneuil-Hall.” They selected Samuel Adams as moderator for the meeting. Adams, in turn, recognized John Hancock to deliver “an ORATION, on the dangerous Tendency of Standing Armies being placed in free and populous Cities” and sought to “perpetuate the Memory of the horrid Massacre … by a Party of Soldiers belonging to the 29th Regiment, commanded by Capt. Thomas Preston.”
According to the printers, a “prodigious Crowd of People attended to hear the Oration, which was received with universal applause.” In turn, two committees were appointed, one to select a speaker to deliver the oration the following year and the other “to return the Orator the Thanks of the Town for his elegant and spirited Oration, and also to request a Copy of it for the Press.” Already, the annual commemoration including publishing the oration for further dissemination throughout the city and beyond. Edes and Gill further reported that the anniversary occurred on Saturday, “the Evening of which is considered by many Persons as the Commencement of the Sabbath,” so the display of the “Exhibition Portraits of the Murderers, and the slaughtered Citizens” was delayed until Monday evening, the same day the printers distributed that issue of the Boston-Gazette.
Two weeks later, on March 21, Edes and Gill ran a notice in their own newspaper to alert readers that “ON WEDNESDAY NEXT … THE ORATION DELIVER’D BY THE Hon. JOHN HANCOCK, Esq; Will be PUBLISHED” at their printing office. They even specified the time, “ELEVEN o’Clock,” so prospective customers would know exactly when they could obtain their copies. The printers staged an eighteenth-century precursor to a release party. In hopes of inciting greater demand and gaining even more attention for Hancock’s arguments about the rights of colonizers, Edes and Gill also ran advertisements in the Boston Evening-Post and the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Post-Boy on March 21. The next issue of the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter carried a notice that the oration had been published and was available from “EDES & GILL in Queen-Street.” Each year, printers published the oration marking the anniversary of the Boston Massacre and advertised it widely. Commodification of the event went hand in hand with commemoration.

[…] Many colonizers commemorated events that were part of the American Revolution before the Revolutionary War began. For instance, residents of Boston acknowledged the anniversary of the “horrid Massacre on the 5th of March 1770” each year. That description of the Boston Massacre came from coverage of the fourth anniversary commemorations in the March 7, 1774, edition of the Boston-Gazette. Benjamin Edes and John Gill, the printers, reported that “the Freeholders and other Inhabitants of this Town met at Faneuil-Hall.” They selected Samuel Adams as moderator for the meeting. Adams, in turn, recognized John Hancock to deliver “an ORATION, on the dangerous Tendency of Standing Armies being placed in free and populous Cities” and sought to “perpetuate the Memory of the horrid Massacre … by a Party of Soldiers belonging to the 29th Regiment, commanded by Capt. Thomas Preston.” Read more… […]
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