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

“ALL sorts of PLANES … as compleat as any made in London.”
Robert Parrish inserted an advertisement in the August 26, 1775, edition of the Pennsylvania Ledger to advise the public that he made and sold “ALL sorts of PLANES, suitable for carpenters, joiners, cabinet-makers, coopers,” and other artisans at “his house in Third-street, a few doors above Arch-street, and nearly opposite the Golden-Swan Tavern” in Philadelphia. Parrish was no stranger to advertising in the public prints. He previously ran an advertisement for “DUTCH FANS” and “ROLLING SCREENS,” both used for separating wheat from chaff, in the Pennsylvania Chronicle.
That notice featured two images, one of each kind of equipment that Parrish made and sold. A woodcut also accompanied his new advertisement, this one depicting a carpentry plane. It almost certainly drew attention to his advertisement since it was the only image of any sort, except for the coat of arms of Great Britain that always appeared in the masthead, in that issue of the Pennsylvania Ledger. Parrish stated that “continues to make Dutch-Fans, as usual, and various machines for grist-mills, such as the rolling screen improved,” yet he did not include either of the images that accompanied his previous advertisement. Perhaps he never reclaimed them from the printing office when William Goddard ceased publishing the Pennsylvania Chronicle in 1774 … or maybe he considered it too expensive to purchase the necessary space to feature two images. His copy, after all, was significantly longer than in that earlier advertisement.
Parrish insisted that the planes made and sold at his shop were “as compleat as any made in London,” an assurance that the quality of construction matched imported tools. American artisans frequently made such claims, though such promises had even greater significance with the Continental Association in effect. The First Continental Congress devised that nonimportation and nonconsumption agreement in response to the Coercive Acts. It also called for producers and consumers to support domestic manufactures, goods produced in the colonies, as alternatives to imported items. Parrish signaled that he did his part to support the American cause by supplying carpenters, joiners, cabinetmakers, and coopers with the tools they needed to earn their livelihoods.

[…] Robert Parrish published an advertisement adorned with a woodcut depicting a carpenter’s plane in the August 26, 1775, edition of the Pennsylvania Ledger, it was the first of several appearances […]