May 22

What was advertised in revolutionary American newspaper 250 years ago today?

Pennsylvania Gazette (May 22, 1776).

“AN approved new edition of the Laws of New-Jersey.”

An advertisement in the May 22, 1776, edition of the Pennsylvania Gazette alerted the public that an “approved new edition of the Laws of New-Jersey (including those of the last session)” had been published and was available for sale.  Some readers apparently anticipated that volume since the advertisement indicated that it “has been largely subscribed for” because it was “much wanted.”  In other words, there had been so much demand for an updated compendium of the laws of the colony that the printer distributed a subscription notice announcing his intention to publish such a work and inviting those who wished to reserve copies to do so.

Publishing by subscription was common in eighteenth-century America.  It allowed printers to assess the viability of a project and avoid printing too many surplus copies that would never sell.  Local agents often assisted in collecting the names of subscribers to transmit to the printer and distributing the books after publication.  In this instance, the advertisement declared that the books were “now sent to those persons who took in the subscriptions, ready for delivery to the subscribers, who are desired to call for the same.”  In addition, “not many more volumes than subscribed for were struck off,” so “those who are desirous of having this body of laws, may do well to apply speedily, or they may not be able to furnish themselves.”  With a limited supply, anyone who had not previously reserved their copies needed to act quickly.

The advertisement did not definitively indicate who printed this new edition, only that local agents sold the remaining copies.  Joseph Crukshank did so in Philadelphia, along with Samuel Allinson in Burlington, New Jersey, and Elias Boudinot in Elizabethtown, New Jersey.  This advertisement most likely referred to Acts of the General Assembly of the Province of New-Jersey, from the Surrender of the Government to Queen Anne, on the 17th Day of April, in the Year of Our Lord 1702, to the 14th Day of January 1776, printed in Burlington by Isaac Collins, Printer to the King, for the Province of New-Jersey.”  A note on the title page reported that the laws had been “Compiled and published under the Appointment of the GENERAL ASSEMBLY, and compared with the ORIGINAL ACTS, BY SAMUEL ALLINSON,” one of the local agents listed in the advertisement.  Collins advertised in the Pennsylvania Gazette because New Jersey did not have its own newspaper.  Newspapers published in New York and Philadelphia were regional newspapers that served readers in several colonies, including New Jersey.

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