September 8

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

Pennsylvania Evening Post Extraordinary (September 8, 1775).

“The publisher would be very glad to have some more good original pieces handed to him.”

When Joseph Greenleaf ceased publication of the Royal American Magazine just after the battles at Lexington and Concord, Robert Aitken’s Pennsylvania Magazine, Or American Monthly Museum became the only magazine published in the American colonies.  Circumstances in Boston prevented Greenleaf from continuing production of his magazine, acquired from its founder, Isaiah Thomas, the previous summer.  Aitken had a more advantageous situation in Philadelphia.

Yet events unfolding in Massachusetts loomed large for Aitken and readers of the Pennsylvania Magazine.  When Samuel Loudon, a bookseller in New York, advertised subscriptions for the magazine in August 1775, he noted that the most recent issue came with a bonus item, a “new and correct Plan of the TOWN of BOSTON, and PROVINCIAL CAMP.”  Aitken highlighted coverage of the siege of Boston and the threat posed by British troops in his own advertisements.  In early September, he informed the public that the contents of the most recent issue included “several useful, curious and interesting original pieces both in prose and verse, embellished with an exact plan of General Gage’s lines on a large scale, with a description of the plan, number of cannon, shot, &c.”  When it came to disseminating news about the Continental Army facing off against British forces during the first months of the Revolutionary War, the Pennsylvania Magazine supplemented coverage in newspapers.

While Aitken certainly welcomed any accounts of current events in Massachusetts, he aimed to compile an array of “useful, curious and interesting” content for his readers.  To that end, he proclaimed that he “would be very glad to have some more good original pieces handed to him.”  During his time as publisher of the Royal American America, Thomas similarly ran advertisements seeking submissions.  He solicited “LUCUBRATIONS,” requesting that “Gentlemen” send them “with all speed to his Printing office.”  Aitken did not make his request solely of men, perhaps recognizing that genteel women participated in belles lettres literary circles as both readers and writers.  Women used pseudonyms, often classical allusions, in those circles.  They could do the same when sending pieces for the magazine.  “The exercise of different gifts or talents,” Aitken declared, “add much to the spirit of a Magazine.”  Like Thomas, he engaged in an eighteenth-century version of crowdsourcing to generate content for his magazine.

April 30

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

Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (April 13, 1775).

THIS DAY PUBLISHED, The Royal American Magazine; FOR MARCH, 1775.”

On April 28, 1775, Daniel Fowle, printer of the New-Hampshire Gazette, reported that the “Boston News Papers … are all stopt, and no more will be printed for the present” following the outbreak of hostilities at Lexington and Concord.  He could have also mentioned that the Royal American Magazine, published by Joseph Greenleaf in Boston, had been suspended as well.  Although some of the newspapers eventually resumed, the Royal American Magazine did not.  The March 1775 issue, distributed in the second week of April, was the last one for that ambitious project that had repeatedly met with mishaps.  Isaiah Thomas, the original publisher, delayed the first issue when the ship carrying new types ran aground in January 1774 and then fell several issues behind because of the “Distresses” that Boston experienced when the Boston Port Act closed the harbor in June 1774 in retaliation for the destruction of tea the previous December.  Shortly after Thomas advised the public that he had suspended the magazine, he announced that he transferred it to Greenleaf.  The new publisher worked diligently to compile, print, and circulate the overdue issues and get back on schedule.

Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (April 20, 1775).

Despite the challenges, he managed to do so, especially considering that eighteenth-century subscribers expected the issue for a month either at the very end of that month or early in the following month.  Accordingly, when Greenleaf first announced publication of the February 1775 issue on March 13 the new issue was on time, especially given the circumstances.  A month later, he ran a brief notice in the April 13 edition of the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter: “THIS DAY PUBLISHED, The Royal American Magazine; FOR MARCH, 1775.”  A week later, he placed a more extensive advertisement in the same newspaper.  That one promoted the “elegant Engraving” that “Embellished” the magazine, though he did not reveal that it was a political cartoon depicting “America in Distress” engraved by Paul Revere.  (See the American Antiquarian Society’s illustrated inventory of “Royal American Magazine Plates” for images and descriptions of Revere’s engravings that accompanied the magazine.)  As he sometimes did in advertisements in previous months, Greenleaf stated that “Subscriptions continue to be taken in.”  That advertisement appeared on April 20, the day after the battles at Lexington and Concord.  Almost certainly Greenleaf composed the advertisement before such momentous events; very likely the type had already been set when word arrived in Boston.  The Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter covered the “unhappy Affair” in a single paragraph that ran on the same page as the advertisement for the Royal American Magazine.  It would be the last issue of that newspaper until May 19.  On April 24, the final issue of the Boston Evening-Post carried only three advertisements, one of them announcing publication of the March issue of the Royal American Magazine.

Boston Evening-Post (April 24, 1775).

That brought to conclusion an advertising campaign that lasted nearly two years when Thomas first declared that he would distribute subscription proposals.  For several months, he advertised widely in newspapers in New England, New York, Pennsylvania, and Maryland, seeking subscribers in distant cities for what was the only magazine published in the colonies at the time.  (Robert Aitken eventually launched the Pennsylvania Magazine in January 1775, a year after the Royal American Magazine commenced.)  Thomas scaled back the advertising once he took the first issue of the magazine to press.  In turn, Greenleaf also confined his advertising to Boston’s newspapers.  The ambitious project ended up a casualty of the imperial crisis when resistance became revolution.

This entry concludes an ongoing series in which the Adverts 250 Project has tracked advertisements for the Royal American Magazine from Thomas’s first notice, in May 1773, that he planned to distribute subscription proposals to newspapers advertisements in JuneJulyAugustSeptemberOctoberNovember, and December 1773 and JanuaryFebruaryMarchAprilMay, and June 1774.  No magazine advertisements for the magazine appeared in July 1774 because of the “Distresses,” yet they resumed in AugustSeptemberOctoberNovember, and December 1774 and JanuaryFebruary, and March 1775.

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THIS DAY PUBLISHED, The Royal American Magazine; FOR MARCH, 1775”

  • April 13 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (first appearance)

JUST PUBLISHED … The Royal American Magazine … For MARCH, 1775”

  • April 20 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (first appearance)

“THIS DAY PUBLISHED … The Royal American Magazine … For MARCH, 1775.”

  • April 24 – Boston Evening-Post (first appearance)

March 26

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

“The Royal American MAGAZINE … for February 1775.”

In March 1775, three of Boston’s newspapers carried advertisements that the February issue of the Royal American Magazine was now available “at Greenleaf’s Printing Office in Union-Street near the Market” in Boston.  The advertisements first appeared in the Boston Evening-Post and the Boston-Gazette on March 13.  Based on publication dates for magazines today, the February issue seems quite overdue, but in the eighteenth century published distributed magazines at the end of the month or early in the following month.  Considering that Greenleaf had not advertised the January edition until February 20, it appears that he managed to take the next issue to press in just three weeks.

Above: Boston Evening-Post (March 13, 1775); Below: Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (March 17, 1775).

The advertisement in the Boston-Gazette ran for two consecutive weeks.  The more elaborate version in the Boston Evening-Post reported that the February issue was “Embellished with an elegant Engraving of a History Piece.”  That copperplate engraving, executed by Paul Revere, depicted a scene from the “History of Lauretta,” a moral tale included among the contents of the magazine.  The advertisement ran only once in the Boston Evening-Post, but appeared in the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter on March 17 and 30.  Once again, those printing offices seem to have shared type set in one printing office and transferred to the other.  It is not clear what role Greenleaf played in that arrangement since some of the city’s printers engaged in that practice on other occasions.

What is clear is that Greenleaf’s marketing campaign was not nearly as extensive as the one devised by Isaiah Thomas when he first proposed publishing the Royal American Magazine and announced distribution of the first several issues.  Yet the number of advertisements and the array of newspapers that carried them diminished even during Thomas’s tenure as publisher of the magazine, likely due to the evolving political situation in Boston and throughout the colonies.  He had promoted the magazine widely in the months before colonizers dumped tea into Boston Harbor, but only began publishing it as they contended with the aftermath, including the closure of the port and other punitive measures passed by Parliament in the Coercive Acts.  Even as Thomas filled the magazine with patriot propaganda, he and other residents of Boston experienced “Distresses” that apparently made marketing the Royal American Magazineless of a priority.  For his part, Greenleaf advised the public about new issues, but he did not attempt to replicate the initial marketing strategy devised by Thomas.

This entry continues an ongoing series in which the Adverts 250 Project has tracked advertisements for the Royal American Magazine from Thomas’s first notice, in May 1773, that he planned to distribute subscription proposals to newspapers advertisements in JuneJulyAugustSeptemberOctoberNovember, and December 1773 and JanuaryFebruaryMarchAprilMay, and June 1774.  No magazine advertisements for the magazine appeared in July 1774 because of the “Distresses,” yet they resumed in AugustSeptemberOctoberNovember, and December 1774 and January and February 1775.

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This Day PUBLISHED, The Royal American MAGAZINE … for February 1775.”

  • March 13 – Boston-Gazette (first appearance)
  • March 20 – Boston-Gazette (second appearance)

“THIS DAY PUBLISHED … The Royal American Magazine … For FEBRUARY 1775.”

  • March 13 – Boston Evening-Post (first appearance)
  • March 17 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (first appearance)
  • March 30 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (second appearance)

February 26

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

Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (February 26, 1775).

“The Royal American Magazine … For JANUARY, 1775.”

When Joseph Greenleaf acquired the Royal American Magazine from Isaiah Thomas, the original printer, near the end of the summer of 1774, the magazine had fallen two months behind, largely due to the hardships caused by the Boston Port Act.  Over the next several months, Greenleaf worked diligently to return the magazine to its publication schedule, achieving that goal with publication of the December 1774 issue during the first week of January 1775.  While that may seem late by twenty-first century standards, magazines bore the date of the previous month, not the upcoming month, in the eighteenth century.  Subscribers anticipated receiving that month’s issue at the very end of the month or the beginning of the next month.

Although Greenleaf managed to get the magazine back on schedule at the beginning of the new year, that did not last long.  The January issue, anticipated around the first of February, was not available until nearly the end of the month.  On February 20, a notice in the Boston Evening-Post announced, “THIS DAY PUBLISHED … The Royal American Magazine … For JANUARY, 1775.”  It was the first advertisement that mentioned the magazine in February, except for the final appearance of Henry Christian Geyer’s notice that critiqued the Royal American Magazine because it “was not printed with his Ink” that he “manufactured” in Boston.  Greenleaf’s progress may have been stalled, in part, by producing a supplement to the first volume of the magazine during January.  That supplement included a title page for the entire volume to insert if subscribers had all the issue bound together, an address to subscribers, and an index.  It also delivered an installment of Thomas Hutchinson’s History of Massachusetts-Bay, a premium offered to subscribers when Thomas circulated subscription proposals.

Boston Evening-Post (February 20, 1775).

Greenleaf published only two advertisements for the Royal American Magazine in February 1775.  His notice that first appeared in the Boston Evening-Post on February 20 ran three days later in the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-LetterAs had been the case in January, it seems that the printing offices shared type that had been set in one location and transferred to the other.

The January 1775 issue turned out to be one of the last issues of the Royal American Magazine, despite the plans for improvement that Greenleaf sketched in the address to subscribers in the supplement.  The printer could not contend with the circumstances in Boston as the political situation worsened.  Although Greenleaf and the subscribers did not know it at the time, the first battles of the Revolutionary War would take place within a couple of months.  In their wake, some newspapers printed in Boston suspended publication and others ceased publication.  The Royal American Magazine was not the only periodical that became a casualty of the imperial crisis.

This entry continues an ongoing series in which the Adverts 250 Project has tracked advertisements for the Royal American Magazine from Thomas’s first notice, in May 1773, that he planned to distribute subscription proposals to newspapers advertisements in JuneJulyAugustSeptemberOctoberNovember, and December 1773 and JanuaryFebruaryMarchAprilMay, and June 1774.  No magazine appeared in July 1774 because of the “Distresses,” yet they resumed in AugustSeptemberOctoberNovember, and December 1774 and January 1775.

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“Royal American Magazine, was not printed with his Ink”

  • February 6 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Post-Boy (third appearance)

“THIS DAY PUBLISHED … NUMBER I. VOL. II. … For JANUARY, 1775”

  • February 20 – Boston Evening-Post (first appearance)
  • February 23 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (first appearance)

January 30

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

Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Post-Boy (January 30, 1775).

“The Royal American Magazine, was not printed with his Ink.”

The final mention of the Royal American Magazine in newspaper advertisements published in January 1775 may not have been the kind of coverage that Joseph Greenleaf, the printer, desired.  Henry Christian Geyer once again inserted his notice for printing ink that he made and sold “at his Shop near Liberty-Tree” in Boston in the January 30 edition of the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Post-Boy.  In it, he noted to the public that “the Royal American Magazine, was not printed with his Ink.”

Beyond that squabble, Greenleaf did advertise the Royal American Magazine on eight occasions in three of the five newspapers printed in Boston that January.  On January 5, he ran notices in both the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter and the Massachusetts Spy.  In the former, he announced that he “JUST PUBLISHED … NUMBER XII. of The Royal American Magazine … For DECEMBER, 1774.”  To entice curiosity, he noted that issue was “Embellished with elegant Engravings.”  He also stated that he continued to accept subscriptions at his printing office.  That advertisement ran in three consecutive issues.  As was his custom, he ran a shorter advertisement in the Massachusetts Spy.  Extending only three lines, it advised, “This day was published, by J. GREENLEAF, THE Royal American Magazine, or Universal Repository, No. XII. for DECEMBER, 1774.”  That advertisement in the Massachusetts Spy ran only twice.  Another version appeared in the January 16 edition of the Boston Evening-Post, much closer in format to the one in the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter except but without the call for new subscriptions.

That Greenleaf disseminated the December edition of the magazine in early January was a feat.  In the eighteenth century, monthly magazines came out at the end of the month that bore their date or early in the next month, unlike modern magazines released in advance of the dates on their covers.  When Greenleaf acquired the Royal American Magazine from Isaiah Thomas in August 1774, publication had fallen behind by two months because of the “Distresses of the Town of Boston, by the shutting up of our Port.”  Over the next several months, Greenleaf steadily caught up on the overdue issues, delivering the December issue to subscribers right on time at the beginning of January.

On January 23, Greenleaf inserted a new advertisement in the Boston Evening-Post, this time alerting readers that he published “A SUPPLEMENT to The Royal American Magazine … With the Title-Page and Index to Vol. I. for 1774.”  That supplement consisted of a two-page address to the subscribers, a seven-page index, and the next twenty-four pages of Thomas Hutchinson’s History of the Province of Massachusetts-Bay, a monthly feature and premium for subscribers.  In the address, Greenleaf explained that since the magazine had been “suspended near two months by the original undertaker, I have been obliged to publish one oftner than once in three weeks.”  Furthermore, he considered it “necessary to apologize for the poor appearance of the work the last six months.”  He did not have type “so good as I could wish” and could not acquire more because of the “non-importation agreement, which it was MY DUTY to comply with.”  Fortunately, a friend assisted him in obtaining “almost new” type for continuing to publish the magazine.  He also acknowledged that the ink “has been poor, but as it was of AMERICAN MANUFACTURE my customers were not only willing but desirous I should use it.”  When Geyer published advertisements that mentioned Greenleaf did not use his ink in printing the Royal American Magazine, it may have been just as much an attempt to distance his product from the “poor” appearance of the magazine as it was an effort to shame Greenleaf into purchasing from him in the future.  The index concluded with “DIRECTIONS to the BOOK-BINDER for placing the PLATES, &c. in the ROYAL AMERICAN MAGAZINE, for 1774.”  Bookbinders usually incorporated the copperplate engravings that accompanied eighteenth-century magazines yet removed the advertising wrappers that enclosed them.

Curiously, when an advertisement about the supplement ran in the January 26 edition of the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter, it looked identical to the one in the Boston Evening-Post.  If that was indeed the case, it was not the first time that those printing offices seemed to share type that had already been set, a matter for further investigation.

This entry continues an ongoing series in which the Adverts 250 Project has tracked advertisements for the Royal American Magazine from Thomas’s first notice, in May 1773, that he planned to distribute subscription proposals to newspapers advertisements in June, July, August, September, October, November, and December 1773 and January, February, March, April, May, and June1774.  No magazine appeared in July 1774 because of the “Distresses,” yet they resumed in August, September, October, November, and December.

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JUST PUBLISHED … Royal American Magazine … For DECEMBER, 1774”

  • January 5 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (first appearance)
  • January 12 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (second appearance)
  • January 19 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (third appearance)

This day was published … Royal American Magazine … for DECEMBER, 1774”

  • January 5 – Massachusetts Spy (first appearance)
  • January 12 – Massachusetts Spy (second appearance)

This Day is Published … Royal American Magazine … For DECEMBER, 1774”

  • January 16 – Boston Evening-Post (first appearance)

THIS DAY PUBLISHED … A SUPPLEMENT to The Royal American Magazine”

  • January 23 – Boston Evening-Post (first appearance)
  • January 26 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (first appearance)

“Royal American Magazine, was not printed with his Ink”

  • January 23 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Post-Boy (first appearance)
  • January 30 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Post-Boy (second appearance)

December 25

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

Boston Evening-Post (December 26, 1774).

THIS DAY PUBLISHED … The Royal American Magazine … For NOVEMBER, 1774.”

Joseph Greenleaf published a new issue of the Royal American Magazine and advertised sporadically in December 1774.  Perhaps the troubles that Boston experienced in the wake of the Boston Port Act, the Massachusetts Government Act, and the other Coercive Acts played a role in placing advertisements without the same attention to developing a marketing strategy that Isaiah Thomas had sometimes shown when he first launched the magazine, though the original publisher had also advertised somewhat haphazardly in his final months as proprietor before transferring the publication to Greenleaf.  In general, Thomas had been much more intentional about advertising in the early stages when he sought subscribers than he had been once the magazine began circulating to readers.

The Adverts 250 Project has tracked advertisements for the Royal American Magazine from Thomas’s first notice, in May 1773, that he planned to distribute subscription proposals to newspapers advertisements in June, July, August, September, October, November, and December 1773 and January, February, March, April, May, and June 1774.  No magazine appeared in July 1774 because of the “Distresses,” yet they resumed in August, September, October, and November.

As previously noted, Greenleaf advertised on November 17 that he would publish the October edition of the Royal American Magazine the following day, but no subsequent advertisements appeared in any of Boston’s newspapers until December 5.  On that day, the Boston-Evening Post ran a notice that declared, “THIS DAY PUBLISHED … The Royal American Magazine … For OCTOBER, 1774.”  To entice readers, Greenleaf noted that the issue was “Embellished with an elegant Engraving of the Dancing Bishops.”  Eighteenth-century readers knew that “THIS DAY PUBLISHED” meant that a book, pamphlet, almanac, magazine, or other item was available for sale, not necessarily that it had been published on that day.  As a result, Greenleaf could have published and circulated the October edition any time between November, if he had not met any delays after his previous advertisement, and December 5.

Three days later, Greenleaf placed advertisements in both the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letterand the Massachusetts Spy.  In the former, he hawked the October edition of the magazine, “Embellished with an elegant Engraving.”  That notice did not describe the engraving, but it did indicate that Greenleaf continued to take in subscribers.  A much shorter advertisement in the Massachusetts Spy announced, “To-morrow will be published, by J. GREENLEAF, THE Royal American Magazine, No. XI. For NOVEMBER, 1774.”  Subsequent advertisements suggest that Greenleaf did indeed publish the new edition in the next few days.  That meant that whatever difficulties he experienced in the past month, he was nearly on time in delivering the November issue of the Royal American Magazine.  In the eighteenth-century, magazines usually came out at the end of the month or the first week of the next month rather than in advance of the date on the cover.

During the following week, Greenleaf inserted advertisements for the November edition of the Royal American Magazine in four of the five newspapers published in Boston at the time.  Rather than submit identical copy to the printing offices, he devised four variations, starting with one that ran in the Boston Evening-Post on December 12.  In that one, he stated that the November issue was “THIS DAY PUBLISHED” and promoted two engravings, “the Gerubaor Russian Rabbit, and Mademoiselle Clarion, in the Habit of an Actress.”  (Paul Revere produced all the engravings for the Royal American Magazine, though neither Thomas nor Greenleaf ever identified him in their advertisements.) On December 16, the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter and the Massachusetts Spy, each published a day later than usual, both ran advertisements about the Royal American Magazine, though this time about the same edition.  The advertisement in the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter merely updated the month and issue number, presumably using type already set for the previous advertisement.  The compositor for the Massachusetts Spy seemingly did something similar, updating the first line to read “This day was published, by J. GREENLEAF” instead of ““To-morrow will be published, by J. GREENLEAF.”  The “T” in “THE Royal American Magazine,” slightly out of alignment in both advertisements suggests that was the case.  Finally, the Boston-Gazettecarried a brief advertisement on December 19: “Just Published (No. XI) The Royal American Magazine, For November 1774, at Greenleaf’s Printing-Office, near the Market, Boston.”

Greenleaf inserted advertisements in the Boston Evening-Post and the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter a second time, but not the Boston-Gazette and the Massachusetts Spy.  For some reason, two weeks passed between the first and second appearance of those notices that did run twice.  Still, Greenleaf pursued a more extensive advertising campaign for the Royal American Magazine in December than November, increasing to nine advertisements compared to only four.  Although not as robust as some months, these marketing efforts gave the magazine’s November edition greater visibility in the public prints.

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THIS DAY PUBLISHED … Royal American Magazine … For OCTOBER, 1774”

  • December 5 – Boston Evening-Post (first appearance)

JUST PUBLISHED … Royal American Magazine … For OCTOBER, 1774”

  • December 8 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (first appearance)

To-Morrow will be published … Royal American Magazine … NOVEMBER, 1774”

  • December 8 – Massachusetts Spy (first appearance)

THIS DAY PUBLISHED … Royal American Magazine … For NOVEMBER, 1774”

  • December 12 – Boston Evening-Post (first appearance)
  • December 26 – Boston Evening-Post (second appearance)

JUST PUBLISHED … Royal American Magazine … For NOVEMBER, 1774”

  • December 16 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (first appearance)
  • December 29 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (second appearance)

This day was published … Royal American Magazine … NOVEMBER, 1774”

  • December 16 – Massachusetts Spy (first appearance)

“Just Published (No. XI) The Royal American Magazine, For November 1774”

  • December 19 – Boston-Gazette (first appearance)

November 27

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

Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (November 17, 1774).

“NUMBER X. of The Royal American Magazine.”

The Adverts 250 Project has tracked advertisements for the Royal American Magazine from Thomas’s first notice, in May 1773, that he planned to distribute subscription proposals to newspapers advertisements in June, July, August, September, October, November, and December 1773 and January, February, March, April, May, and June 1774.  No magazine appeared in July 1774 because of the “Distresses,” yet they resumed in August, September, and October.

In the first week of November 1774, Joseph Greenleaf took to the pages of two of the newspapers printed in Boston to announce that he had published a new issue of the Royal American Magazine.  His advertisement for the September issue that already appeared in the October 31 edition of the Boston Evening-Post ran in that newspaper once again on November 7.  It actually appeared twice, once on the third page and once on the fourth.  The compositor likely made an error.  In addition, a similar advertisement appeared in the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter on November 3, following up on a notice from October 27 that stated the magazine would be published the following day.

Greenleaf had been busy trying to catch up on overdue editions since he acquired the magazine from Isaiah Thomas in August.  Thomas had fallen behind due to the “Distresses of the Town of Boston” following the Boston Port Act and other Coercive Acts that went into effect in the summer of 1774.  He originally planned to suspend publication of the magazine, but then decided to transfer ownership to Greenleaf.  In the eighteenth century, monthly magazines usually appeared at the end of the month, so subscribers expected the October edition near the end of October or in the first week of November.  The September edition that Greenleaf advertised at the end of October and the beginning of November was a month overdue, yet the new publisher had made progress in getting back on schedule.

However, he may not have been able to improve on that progress.  The advertisements make it difficult to determine.  On November 17, Greenleaf placed advertisements in the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter and the Massachusetts Spy.  In both, he stated that he would publish the October edition of the Royal American Magazine TO-MORROW.”  In the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter, he noted that “an elegant Engraving” accompanied the magazine, though he did not reveal its subject, and stated that “Subscriptions continue to be taken in.”  If Greenleaf did indeed publish the October edition of the magazine on November 18, then he made gains on the delinquent issue, disseminating it less than three weeks behind schedule.

Yet no advertisements for the Royal American Magazine ran in any of Boston’s five newspapers throughout the remainder of the month.  For Greenleaf to publish a new issue and not advertise it deviated from the practice he had established during his time as proprietor.  No advertisement for the October edition of the Royal American Magazineappeared until a notice declared it “THIS DAY PUBLISHED” in the Boston Evening-Post on December 5.  Eighteenth-century readers knew that headline meant a book, almanac, pamphlet, magazine, or other publication was available for purchase, not necessarily that it was released for the first time on that date.  That means that the October edition could have been published any time between November 18 and December 5.  The date on the cover did not reveal the complicated publication history of that issue of the Royal American Magazine.

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JUST PUBLISHED … Royal American Magazine … For SEPTEMBER, 1774”

  • November 3 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (first appearance)

THIS DAY PUBLISHED … NUMBER IX … Embellished with an elegant Engraving”

  • November 7 – Boston Evening-Post (second appearance and third appearance)

TO-MORROW will be PUBLISHED … Royal American Magazine … For OCTOBER, 1774”

  • November 17 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (first appearance)

To-Morrow will be published, THE Royal American MAGAZINE, for OCTOBER, 1774”

  • November 17 – Massachusetts Spy (first appearance)

October 30

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

“THIS DAY PUBLISHED … The Royal American Magazine … For SEPTEMBER, 1774.”

Boston Evening-Post (October 31, 1774).

Upon becoming the proprietor of the Royal American Magazine, Joseph Greenleaf set about publishing new issues to catch up with how many should have been distributed.  Isaiah Thomas, the original proprietor, had fallen behind because of the “Distresses of the Town of Boston” when the Boston Port Act went into effect in the summer of 1774.  Initially, Thomas intended to suspend the magazine until “the Affairs of this Country are a little better settled,” but then he decided to transfer it to Greenleaf.  By that time, the magazine was several months behind schedule.  Greenleaf took the July issue to press in September 1774.  In October, he published two issues, the August issue near the beginning of the month and the September issue at the end of the month.  Since magazine typically came out at the end of the month rather than the beginning, that meant that the Royal American Magazine was now only a month behind schedule.  In keeping subscribers and the public apprised of the new issues, Greenleaf resorted to a greater number of advertisements in a greater number of newspapers in October than in September.

The Adverts 250 Project has examined advertisements for the Royal American Magazine that began with Thomas’s first mention of circulating subscription proposals in May 1773 and subsequent newspaper advertisements in June, July, August, September, October, November, and December 1773 and January, February, March, April, May, and June 1774.  The “Distresses” meant no newspaper advertisements for the magazine in July 1774, but they resumed with the notices from Thomas and Greenleaf in August, September, and October.

A brief advertisement in the October 6 edition of the Massachusetts Spy announced, “To-morrow will be published, THE Royal American Magazine, No. 8. For AUGUST, 1774.”  A more elaborate notice in the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter on the same day proclaimed, “THIS DAY PUBLISHED … NUMBER VIII. of The Royal American Magazine.”  That one noted that the issue was “Embellished with an elegant Engraving” to supplement the articles.  It also encouraged new subscribers to submit their names to Greenleaf at his printing office on Hanover Street.  Apparently, there had been a miscommunication with one of the printing offices concerning when the September issue would be ready for subscribers.  That did not matter by the time the Boston Post-Boy ran the same “THIS DAY PUBLISHED” advertisement on October 10.  Readers knew that “THIS DAY PUBLISHED” did not necessarily refer to a specific day but instead meant that a book, pamphlet, or other item was now available.  The Boston-Gazette carried yet another version of Greenleaf’s advertisement, also on October 10.  That one stated that he “JUST PUBLISHED” the magazine and promoted the engraving.  Advertisements for the August issue of the Royal American Magazine appeared in four newspapers published in Boston, compared to advertisements for the July issue running in only two.

Those four newspapers each carried advertisements about the September issue of the magazine by the end of October.  On October 20, Greenleaf inserted a notice in the Massachusetts Spy to inform the public that he moved his printing office to Union Street.  In a nota bene, he stated, “The Magazine for September, will be out next week.”  He ran the same notice in the Boston Evening-Post on October 24.  A few days later, both the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter and the Massachusetts Spy featured variant advertisements that  declared, “To-Morrow will be published, THE Royal American Magazine, for September 1774.”  On October 31, the Boston-Evening Post and the Boston-Gazette also ran similar, but not identical, advertisements that stated, “THIS DAY PUBLISHED … The Royal American Magazine … For SEPTEMBER 1774.”  The version in the Boston Evening-Post promoted an “elegant Engraving of a Water-Spout” and directed readers to Greenleaf’s printing office.  The one in the Boston-Gazette did not.  Greenleaf got the word out about the latest issue of the magazine, produced incredibly quickly compared to previous issues, but did not resort to standard copy that he sent to the various newspapers in Boston.

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THIS DAY PUBLISHED … NUMBER VIII”

  • October 6 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (first appearance)
  • October 10 – Boston Evening-Post (first appearance)
  • October 13 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (second appearance)
  • October 17 – Boston Evening-Post (second appearance)

“To-morrow will be published … No. 8”

  • October 6 – Massachusetts Spy (first appearance)
  • October 13 – Massachusetts Spy (second appearance)

“JUST PUBLISHED … NUMBER VIII”

  • October 10 – Boston-Gazette (first appearance)

“The Magazine for September, will be out next week”

  • October 20 – Massachusetts Spy (first appearance)
  • October 24 – Boston Evening-Post (first appearance)
  • October 27 – Massachusetts Spy (second appearance)

TO-MORROW will be Published … Magazine … For SEPTEMBER”

  • October 27 – Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter (first appearance)

“To-Morrow, will be published … Magazine … for September … by J. GREENLEAF”

  • October 27 – Massachusetts Spy (first appearance)

THIS DAY PUBLISHED … NUMBER IX … Embellished with an elegant Engraving”

  • October 31 – Boston Evening-Post (first appearance)

“THIS DAY PUBLISHED … Magazine … For SEPTEMBER”

  • October 31 – Boston-Gazette (first appearance)

September 26

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

Boston Evening-Post (September 26, 1774).

“NUMBER VII. of The Royal American Magazine.”

The Royal American Magazine experienced a disruption in publication during the summer of 1774.  In a notice in the June issue, Isaiah Thomas, the founder of the magazine, reported that the “Distresses of the Town of Boston” that resulted from the Boston Port Act forced him to suspend publication for a few months.  He hoped to resume once “the Affairs of this Country are a little better settled.”  Not long after making that announcement, however, he took to the pages of his own newspaper, the Massachusetts Spy, to inform subscribers and the public that he transferred the magazine to Joseph Greenleaf.  An address from Greenleaf appeared immediately below Thomas’s advertisement.  They were the latest entries in a marketing campaign that commenced when Thomas first revealed his intention to circulate subscription proposals in May 1773 and subsequent newspaper advertisements in June, July, August, September, October, November, and December 1773 and January, February, March, April, May, and June 1774.  The “Distresses” meant no newspaper advertisements for the magazine in July 1774, but they resumed with the notices from Thomas and Greenleaf in August.

Those notices each made four more appearances in September.  Not surprisingly, the Massachusetts Spy accounted for three of them.  For four weeks, Thomas used his own newspaper to advise subscribers and others of the change in publisher for the magazine.  The companion notices also ran once in the Boston Evening-Post on September 5.  Greenleaf’s address indicated that the July issue of the magazine “is now in the Press, and will be published without Delay.”  On September 15, the last day that they ran in the Massachusetts Spy, that newspaper also carried a new advertisement from Greenleaf, one that declared, “THIS DAY PUBLISHED … NUMBER VII. of The Royal American Magazine.”  The July issue finally became available in September!  Greenleaf’s advertisement was brief and restrained compared to many that Thomas had inserted.  It stated that the issue was “Embellished with an elegant Engraving,” but did not give a description or even a name for Paul Revere’s engraving of “Spanish Treatment at Carthagena,” nor did the advertisement incorporate an extensive list of the contents to entice readers.  Instead, it succinctly noted that the magazine was “Printed and Sold at GREENLEAF’S Printing-Office … where Subscriptions continue to be taken in.” The new publisher hoped to expand the magazine’s circulation despite a less ambitious advertising strategy than Thomas sometimes deployed.  The announcement about the July issue ran only once in the Massachusetts Spy.  It appeared in the Boston Evening-Post for the first time in its next edition four days later and again the following week.  Amid the “Distresses of the Town of Boston,” Greenleaf’s first issue of the Royal American Magazine had less fanfare than many of the issues that Thomas published.

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To the Subscribers of the ROYAL AMERICAN MAGAZINE”

  • September 1 – Massachusetts Spy (second appearance)
  • September 5 – Boston Evening-Post (first appearance)
  • September 8 – Massachusetts Spy (third appearance)
  • September 15 – Massachusetts Spy (fourth appearance)

“To the PUBLIC, and in particular to the Subscribers”

  • September 1 – Massachusetts Spy (second appearance)
  • September 5 – Boston Evening-Post (first appearance)
  • September 8 – Massachusetts Spy (third appearance)
  • September 15 – Massachusetts Spy (fourth appearance)

“THIS DAY PUBLISHED … NUMBER VII”

  • September 15 – Massachusetts Spy (first appearance)
  • September 19 – Boston Evening-Post (first appearance)
  • September 26 – Boston Evening-Post (second appearance)

August 28

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

Massachusetts Spy (August 25, 1774).

“Suspend the Publication of the Magazine for a few Months.”

For more than a year, the Adverts 250 Project has traced Isaiah Thomas’s advertising campaign for the Royal American Magazine, from his first announcement that he intended to circulate subscription proposals in May 1773 through the notices that ran in newspapers in June, July, August, September, October, November, and December 1773 and January, February, March, April, May, and June 1774.  Last month, I noted that Thomas did not advertise the magazine in July 1774, that the sole marketing effort in the public prints was a poem “From the ROYAL AMERICAN MAGAZINE” that appeared in the “POETS CORNER” in the July 21, 1774, edition of the Massachusetts Spy, the newspaper that Thomas printed.  I also commented that newspaper advertisements do not reveal when the June 1774 issue of the magazine became available to readers.

Further investigation, however, reveals that newspaper advertisements do indeed provide that information.  The June 1774 issue of the Royal American Magazine was not published until August 1774.  Eighteenth-century magazines commonly came out at the end of the month, unlike modern magazines issued in advance of the dates on their covers.  Subscribers would have expected the June issue in late June or early July, but Thomas was more than a month late in distributing it.  He had perpetually been behind the anticipated publication schedule since the first issue.

On Thursday, August 4, the Massachusetts Spy carried a notice that “Saturday next will be published … NUMBER VI. of THE ROYAL American Magazine.”  To promote that issue, Thomas proclaimed that it would be “Embellished with elegant Engravings, I. The able Doctor, or America swallowing the bitter Draught.  II. The Hooded Serpent.”  Paul Revere produced both engravings.  The “Able Doctor,” depicting America personified as an Indigenous woman being held down by members of Parliament and forced to drink tea, protested the Boston Port Act.  It is now considered one of the most important examples of visual propaganda supporting the patriot cause produced during the imperial crisis.

By Monday, Thomas took the overdue issue to press.  The August 8 edition carried a nearly identical advertisement with the headline updated to “THIS DAY PUBLISHED.”  On August 11, an announcement received a prominent place in the Massachusetts Spy, running as the first item in the first column on the first page.  Although delinquent in publishing the June issue, Thomas privileged promoting it when he could finally declare, “This day was published … NUMBER VI. of THE ROYAL American Magazine.”  As he had done with previous issues, Thomas highlighted the engravings and provided a list of the contents to entice readers who were not already subscribers to purchase copies.  The articles included a “Description of the Hooded Serpent” to accompany the second engraving.

The June issue included an address “To the PUBLIC” in which Thomas informed “all those Gentlemen and Ladies, in this and the other Provinces, who have favoured him with their Subscriptions” that current events forced him to suspend publication of the magazine.  “The Distresses of the Town of Boston, by the shutting up of our Port,” Parliament’s response to the Boston Tea Party, had “throw[n] all Ranks of Men into Confusion,” including “those good Gentlemen … who kindly promised to assist the Editor with their various Lucrubrations.”  Thomas had regularly published advertisements seeking original content for the magazine, but now those who had volunteered to contribute had found themselves overcome by other priorities.  As a result, Thomas received “but few original Pieces.”  He could not provide readers with “that Entertainment and Instruction, which they have a Right to expect.”  Accordingly, he planned to suspend publication for a few months “until the Affairs of this Country are a little better settled” and his correspondents could once again turn their attention to supplying the magazine with content.

Not long after subscribers saw that notice in the June issue of the American Royal Magazine, Thomas took to the Massachusetts Spy with a new update on August 25.  He reported that “a Number of Gentlemen have desired that it may not be suspended.”  Not in a position to continue with the magazine at that time, Thomas “agreed with Mr. JOSEPH GREENLEAF, to carry on the Publication.”  He assured subscribers that the new publisher “will continue it to general satisfaction.”  He also instructed them to submit subscription fees for the first six issues to Greenleaf.  A notice from Greenleaf “To the PUBLIC, and in particular to the Subscribers for the ROYAL AMERICAN MAGAZINE” immediately followed.  He pledged to make the magazine “as entertaining and instructive as possible,” yet, like Thomas, needed the “Assistance of the learned and judicious in this and the neighbouring colonies.”  He was on track to make good on his promise to subscribers, declaring that the next issue “is now in the Press, and will be published without Delay.”  In addition, subscribers “may depend upon having the future Numbers published in good Season,” implicitly acknowledging that publication of previous issues had often been deferred longer than anticipated.  The new publisher concluded with a request that current subscriber continue and new subscribers “add their Names,” either at his printing office or with any other printers in Boston.

The suspension could have been the end of the Royal American Magazine, but Greenleaf managed to publish new issues through February 1775.  The Adverts 250 Project will continue to document advertisements for the magazine to compare Greenleaf’s marketing efforts to those of Thomas.

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“Saturday next will be published … NUMBER VI.”

  • August 4 – Massachusetts Spy (first appearance)

“THIS DAY PUBLISHED … NUMBER VI.”

  • August 8 – Boston Evening-Post (first appearance)
  • August 15 – Boston Evening-Post (second appearance)

“This day was published … NUMBER VI.” [with list of contents]

  • August 11 – Massachusetts Spy (first appearance)

To the Subscribers of the ROYAL AMERICAN MAGAZINE”

  • August 25 – Massachusetts Spy (first appearance)

“To the PUBLIC, and in particular to the Subscribers”

  • August 25 – Massachusetts Spy (first appearance)