May 3

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

Massachusetts Spy (May 3, 1775). Courtesy American Antiquarian Society.

“I beg the Assistance of all the Friends to our righteous Cause to circulate this Paper.”

When the patriot printer Isaiah Thomas revived the Massachusetts Spy, originally published in Boston, after fleeing to Worcester to evade “friends of the British administration” who “openly threatened him with the effects of their resentment,” the first issue published in that town opened with a notice to the public.[1]  He reminded readers that he had previously entered into an agreement to aid in establishing a press in Worcester, installing a junior partner to manage a printing office there while he oversaw the enterprise from Boston.  He had issued proposals for the newspaper, intending to name it the “WORCESTER GAZETTE, or AMERICAN ORACLE of LIBERTY.”  However, when Thomas determined that it became “highly necessary that I should remove my Printing Materials from Boston to this Place,” he decided to “continue the Publication of the well-known MASSACHUSETTS SPY, or THOMAS’S BOSTON JOURNAL.”  He continued the numbering but gave it a new title, combining elements of the existing one and the proposed one: Massachusetts Spy Or, American Oracle of Liberty.  In addition, the masthead proclaimed, “Americans! — Liberty or Death! — Join or Die!”

In his notice, Thomas reported that first he sent his “Printing Utensils” to Worcester and then “escaped myself from Boston on the memorable 19th of April, 1775, which will be remembered in the future as the Anniversary of the BATTLE of LEXINGTON!”  Elsewhere that first issue published in Worcester, Thomas provided a chronicle of the battle “collected from those whose veracity is unquestioned.”  That narrative likely incorporated elements drawn from the printer’s own firsthand account.  Several years later, he recorded that at daybreak on April 19 he “crossed from Boston over to Charlestown in a boat with Dr. Joseph Warren, went to Lexington, and joined the provincial militia in opposing the king’s troops.”[2]  The following day, went to Worcester to open the printing office and revive his newspaper.  He was proud of that work and the service he provided, making a note and signing his name in the margin at the bottom of the first page of the first issue published there: “This News-paper is the first Thing ever printed in Worcester – Isaiah Thomas.”

Massachusetts Spy (May 3, 1775). Courtesy American Antiquarian Society.

Having installed himself in that town, he made clear his purpose in publishing the Massachusetts Spy as such momentous events occurred.  He pledged to give “the utmost of my poor Endeavours … to maintain those Rights and Priviledges for which we and our Fathers have bled!”  To that end, he would “procure the most interesting and authentic Intelligence” to keep his readers in central Massachusetts and beyond informed of the latest news.  In addition, he called on “all the Friends to our righteous Cause” to aid in circulating the Massachusetts Spy.  Many had already enlisted in that endeavor, serving as local agents who collected the names of subscribers and forwarded them to the printing office.  In revised proposals that ran immediately below Thomas’s notice, he listed associates who accepted subscriptions in nearly three dozen towns in Worcester County and indicated that “many other Gentlemen in several parts of the province” did as well.

Of the five newspapers published in Boston at the beginning of April 1775, the Massachusetts Spy was the first to suspend publication, the decision resulting from Thomas leaving town rather than the outbreak of hostilities at Lexington and Concord.  It was also the first to resume circulating weekly issues on a regular schedule, a result of the printer’s foresight in relocating to Worcester.  Some of the other newspapers folded completely, but the Massachusetts Spy continued throughout the war and well beyond.

Massachusetts Spy (May 3, 1775). Courtesy American Antiquarian Society.

Click here to view the entire May 3, 1775, edition of the Massachusetts Spy, including Thomas’s note on the first page and the account of the Battle of Lexington on the third page.  That copy is in the collections of the American Antiquarian Society, founded by Thomas in 1812.

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[1] Isaiah Thomas, The History of Printing in America: With a Biography of Printers and an Account of Newspapers (1810; New York: Weathervane Books, 1970), 168

[2] Thomas, History of Printing, 168-9.

April 17

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

Boston Evening-Post (April 17, 1775).

“THE Massachusetts Spy … will be published … in the Town and County of Worcester.”

Isaiah Thomas published the last issue of the Massachusetts Spy in Boston on April 6, 1775.  Eleven days later, advertisements in the Boston Evening-Post and the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Post-Boy informed readers that the “Massachusetts Spy, or Thomas’s Boston Journal, will be published on Wednesday the 3d Day of May next in the Town and County of Worcester, and will be immediately forwarded to Boston.”  Why did Thomas suddenly suspend publishing the Massachusetts Spy, founded in 1770, and relocate to Worcester with plans to revive the newspaper there?

In his History of Printing in America, published in 1810, Thomas declared, “It became at length apparent to all reflecting men that hostilities must soon take place between Great Britain and her American colonies.”  Through the editorial stance he took in the Massachusetts Spy, the patriot printer “had rendered himself very obnoxious to the friends of the British administration; and, in consequence, the tories, and some of the British soldiery in the town, openly threatened him with the effects of their resentment.”  Along with other residents of Boston, Thomas had endured all sorts of “Distresses,” as he called them, following the closure of the harbor in retaliation for the destruction of the tea, but now his own safety was at stake.  “For these and other reasons, he was induced to pack up, privately, a press and types, and to send them in the night over the Charles river to Charlestown, whence they were conveyed to Worcester.”  Thomas was smart with his timing for getting out of Boston: “This was only a few days before the affair at Lexington.”[1]  The printer smuggled a press out of Boston just before the Revolutionary War began with the skirmishes at Lexington and Concord followed by the siege of Boston.

Near the end of February, the Massachusetts Spy carried subscription proposals for a “New Weekly NEWS-PAPER … To be entitled, The WORCESTER GAZETTE.”  Thomas had made arrangements with “a number of gentlemen in the county of Worcester, zealously engaged in the cause of the country … to open a printing house, and to publish a newspaper there, in the course of the ensuing spring.”  It would be the town’s first printing office and first newspaper.  Thomas planned “to send a press, with a suitable person to manage the concerns of it,” having previously gained experience setting up Henry-Walter Tinges as a junior partner who oversaw their printing office in Newburyport and printed the Essex Journal.  “The war commencing sooner than expected,” however, Thomas “was obliged to leave Boston, and came himself to Worcester, opened a printing house, and on the 3d of May, 1775, executed the first printing done in the town.”[2]

As he prepared to open that printing office, his advertisement in newspapers still published in Boston advised the public that the “Publisher [of the Massachusetts Spy] begs the continuance of the favors of his good Customers, and assures then that notwithstanding the distance to which he has removed, he shall be able to give them all that Satisfaction in his publications which they have hitherto approved.”  Furthermore, he planned to return to Boston “[a]s soon as the tranquility of this unfortunate Capital is restored,” not knowing at the time that he would remain in Worcester after the war ended.  For the moment, he designated a local agent, Alexander Thomas, who oversaw his shop in Boston and saw to the delivery of new issues of the Massachusetts Spy on Thursdays, the day after the printer published them in Worcester.  He also requested that “All Persons indebted for the Massachusetts Spy … pay their respective balances.” Like other printers, Thomas extended credit to his customers, but the “great distress [of] the unhappy state of affairs” made it necessary to call on them to make payment.”  Thomas faced a new chapter, one that the Adverts 250 Projectwill chronicle as it examines advertisements placed in revolutionary American newspapers.

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[1] Isaiah Thomas, The History of Printing in America: With a Biography of Printers and an Account of Newspapers (1810; New York: Weathervane Press, 1970), 168.

[2] Thomas, History of Printing, 180-181.

February 23

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

Massachusetts Spy (February 23, 1775).

“A New Weekly NEWS-PAPER … The WORCESTER GAZETTE; OR, AMERICAN ORACLE of LIBERTY.”

Among the advertisements in the February 23, 1775, edition of the Massachusetts Spy appeared “PROPOSALS For … A New Weekly NEWS-PAPER … To be entitled, The WORCESTER GAZETTE; OR, AMERICAN ORACLE of LIBERTY.”  That newspaper would commence publication in Worcester, about forty miles west of Boston, “as soon as Seven Hundred Subscribers have entered their names.”  It would be the first newspaper published in that town, giving residents greater access to “the most early and authentic Intelligence, and such Political Essays, as are worthy of Public notice, with other matters interesting and entertaining.”

In his History of Printing in America (1810), Isaiah Thomas explained, “In 1774, a number of gentlemen in the county of Worcester, zealously engaged in the cause of the country, were from the then appearance of public affairs, desirous to have a press established in Worcester.”  In other words, supporters of the patriot cause wanted a local newspaper instead of relying on newspapers published in Boston, Salem, Newburyport, Providence, Portsmouth, Norwich, and Hartford.  Although newspapers from each of those towns served readers in larger, overlapping regions, Patriots in Worcester believed that a local newspaper would both serve their community and strengthen their position.  By the time they “applied to a printer in Boston” in December 1774, the “Worcester Revolution” had already closed the courts and removed British authority from that town.  Thomas, that printer in Boston, “engaged to open a printing house, and to publish a newspaper there, in the course of the ensuing spring.”  He initially intended to follow a model like the one for establishing the Essex Journal in partnership with Henry-Walter Tinges in Newburyport.  Tinges, the junior partner, managed the printing office there while Thomas remained in Boston.  As part of his preparations, Thomas published the proposals for the Worcester Gazette as he worked on recruiting “a suitable person to manage the concerns of it.” However, when the Revolutionary War began with the Battles of Lexington and Concord on April 19, Thomas “was obliged to leave Boston, and came himself to Worcester” and became the city’s first printer.[1]

When Thomas disseminated the first issue on May3, he combined the name of the newspaper he published in Boston for several years, the Massachusetts Spy, and the intended name for the new newspaper, calling it the Massachusetts Spy or American Oracle of Liberty.  As outlined in the proposals from February, he published the newspaper “every WEDNESDAY Morning, as early as possible” so it could be “delivered to the Subscribers in Worcester at their houses, and sent by the first opportunity to such as are at a greater distance.”  The annual subscription fee in the colophon matched the proposals, “Six Shillings and Eight Pence per annum, the same as the Boston news-papers.”  The colophon did not list rates for advertising, though the proposals stated that they would be “inserted in a neat and conspicuous [manner], at the same rates as they are in Boston.”  Little did Thomas know when he published the “PROPOSALS [for] The WORCESTER GAZETTE” in February 1775 that he would soon relocate to that town and become one of its most prominent residents, establishing the first printing office and, eventually, founding the American Antiquarian Society in 1812.

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[1] Isaiah Thomas, The History of Printing in America: With a Biography of Printers and an Account of Newspapers (1810; New York: Weathervane Books, 1970), 180-181.