Views of African Bodies and Minds and to Africans’ Decision to Circulate Their Knowledge of Inoculation
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
“Extracts from Some Rebel Papers”: Patriots, Loyalists, and the Perils of Wartime Printing
1 “Extracts from some Rebel Papers”: Patriots, Loyalists, and the Perils of Wartime Printing Joseph M. Adelman National Endowment for the Humanities Fellow American Antiquarian Society Presented to the Joint Seminar of the McNeil Center for Early American Studies And the Program in Early American Economy and Society, LCP Library Company of Philadelphia, 1314 Locust Street, Philadelphia 24 February 2012 3-5 p.m. *** DRAFT: Please do not cite, quote, or distribute without permission of the author. *** 2 The eight years of the Revolutionary War were difficult for the printing trade. After over a decade of growth and increasing entanglement among printers as their networks evolved from commercial lifelines to the pathways of political protest, the fissures of the war dispersed printers geographically and cut them off from their peers. Maintaining commercial success became increasingly complicated as demand for printed matter dropped, except for government printing, and supply shortages crippled communications networks and hampered printers’ ability to produce and distribute anything that came off their presses. Yet even in their diminished state, printers and their networks remained central not only to keeping open lines of communication among governments, armies, and civilians, but also in shaping public opinion about the central ideological issues of the war, the outcomes of battles, and the meaning of events affecting the war in North America and throughout the Atlantic world. What happened to printers and their networks is of vital importance for understanding the Revolution. The texts that historians rely on, from Common Sense and The Crisis to rural newspapers, almanacs, and even diaries and correspondence, were shaped by the commercial and political forces that printers navigated as they produced printed matter that defined the scope of debate and the nature of the discussion about the war. -
The Newspapers of the British Empire As a Matrix for The
Warner.communicating.liberty-1 Communicating Liberty: the Newspapers of the British Empire as a Matrix for the American Revolution William B. Warner “I beg your lordship’s permission to observe, and I do it with great concern, that this spirit of opposition to taxation and its consequences is so violent and so universal throughout America that I am apprehensive it will not be soon or easily appeased. The general voice speaks discontent… determined to stop all exports to and imports from Great Britain and even to silence the courts of law…foreseeing but regardless of the ruin that must attend themselves in that case, content to change a comfortable, for a parsimonious life,…” Lieutenant-Governor of South Carolina, Wm. Bull to Earl of Dartmouth, July 31, 1774. [Documents of the American Revolution, 1770-1783, Ed. K. G. Davies. (Dublin: Irish University Press, 1975) VIII: 1774, 154.] Momentous historical events often issue from a nexus of violence and communication. While American independence from Britain ultimately depended upon the spilling of blood on the battlefields of Bunker Hill, Saratoga and Yorktown, the successful challenge to the legitimacy of British rule in America was the culmination of an earlier communications war waged by American Whigs between the Stamp Act agitation of 1764-5 and the Coercive Acts of 1774. In response to the first of the Coercive acts--the Boston Port Bill--Boston Whigs secured a tidal wave of political and material support from throughout the colonies of British America. By the end of 1774, the American Secretary at Whitehall, Lord Dartmouth, was receiving reports from colonial Governors of North America, like the passage quoted above from the Lieutenant-Governor of South Caroline, William Bull. -
Searchable PDF Document
This file may be searchable, depending on the operating system, browser and PDF viewer in use. Nov 1879 – Oct 1880 - Watertown Enterprise 11/12/1879 p.4 General Tom Thumb to entertain at Town Hall p.4 Story of new American Shade Company on Fayette St. 11/19/1879 p.3 Story on how Watertown is careless about its history 11/26/1879 p.3 Emery Mayo building new rental house on Walnut St. 12/03/1879 p.3 Two new streetlights on Arlington St. 12/10/1879 p.3 Town meeting on bringing in new water supply p.3 Alfred Hosmer purchases land and buildings on River St. for $1500 12/31/1879 p.3 George March presented with bronze statuary 1/28/1880 p.3 Annual report shows 86 deaths & 106 births 2/04/1880 p.2 Essays about Watertown history written by 13-year-old students p.4 Ad for a horse dentist 2/25/1880 Story about the advantages of being an “old maid” 3/31/1880 p.4 Part of Watertown annexed to Newton 4/14/1880 p.2 Railroad extended between Watertown & Newton p.3 Board of Health examines wells due to 3 children dying in one family of diphtheria 4/28/1880 p.3 Fire at Aetna Mills tenement building. First time fire alarm box was used 5/05/1880 p.2 P.T. Barnum circus ad p.4 Old fire horse “Jim” retires p.5 Mrs. Harrington attempts suicide for 3rd time 5/26/1880 Story on women gamblers 6/02/1880 p.3 Lighting of streets at night being copied by other towns 6/09/1880 p.2 Story on Walker & Pratt Company 6/16/1880 p.2 Story on Lewando’s French Dye House p.3 Strawberry Festival 7/14/1880 Aaron Burr love story p.3 Galen St. -
United States Newspapers Index (PDF)
U.S. Newspapers Briscoe Center for American History The Briscoe Center for American History's newspaper collections also contain titles from around the United States. These titles are limited to the few dates listed or an incomplete, brief date run. A significant part of this collection consists of several hundred linear feet of newspapers published in every state of the Confederacy from the 1790s through the early 1900s. Holdings include extensive runs of early newspapers in hard copy from Charleston, South Carolina (1795-1942), Augusta, Georgia (1806-1885), New Orleans, Louisiana (1837-1914), and Little Rock, Arkansas (1819-1863). Many issues are scarce or extremely rare, including the only known copies of several important antebellum Louisiana and Mississippi newspapers. Many of these newspapers are in Original Format (OR), and cannot be photocopied. Patrons have the option of photographing these newspapers themselves with no additional lighting and under the direct supervision of the Reading Room staff. Patrons must complete an Items Photographed by Patrons form. The resulting images are for research only and may not be published. Frequency: d=daily, w=weekly, tw=tri-weekly, sw=semi-weekly, m=monthly, sm=semi-monthly, u=unknown Format: OR=Original newspaper, MF=Microfilm, RP=Reproduction *an asterisk indicates all or part of the newspaper is stored offsite and requires advance notice for retrieval ALABAMA Alabama, Birmingham Sunday Morning Chronicle (w) Dec 9, 1883 OR (oversize) Alabama, Carrollton West Alabamian (w) Jan 1870-Dec -
Discover a Variety of Genealogy Records and News Stories in These 81 Boston Historical Newspapers: • Agricultural 1/14/1820
Discover a variety of genealogy records and news stories in these 81 Boston historical newspapers: Agricultural 1/14/1820 – 7/7/1820 American Apollo 10/5/1792 – 12/25/1794 American Herald 1/19/1784 – 6/30/1788 American Traveller 11/14/1846 – 8/19/1876 Argus 7/22/1791 – 6/28/1793 Boston Advance 2/17/1900 – 2/17/1900 Boston Chronicle 10/22/1767 – 6/21/1770 Boston Commercial Gazette 10/9/1800 – 1/23/1840 Boston Courant 1/6/1900 – 1/6/1900 Boston Courier 6/13/1805 – 10/27/1864 Boston Cultivator 4/7/1866 – 4/7/1866 Boston Daily Advertiser 3/3/1813 – 12/31/1900 Boston Daily Record 12/1/1951 – 9/30/1961 Boston Evening-Post 8/18/1735 – 4/24/1775 Boston Evening Post 10/20/1781 – 1/10/1784 Boston Evening Transcript 1/1/1842 – 12/31/1866 Boston Gazette 12/21/1719 – 9/17/1798 Boston Herald 5/1/1848 – 4/30/1992 Boston Intelligencer 8/17/1816 – 12/30/1820 Boston Journal 1/1/1866 – 10/6/1917 Boston Mirror 10/22/1808 – 7/21/1810 Boston News-Letter 4/24/1704 – 2/29/1776 Boston Patriot 3/3/1809 – 5/31/1817 Boston Patriot and Daily Chronicle 6/2/1817 – 12/30/1820 Boston Post 1/10/1840 – 10/16/1876 Boston Post-Boy 4/21/1735 – 4/10/1775 Boston Price-Current 9/7/1795 – 5/31/1798 Boston Recorder 1/3/1816 – 5/3/1872 Boston Spectator 1/1/1814 – 2/25/1815 Boston Traveler 7/5/1825 – 7/8/1967 Censor 11/23/1771 – 5/2/1772 Christian Watchman 5/29/1819 – 12/30/1820 Columbian Centinel 6/16/1790 – 12/31/1825 Columbian Detector 11/7/1808 – 5/19/1809 Constitutional Telegraph 10/2/1799 – 5/22/1802 Continental Journal 5/30/1776 – 6/21/1787 -
Communities of Color in Eighteenth Century Boston Eric M
University of Massachusetts Boston ScholarWorks at UMass Boston Graduate Masters Theses Doctoral Dissertations and Masters Theses 8-31-2014 “So Succeeded by a Kind Providence”: Communities of Color in Eighteenth Century Boston Eric M. Hanson Plass University of Massachusetts Boston Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.umb.edu/masters_theses Part of the African American Studies Commons, Public History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Hanson Plass, Eric M., "“So Succeeded by a Kind Providence”: Communities of Color in Eighteenth Century Boston" (2014). Graduate Masters Theses. Paper 270. This Open Access Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Doctoral Dissertations and Masters Theses at ScholarWorks at UMass Boston. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate Masters Theses by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at UMass Boston. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ―SO SUCCEEDED BY A KIND PROVIDENCE‖ COMMUNITIES OF COLOR IN EIGHTEENTH CENTURY BOSTON A Thesis Presented by ERIC M. HANSON PLASS Submitted to the Office of Graduate Studies, University of Massachusetts Boston, in partial fulfillment of the requirement for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS August 2014 Public History Program © 2014 by Eric M. Hanson Plass All rights reserved ―SO SUCCEEDED BY A KIND PROVIDENCE‖ COMMUNITIES OF COLOR IN EIGHTEENTH CENTURY BOSTON A Thesis Presented by ERIC M. HANSON PLASS Approved as to style and content by: ________________________________________________ Julie Winch, Professor Chairperson of Committee ________________________________________________ James Green, Professor Member ________________________________________________ Jane Becker, Lecturer Member _________________________________________ Paul Bookbinder, Program Director Public History Program _________________________________________ Jonathan Chu, Chairperson History Department ABSTRACT ―SO SUCCEEDED BY A KIND PROVIDENCE‖ COMMUNITIES OF COLOR IN EIGHTEENTH CENTURY BOSTON August 2014 Eric M. -
Seabrook, Revision 11 to Updated Final Safety Analysis Report
EARTHQUm OF NOVEMBER 27, 1852 CA: 23:45 (L) EPXCENTRAli INTENSITY: V(MM) EVALUATION : The earthquake of November 27, 1852 is centered near Eater, New Hampshire (Fiqure 2.5.2A-15). It was felt over a 9,900 square kilometer region from the Cape Ann region north to Saco, Maine. The 'maximum effects , Intensity V(MM), were observed near meter, New Hampshire. PERTINENT ACCOUNTS: Daily Morning Chronicle, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, November 30, 1852 "!The Emthqwke, on Saturday night, mi likened & sbme persm in this city, who happened to be up and doing, tu the m&ng of a chinmey on firs-others supposed it to be the hemy &Zing of a toaded wagon over a paved street. * "It tlas supposed by some gentZemen at Kittery Point tu be a stecmtboat 5n the hbor letting off stem. "!?he SaZem Register calls it a 'smart sbck, ' and says, '2% nrmbZing noise and the jmring of the windaws cmd doors were very perceptibze fop $he space, some say, of kZf a minute. Some fuithZess ones attAbute the shock to the eqZosim of a powex-miZ Z somazhere, ' '% in GreenZmd says the earthquake shuok her house wad those of her ne;ghbors very serrsibZ3. "ike Boston JotazaZ stqs .i.t was feZt at Exekr where it shook the doors and windows viokntty, and <n one instcuace jmed daJn sme' of the plastehg of a duelzing house. It does not seem to have been felt at Bosm. "A very heavy eqtosim startzed our citizens at 25 minutes before 12 o 'cZock, SaturcZcry night. It ccme frm 'a norther Zy direction adwas probabty from the Beter Pmer Milts, though no for me^ eqtosion of these miZZs ever produced here half so severe a corrcussion, or mything Z<ke the Zoud report and reverberation. -
EARLY AMERICAN NEWSPAPERS from the AMERICAN ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY MICROCARD COLLECTION – Mcwherter Library Holdings –
EARLY AMERICAN NEWSPAPERS FROM THE AMERICAN ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY MICROCARD COLLECTION – McWherter Library Holdings – CONNECTICUT Hartford American Mercury 1784-1820 CT 1 Connecticut Courant 1764-1820 CT 2 Connecticut Mirror 1809-1820 CT 5 Litchfield Litchfield Journal 1818 CT 6 Litchfield Monitor 1784-1807 CT 7 Litchfield Republican 1819-1821 CT 6 Middletown Middlesex Gazette 1785-1820 CT 8 New Haven Connecticut Journal 1767-1820 CT 3 & CT 4 New-Haven Chronicle 1786-1787 CT 9 New-Haven Gazette 1784-1786 CT 9 New-Haven Gazette & Connecticut Magazine 1786-1789 CT 9 New London Connecticut Gazette 1774-1820 CT 10 New London Gazette 1763-1773 CT 10 New-London Summary 1758-1763 CT 6 Norwich Norwich Packet 1773-1802 CT 11 Weekly Register 1791-1795 CT 12 DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Georgetown Courier 1812 WDC 2 Independent American 1809-1811 WDC 4 Metropolitan 1820 WDC 5 National Messenger 1817-1820 WDC 7 Washington City of Washington Gazette 1817-1820 WDC 1 Daily National Intelligencer 1813-1820 WDC 3 National Intelligencer 1800-1812 WDC 6 Senator 1814 WDC 2 Spirit of Seventy-Six 1809-1811 WDC 8 DELAWARE Wilmington American Watchman 1809-1820 DE 1 GEORGIA Milledgeville Milledgeville Republican 1816 GA 2 Reflector 1817-1819 GA 2 Savannah Georgia Gazette 1763-1770 GA 1 INDIANA Brookville Brookville Enquirer 1819-1820 IN 1 KENTUCKY Danville People's Friend 1818-1819 KY 1 Frankfort Kentucky Journal 1795 KY 1 Georgetown Telegraph 1811-1813 KY 1 Lancaster Political Theatre 1808-1810 KY 1 Maysville Eagle 1814-1820 KY 1 Paris Instructer 1818 KY 1 Richmond Globe -
Shedding Light on the Great Dark Day of 1780
THOMAS J. CAMPANELLA ‘mark well the gloom’: SHEDDING LIGHT ON THE GREAT DARK DAY OF 1780 ABSTRACT This essay is about one of the most extraordinary natural events in early American history, the great “Dark Day” of May 19, 1780. On that morning a preternatural gloom settled upon the New England landscape, and by noon the sun had been all but blotted from the sky. Using accounts drawn from contemporary diaries, journals, newspapers, broadsides, and other sources, this essay reconstructs the events of the Dark Day and explores the manifold ways—from theological speculation to amateur scientific inquiry—in which New Englanders sought to explain and rationalize the sudden darkness. Ye Sons of Light who saw the Night, triumphing at High noon, The nineteenth Day of th’ Month of May, Mark well the dismal Gloom.1 THE RISING SUN first struck the fir-quilled hump of Porcupine Mountain, on the northern coast of Maine, at 3:52 on the morning of Friday, May 19, 1780.2 An hour later the sunbeams had cast their way across New England, reaching Connecticut’s south shore and the western flank of the Housatonic Valley. Night melted into day; songbirds greeted the dawn and a thousand Yankee farmsteads stirred to life. It seemed a perfectly ordinary spring morning in New England. But things were far from ordinary on this vernal day. It had been a rough and long winter—one of the coldest in memory—and though the breath of spring was in the air, so were troubling signs. For several days now the weather had been unseasonably warm. -
Massachusetts Newspapers During Ratification
Massachusetts Newspapers during Ratification Twelve newspapers were published in Massachusetts between 17 September 1787 and 1 April 1788. Eleven of them appeared during the entire period. During the debate over Massachusetts ratification, at least one newspaper appeared in Boston on every day of the week, except Sunday; outside Boston, two newspapers were printed on every Tuesday, two on Wednesday, and two on Thursday. Five newspapers were printed in Boston, the principal town and state capital, and one each in Newburyport, Salem, Worcester, Springfield, Northampton, Portland (Maine), and Pittsfield. Two Boston newspapers, the Massachusetts Centinel and Massachusetts Gazette, were semiweeklies, while the remaining ten were weeklies. (The American Herald became a semi-weekly with the issue of 28 February 1788.) Complete files exist for eight of the twelve newspapers. The Boston Gazette lacks one issue (21 January 1788); the Cumberland Gazette one (21 February 1788); and the Hampshire Chronicle three (18 September and 2 October 1787, and 19 March 1788). No issue of the American Centinel is extant. Most newspapers were Federalist. The Massachusetts Centinel was the dominant Federalist paper. The American Herald was the preeminent Antifederalist one, although the Independent Chronicle, and Massachusetts Gazette (and to a lesser degree, the Boston Gazette) also printed significant amounts of Antifederalist material. The material published on the Constitution in Massachusetts was so voluminous that “A Friend for Liberty” noted that newspapers “are now more read than the bible at this time” (Massachusetts Centinel, 14 November 1787). The five newspapers printed in Boston were the Massachusetts Centinel, American Herald, Boston Gazette, Independent Chronicle, and Massachusetts Gazette. -
Biased Reporting/Boston Massacre, 1770
Biased Reporting/Boston Massacre, 1770 Investigation: Comparing Accounts Two people who’ve been in a fist fight are likely to give very different explanations of what happened. Aroused emotions cause accounts to be biased or “slanted.” Some of these differences aren’t intentional. When people are angry and excited, they may remember only the things that seemed unfair. Other differences may be intentional; people may try to gain sympathy by telling their stories in a certain way. This is also true in historical documents. Accounts of value-threatening situations or events may be given what is now called “spin”—an intentional or unintentional bias. In Boston on the evening of March 5, 1770, an event happened that has become known as the “Boston Massacre”—a confrontation between Boston residents and British soldiers. Following are three different accounts and a drawing describing what happened. Identify differences in the four views. John Tudor, a Boston merchant, was an eyewitness. Here’s his account: On Monday evening the 5th, a few minutes after nine o’clock, a most horrid murder was committed in King Street before the customhouse door by eight or nine soldiers under the command of Captain Thomas Preston. This unhappy affair began when some boys and young fellows threw snowballs at the sentry placed at the customhouse door. At this, eight or nine soldiers came to his aid. Soon after, a number of people collected. The Captain commanded the soldiers to fire, which they did, and three men were killed on the spot and several mortally wounded, one of which died the next morning. -
To South Boston and Our Veterans
SouthBoston TODAYOnline • On Your Mobile • At Your Door MARCH 6, 2014; Vol.2 Issue 16 SERVING SOUTH BOSTONIANS AROUND THE GLOBE To South This Week’s Boston and Our Veterans – Poll On We’ve Got Page 2 Your Back A Note To Mass Equality et’s cut to the chase. The South Boston Today South Boston Parade, L first and foremost, is and has always been a celebration of the birth of our nation, our Irish ancestry and the role of patriots in our history. Millions of visitors, cloaked in Kelly green, have made @SBostonToday this community a destination to celebrate these traditions with us, as the winter season heads into spring. For many years, the crowds Go to our South Boston Today have been larger than those of the page to vote on our weekly poll. Boston Marathon. Make sure you like & share CONTINUED ON page 8 Tired of Watching the Buses Pass You By? Tired of Being Late for Work? Tired of Being Packed in Like Sardines? Southie Shuttle Express Service to Back Bay & South Station Starts Soon! AA LimitedLimited NumberNumber ofof SeatsSeats areare Available.Available. CallCall UsUs atat 617-268-4110617-268-4110 oror EmailEmail atat [email protected]@SouthieShuttle.com toto Inquire.Inquire. 2 SOUTHBOSTONTODAY • www.southbostontoday.com March 6, 2014 EDITORIAL “You’re not Special” This letter to the Editor the club’s past decisions? asked only that I not wave “don’t they all think when you’re “special” appeared in a daily It’s right of the private the gay flag as a political alike”? Here’s another you can say anything you newspaper March 1st.