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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
Early National Literature, Part II; Later National Literature, Part I
>
Newspapers, 17751860
>
The Pennsylvania Packet
the first daily Newspaper
Revolutionary Newspapers
Development after the War
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
VOLUME XVI. Early National Literature, Part II; Later National Literature, Part I.
XXI.
Newspapers, 17751860
.
§ 2.
The Pennsylvania Packet
the first daily Newspaper.
Perhaps a dozen of the survivors held their own in the new time, notably the Boston
Gazette,
which declined rapidly in the following decade,
The Connecticut Courant
of Hartford,
The Providence Gazette,
and
The Pennsylvania Packet
of Philadelphia, to which may be added such representative papers as
The Massachusetts Spy,
the Boston
Independent Chronicle,
the New York
Journal
and
Packet,
the Newport
Mercury, The Maryland Gazette
of Annapolis,
The Pennsylvania Gazette
and
The Pennsylvania Journal,
both of Philadelphia. Practically all were of four small pages, each of three or four columns, issued weekly.
The Pennsylvania Packet,
which appeared three times a week, became in 1784 the first daily paper. In the same year the New York
Journal
was published twice a week, as were several of the papers begun in that year. There was a notable extension to new fields. In Vermont, where the first paper, established in 1781, had soon died, another arose in 1783; in Maine two were started in 1785. In 1786 the first one west of the Alleghanies appeared at Pittsburg, and following the westward tide of immigration
The Kentucky Gazette
was begun at Lexington in 1787.
5
Conditions were hardly more favourable to newspapers than during the recent conflict. The sources of news were much the same; the means of communication and the postal system were little improved. Newspapers were not carried in the mails but by favour of the postmen, and the money of one state was of dubious value in another. Consequently circulations were small, rarely reaching a thousand; subscribers were slow in paying; and advertisements were not plentiful. Newspapers remained subject to provincial laws of libel, in accordance with the old common law, and were, as in Massachusetts for a short time in 1785, subject to special state taxes on paper or on advertisements. But public sentiment was growing strongly against all legal restrictions, and in general the papers practised freedom, not to say license, of utterance.
6
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Revolutionary Newspapers
Development after the War
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