The historical type of broadsides, designed to be plastered onto walls as a form of
street literature, were
ephemera, i.e., temporary documents created for a specific purpose and intended to be thrown away. They were one of the most common forms of printed material between the sixteenth and nineteenth centuries. They were often
advertisements, but could also be used for news information or
proclamations. Broadsides were a very popular medium for printing topical ballads starting in the 16th century.
Broadside ballads were usually printed on the cheapest type of paper available. Initially, this was cloth paper, but later it became common to use sheets of thinner, cheaper paper (pulp). In
Victorian era London they were sold for a
penny or half-penny. The sheets on which broadsides were printed could also be folded, twice or more, to make small pamphlets or
chapbooks. Collections of songs in chapbooks were known as garlands. Broadside ballads lasted longer in Ireland, and although never produced in such huge numbers in North America, they were significant in the eighteenth century and provided an important medium of propaganda, on both sides, in the
American War of Independence. Broadsides were commonly sold at
public executions in the United Kingdom in the 18th and 19th centuries, often produced by specialised printers. They could be illustrated by a crude picture of the crime, a portrait of the criminal, or a generic
woodcut of a hanging. There would be a written account of the crime and of the trial and often the criminal's confession of guilt. A
doggerel verse warning against following the criminal's example, to avoid his fate, was another common feature. By the mid-19th century, the advent of
newspapers and inexpensive
novels resulted in the demise of the street literature broadside. One classic example of a broadside used for proclamations is the
Dunlap broadside, which was the first publication of the
United States Declaration of Independence, printed on the night of July 4, 1776 by
John Dunlap of
Philadelphia in an estimated 200 copies. Another was the first published account of
George Washington's crossing of the Delaware River, printed on December 30, 1776, by an unknown printer. In nineteenth-century Pennsylvania, broadsides were used by the Pennsylvania Dutch to advertise the "vendu", or county sale, for religious instruction, and to publish Trauerlieder or "sorrow songs" for sale. Today, broadside printing is done by many smaller printers and publishers as a fine art variant, with poems often being available as broadsides, intended to be framed and hung on the wall. Broadsides pasted on walls are still used as a form of mass communication in
Haredi Jewish communities, where they are known by the Yiddish term "
pashkevil" (
pasquil). Originally, they were used to ridicule public authority figures, to publicly criticize the powerful, and to publish concealed information. ==See also==