17th century '', published in
Philadelphia '' was the first newspaper to publish the
Declaration of Independence following its unanimous adoption on July 4, 1776, by the
Second Continental Congress. Newspapers in colonial America served to disseminate vital political, social and religious information that explicitly appealed to the colonist's growing sense of independence and unity with other Americans. This was a cause of great concern to the royal colonial governments among the colonies who feared that the mass dissemination of news and opinion undermined their authority. Colonial
Boston was where the American newspaper emerged, and where it was nurtured through its initial stages. Initially newspapers were delivered through the mails at no charge for postage until 1758. On September 25, 1690, the first newspaper to emerge in the British colonies in America was the
Publick Occurrences Both Forreign and Domestick, printed and published in Boston by
Richard Pierce for
Benjamin Harris. Harris had fled England for fear of religious persecution and speaking out against the crown. His newspaper was welcomed and received enthusiastically by the colonists, however, it was not approved or well regarded by the colonial governor, especially since it had no official printing license, required by British law at that time. i.e."no person [was to] keep any printing-press for printing, nor [was] any book, pamphlet or other matter whatsoever" without "especial leave and license first obtained" from the governor. As one historian put it, "the first newspaper published in America became the first to be suppressed by the authorities." In 1695, Harris returned to England where he was arrested for publishing his newspaper. The first successful newspaper in America was
The Boston News-Letter, which appeared in 1704, and until 1719 it was the only newspaper published in the colonies. By 1787
Thomas Jefferson expressed the sentiment now shared by many printers over the idea of freedom of the press when he said, "Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter." In the beginning of the 18th century, there were twice as many printers in Boston as there were for in all the other colonies combined. There were only six American newspapers, where four of them were published in Boston. The majority of the books and pamphlets of the period bore a Boston imprint, making eastern Massachusetts the literary and typographic center of colonial America. Colonial newspapers played an active role during the
Christian revivalist controversy that occurred in the early 1740s. The controversy started in and centered around Boston, where
Thomas Fleet was one of the most visible critics, using his
Boston Evening Post to publish criticism against the established Clergy, along with the newspaper of
Thomas Prince,
The Christian History. Among the dozens of newspapers that existed before and during the
American Revolution, many of them proved to be exceptionally noteworthy in terms of criticizing colonial government, promoting freedom of the press, and other freedoms, and furthering the cause for American independence. Newspapers easily accomplished these ends as they had already become indispensable to the colonists who relied on them for information prior to the revolution, and who considered the printed distribution of materials an essential means in keeping the overall community informed, while promoting the ideals of freedom they embraced. Newspapers would also play an important role in outlining public debates while the Constitution was being
ratified in 1787–1788.
American Revolution The idea of an independent American union began to emerge after the
French and Indian War, when the Parliament began imposing heavy taxes on the colonies for the debts Britain incurred during that war. By 1774, the idea for an independent union was not yet one of complete separation from the mother country in England and had assumed that the colonies would still be an essential component of the British Empire and still under the authority of the King and Parliament. By the end of 1773, after the
Boston Tea Party, the idea of a colonial independent union with its own government began appearing and promoted in various newspaper articles and essays, most often written anonymously by newspaper editors for fear of reprisal and prosecution. They promoted the idea that there was a need for an “American Congress” that would speak on behalf of the Americans, and in no uncertain terms insisted that an independent American congress should have equal status with British authority. After the Boston Tea Party, the British responded with the
Intolerable Acts that, among other things, closed down the busy
port of Boston. Word of this incursion quickly spread in newspapers and broadsides and in response the various colonies, in support of Massachusetts whose trade had largely been halted, sent representatives to Philadelphia and formed the
First Continental Congress. To assert pressure on England to repeal the acts, they formed the
Continental Association, which called for a colony wide boycott of British goods. Considered by many historians as the first significant step towards colonial independence, this only served to infuriate
King George III. Within months, he sent
British troops to Boston, where they participated in the
Lexington and Concord in April 1775, the first battles of the
American Revolutionary War. The war caused many printers to flee Massachusetts and relocate their shops elsewhere or otherwise close down. Newspapers such as the
Boston Gazette and
The Providence Gazette were among the most visible in publishing literature that fostered the idea of American independence, which now was receiving popular support among the colonies. In 1719, the
Boston Gazette was established in
Boston and the first newspaper in
Philadelphia,
The American Weekly Mercury, was founded by
Andrew Bradford. In 1736, the first newspaper in to emerge in Virginia was the
Virginia Gazette, founded by
William Rind in Virginia. Rind was soon appointed public printer. This gazette printed
Thomas Jefferson's
A Summary View of the Rights of British America in 1774, two years before he drafted the Declaration of Independence. Also in 1774, the
Virginia Gazette reprinted the articles of the
Continental Association, calling for a boycott on British goods, drafted and signed by members of the
First Continental Congress, in response to the
Intolerable Acts, which united the colonies in a boycott of British goods and a prohibition against any exports to England. The articles in this Association were met with mixed reactions from the colonists, and from various American and British individuals in Britain, with letters for and against the measure appearing in colonial newspapers, with criticisms coming mostly from moderate or loyalist presses. On April 22, 1775, three days after the
Battles of Lexington and Concord, the
Virginia Gazette reported that a large quantity of gunpowder in Williamsburg had been stolen during the night by order of
Lord Dunmore. The news traveled quickly and was repeated in
The Pennsylvania Evening Post. The news reports subsequently prompted Dunmore to pay for the gunpowder and for a time averted armed conflict in Virginia.
The New-England Courant made its appearance on Monday, August 7, 1721, as the third newspaper to appear in Boston and the fourth in the colonies. Founded in Boston by
James Franklin, Benjamin Franklin's older brother, who was started in retaliation for losing his printing job at the
Boston Gazette when its ownership changed hands and the printing was given to Samuel Kneeland. Writing under the assumed name of
Silence Dogood, Benjamin Franklin wrote more than a dozen articles. One such article led to James Franklin's month long imprisonment in 1726 by British colonial authorities for printing what they considered seditious articles after he refused to reveal the identity of the author. After being released, James resumed his printing practice. Franklin's newspaper had been current for only four months when it was ordered shut down, where he was "... strictly forbidden by this Court to print or publish the
New-England Courant, or any other pamphlet or paper of the like nature, except it be first supervised by the Secretary of this Province; and the Justices of His Majesty's Sessions of the Peace for the County of Suffolk ..." On October 2, 1729,
Samuel Keimer, the owner of
The Pennsylvania Gazette in Philadelphia, who failed to make a success out of this newspaper, fell into debt and before fleeing to
Barbados sold the
Gazette to
Benjamin Franklin and his partner
Hugh Meredith. Under Franklin
The Gazette became the most successful newspaper in the colonies. On December 28, 1732, through the
Gazette Franklin announced that he had just printed and published the first edition of
The Poor Richard, (better known as ''Poor Richard's Alamanack'') by Richard Saunders, Philomath. The almanack proved to be a huge success with a printing run that lasted more than twenty-five years. On June 19, 1744, Franklin took on
David Hall, introduced by
William Strahan while Franklin was in England, as a business partner and made him manager in charge of the
Gazette, allowing Franklin the time to pursue his scientific and other interests. Upon the proposal of the Stamp Act, Hall warned Franklin that subscribers to their newspaper were already canceling their accounts in anticipation of the unpopular tax — not over an increase in the cost it would place on the newspaper, but on principle. After buying out Franklin in May 1766, Hall took on another partner and established a new firm of
Hall and Sellers, which printed the Continental paper currency issued by
Congress during the
American Revolutionary War.
James Davis came to the North Carolina province in 1749, answering a call by their Assembly for an official printer to print their laws, legal journals and paper currency. He became the first printer to establish a print shop in that colony and in the process, founded and printed North Carolina's first newspaper, the
North-Carolina Gazette. In 1755 Benjamin Franklin appointed Davis as the first postmaster of North Carolina. The first newspaper established in Connecticut was
The Connecticut Gazette in New Haven, on April 12, 1755, a weekly newspaper issued every Friday, by
James Parker, in
New Haven. As the premier newspaper in that colony, it functioned as a military record in reporting the events of the
French and Indian War. Parker's partner was Benjamin Franklin who often helped printers in getting started. That year Parker also published 10 religious pamphlets, five almanacs and two New York newspapers. He rarely visited New Haven and left his junior partner,
John Holt, as the editor of the newspaper. The Gazette had, for a time, a large circulation throughout the
Connecticut Colony. The
Gazette was continued by Parker & Company till 1764, was briefly suspended, but was later revived by Benjamin Mecom. Its motto, printed on its front page read, "Those who would give up Essential Liberty, to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety". The
Gazette, like other newspapers of that period, was highly critical of the Stamp Act.
The Providence Gazette, at the time the only newspaper in
Providence, was first published October 20, 1762, by
William Goddard, and later with his sister
Mary Katherine Goddard.
The Providence Gazette was published weekly and passionately defended the rights of the colonies before the revolution and ably supported the cause of the country during the war. After American independence was established following the war it continued to promote federal
republican principles. The
Pennsylvania Chronicle, published by William Goddard, whose first edition was published on January 6, 1767, was the fourth newspaper to be printed in the English language established in Philadelphia, and the first newspaper in the northern colonies to have four columns to a page.
John Dunlap was commissioned by the
Second Continental Congress to print 200
broadsides of the
Declaration of Independence, which was authored predominantly by
Thomas Jefferson and unanimously adopted by the Second Continental Congress on July 4, 1776. These copies came to be known as the
Dunlap broadsides.
John Hancock sent a copy to
General Washington and his
Continental Army, who were in New York, with instructions that the Declaration be read aloud to Continental Army troops.
The Pennsylvania Evening Post was a newspaper published by
Benjamin Towne from 1775 to 1783 during the Revolutionary War.
The Pennsylvania Evening Post was the first newspaper to publish the Declaration of Independence and the first daily newspaper to be established in the United States. In 1740, there were 16 newspapers, all published weekly, in
British America. By the time the
American Revolutionary War commenced in 1775, the number had grown to 37 with most of them editorialized in support of the
American patriot cause and independence from
Britain. ==Freedom of the Press==