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2 3 4 18th century The New Hampshire Gazette was founded in
Portsmouth on October 7, 1756, by printer
Daniel Fowle as the first newspaper in the
Province of New Hampshire. Fowle lived in Boston before founding the
Gazette, and was the first to print the words of
Samuel Adams. He also spent time in prison for printing anti-British pamphlets "The Monster of Monsters" and "A Total Eclipse of Liberty." Recent research suggests that while Fowle was the publisher of The New Hampshire Gazette until 1785, much of the printing was done by an enslaved man,
Primus Fowle. Before the
Stamp Act of 1765 was to take effect on November 1 of that year
The New Hampshire Gazette featured an edition with black borders about its edges and columns, protesting the tax it was about to place on paper and advertising. Other newspapers, like the
Pennsylvania Journal, also featured editions with black borders in response to the coming Stamp Act. The November 1 edition of the
Gazette also included a lengthy article strongly deriding the act. During the
American Revolution it published a eulogy, dated
Epsom, July 1775, to
Andrew McClary, who died during the
Battle of Bunker Hill. It read: "The Major discovered great intrepidity and presence of mind in the action, and his noble soul glowed with ardor and the love of his country . . ."
19th century The
Gazette continued publishing after Fowle's death in 1787, and in 1839, was recognized as the oldest newspaper in the United States after the
Maryland Gazette ceased publication. Starting in the 1890s, the Gazette was published by
The Portsmouth Herald on weekends as a supplement to the
Herald.
20th century In 1960, the
Gazette was renamed the
Herald Weekend Edition, although the
masthead indicated that the paper was "Continuing the New Hampshire Gazette". In 1989, a descendant of Daniel Fowle's, Steven Fowle, discovered that the
Herald relinquished the trade name for the
Gazette. Fowle registered the rights to the name and that spring began publishing the
Gazette as an independent entity "episodically, in a very small format" until May 1, 1999, when the publishers began its current format and schedule. ==Claims of seniority==