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The Boston Evening-post: and the General Advertiser [1] The Boston Gazette [1] Boston Gazette, Commercial and Political [1] The Boston Journal [4] The Boston News-Letter [1] The Boston Post, 1831–1956 [5] The Boston Post-Boy, 1734–1754, 1757–1775 [1] The Boston Post-boy & Advertiser [1] The Boston Price Current and Marine Intelligencer [1 ...
When articles from the Spy were reprinted in other papers, the country as a whole was ready for Thomas Paine's Common Sense, which was published in 1776. [2] The newspaper had to be relocated from Boston to Worcester, Massachusetts, "after the April 6, 1775 issue" just before the Battles of Lexington and Concord and the subsequent Siege of ...
The Boston weekly news-letter. November 5, 1730 – August 25, 1757. The Boston news-letter. September 1, 1757 – March 18, 1762. The Boston news-letter, and New-England chronicle. March 25, 1762 – March 31, 1763. The Massachusetts gazette. And Boston news-letter. April 7, 1763 – May 19, 1768. Boston weekly news-letter. May 26, 1768 ...
The Independent Chronicle and the Universal Advertiser (Boston: 1798). The Independent Chronicle (1776–1840) was a newspaper in Boston, Massachusetts.It originated in 1768 as The Essex Gazette, founded by Samuel Hall (v.1–7) in Salem, and The New-England Chronicle (v.7–9) in Cambridge, before settling in 1776 in Boston as The Independent Chronicle.
Boston Evening-Post, 1735 The Boston Evening-Post (August 18, 1735 – April 24, 1775) was a newspaper printed in Boston , Massachusetts , in the 18th century. Publishers included Thomas Fleet (d.1758), Thomas Fleet Jr. (d.1797), and John Fleet (d.1806).
In 1704, the colonies' second newspaper, The Boston News-Letter, appeared.Printed by Bartholomew Green for John Campbell, proprietor and Postmaster in Boston, this newspaper was also published in Boston, but had government approval and remained in operation for 74 years until 1776, when the British occupied Boston.
A year later he changed it again to The Massachusetts Gazette; and Boston News Letter and printed the emblem of the King's arms in the heading. [1] [2] In 1768 it was united with The Boston Post-Boy. Draper's Post-Boy, was a Tory newspaper that seldom went afield from the British party line.
The Boston Weekly Advertiser (1757–1775), also called The Boston Post-Boy & Advertiser was a weekly newspaper published in Boston, Massachusetts by John Green (1727–1787) and Joseph Russell (1734–1795). [1] The paper "loyally sustained the British Government" during the American Revolution. [2]