NOTES AND DOCUMENTS. The T^evival of the Aurora: a fetter to Tench Coxe I N THE Historical Society of Pennsylvania's recently acquired

Similar documents
The Beattie Family Papers, MS 158

K-PREP. Kentucky Performance Rating For Educational Progress

World Church Financial Update March 2018

Four Franklin Letters Re-discovered, Part I

Guide to the John Carter family papers (bulk )

Benjamin Franklin. Summary. Contents. Jez Uden. Level 3-5. Before Reading Think Ahead During Reading Comprehension... 5

THE HOLBROOK BELL FOUNDRY OF EAST MEDWAY

FIRST POINT AT ISSUE.

Notes on the Thomas Family Portraits

ISLAMIC WILL (According to English Law)

Guide to the John Carter family papers (bulk )

Diagnosing and Treating Yellow Fever in Philadelphia, 1793 End of Unit Assessment Activity

Beers Atlas of Worcester, 1870, p.7 (partial) Supplement 2-A. (from photograph by author)

Benevolence Assistance Request Form

Pennsylvania Magazine

Thomas Paine s CRISIS 1 and the Comfort of Time

Southern Campaign American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

Transcript of Press Conference. held by CHAIRMAN ARTHUR F. BURNS. 7:00 p.m. November 13, in the

Parish Share Reversing the Payment Trend

The First Presidents (Washington Taylor)

So here we are, it is Advent. Thanksgiving has passed, black Friday has already happened and the Christmas season is now in full swing.

Failure of the Faith-Based Initiative

land in Middleboro formerly belonging to John Howland and elizabeth, his wife, and given to the said John Gorum before John Howland's death.

Later, when asked by a friend why he had opposed the appropriation, Crockett gave this explanation:

A Guide to the Francis Brisbane Dick Journal

It is Thought They Will be Shot on the Grounds : A Letter from Missourian Josiah Hendrick During the Mormon-Missouri Conflict

Creating Your Endowment Program. A Resource Guide for Local Churches

LEQ: What was another name for the Age of Reason?

William Trent (d. 1724) Ledger

John 15:8 My Father is glorified by this, that you bear much fruit, and so prove to be My disciples.

Guide to the Meshech Weare Family Papers,

Historical Society of Whitpain local history collection

Life in the Colonies

Leviticus Chapter 25 Continued

Your Inheritance In Christ!

Our Community Service. by William A. "Steve" Stephens. [Portions Taken from my report to the members of the Moffat Cemetery Assn.]

Dickinson College Archives & Special Collections

Southern Campaigns American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

things things FIRST FIRST FIRST FIRST

Records of the Executive Relief Committee for the Earthquake of 1886

THE METHODIST CHURCH, LEEDS DISTRICT

Chapter 3. Comparison Foldable. Section 1: Early English Settlements. Colonial America

Sermon on Give Generously to Get Blessings Kwabena D. Akufo 11/4/ The Macedonian Churches were least positioned to give

these ancient words still apply today? For example, can we say with confidence that whoever wants to be a great employer must

WHEN DID JAMES GUTHRIE DIE?

Trinity College Bulletin, April 1908

Town Northborough. Name Brigham Street Burial Ground. Condition Fair. Acreage 3.29 acres

Maryland Education Standards Middle School: Grades 6-8

Norwich Patriotic Subscription Post John S. Olenkiewicz

PENNSYLVANIA MAGAZINE

AN INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF CHRISTIAN MISSIONS HAROLD R. COOK CHAPTER SEVENTEEN. MISSION BOARDS (Continued) TYPES OF MISSION BOARDS

"Some Account of William Penn's Birth, Education, and Death"

Relating to Electricity, 1885, Vol 33. makes more sense that they married in Utah Territory.

Stewardship: Making Financial Decisions God s Way

Revolutionary War Pension Application

DEAD TO SIN, ALIVE IN CHRIST

JOHN COFFEE PAPERS,

Scholar discusses Joseph Smith's 1844 presidential election campaign

CHAPTER 8 CREATING A REPUBLICAN CULTURE, APUSH Mr. Muller

FROM SMITHSON TO SMITHSONIAN THE BIRTH OF AN INSTITUTION CLASSROOM ACTIVITIES FOR GRADES Smithsonian Institution

FROM CMD S DESK. BHAKTI NEWSLETTER (VII EDITION) (NOVEMBER 2014) Love thy job as thy love themselves

Briggs Family Papers (C4374)

Welfare and Standard of Living

Library Company of Philadelphia. McA MSS 007 YOUNG AND WOODWARD BUSINESS PAPERS..21 linear feet, 1 box

BUTLER (RICHARD) PAPERS. (Mss. 1000, 1069) Inventory. Compiled by. Laura Clark Brown

Financial Problems of a Revolutionary: The Memoir of John Wilkins

Foote Family Association of America Inc

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P APPEAL OF: DAVID SANTUCCI No EDA 2014

PENTECOST 21B 10/14/18 Watch What You Ask For (Mark 10:17-31)

Estate of George Oldham, deceased. Box 74

Brigham Family Pioneer Cemetery Fredonia, NY

Obituaries 247 JAMES OWEN KNAUSS

ADVENT 1C 12/2/18 A Covenant of Hope (Jeremiah 33:14-16)

ZAKAT AS A SOCIAL SAFETY NET Exploring the Impact on Household Welfare in Pakistan

A Mighty Man s Life. Watch ye, stand fast in the faith, quit you like men, be strong. I Corinthians 16:13

Colonial America. Roanoke : The Lost Colony. Founded: 1585 & Founded by: Sir Walter Raleigh WHEN: WHO? 100 men

Do Money and the Gospel Belong Together?

Wi lliam. the Baptist

America s only national Catholic weekly magazine Media Kit

John Miller ( )

Case #2: Reverend Doctor Blackwell

2013 White House Woodrow Wilson Christmas Ornament Fundraising Program

SAVED - NOT BY WORKS! TITUS 3:3-8 GOD'S SAVING WORK ON OUR BEHALF AND IN US IS TOTALLY APART FROM OUR WORKS.

MINUTES LUNENBURG COUNTY MULTI-PURPOSE CENTRE CORPORATION (LCMPCC) Thursday September 21, 2017

A Message From James Hubbard

Turning Points: It s Really About the Money - Luke 16:1-13. Parable of the Shrewd Manager (New Living)

Where is Your Treasure? Scripture Text: Luke 12:13 21

FUTURE. To order now, call Forward Movement Publications at or visit their website at ForwardMovement.org

Eating Right: The Ethics of Food Choices and Food Policy Philosophy 252 Spring 2010 (Version of January 20)

Scipio Africanus Kenner

This Whole Horrible Transaction

interaction among the conference participants leaves one wondering why this journal issue was put out as a book.

ANDREW HYNES PAPERS MSS items

From Slave Owner s Son to African Baptist Church - how one parcel of land transferred in Digby County, Nova Scotia

Contents. Re-Introduction...1. Introduction...9. Chapter 1: What Is Identity? Chapter 2: Your Identity Why Change It?...21

The Wisdom of Andrew Carnegie as told to Napoleon Hill

BEFORE he reached the age of twenty-one, Asbury Dickins had

18. THE PERIOD OF TRANSITION TO THE NEW ECONOMIC POLICY; THE STRUGGLE AGAINST THE OPPORTUNIST FACTIONS OF TROTSKY, BUKHARIN AND OTHERS

DANIEL WAIT HOWE PAPERS,

HENRY¹ OF HINGHAM Sixth Generation

Transcription:

NOTES AND DOCUMENTS The T^evival of the Aurora: a fetter to Tench Coxe I N THE Historical Society of Pennsylvania's recently acquired Brinton Coxe collection there is a letter from William Duane to Tench Coxe in which Duane describes the circumstances of the ^Aurora shortly after the death of its publisher, Benjamin Franklin Bache. Bache had died on September 10, 1798, a victim of yellow fever, and immediately publication of the ^Aurora had ceased. There seemed to be some question as to whether it would resume. 1 Newspaper publishers throughout the colonial and early national periods complained frequently that their papers were dubious assets. Mathew Carey, for one, had sold his 'Pennsylvania Evening Herald after publishing it for less than two years. Evidently, he was quite happy to be rid of such a questionable property. The ^Aurora was no exception: Duane estimated that the paper's accounts receivable amounted to something more than $15,000 in 1798. 2 Under the terms of Bache's will his widow Margaret Bache inherited the ^Aurora as well as all the rest of Bache's property. The will named Richard Bache, her father-in-law, Dr. Adam Kuhn, and Joseph Clay as executors but gave them no special or discretionary powers. The executors must have found their position somewhat difficult. They were doubtless aware that with the suspension of the ^Aurora the Republicans were deprived of their most influential and effective voice in the nation's capital at a particularly unfortunate time. The XYZ affair still rankled. The Sedition Act, under which Bache himself had been arrested in June, was still on the books. And, although only four days after Bache had died the fever claimed 1 The Brinton Coxe collection, as distinct from the papers of Tench Coxe, was received in 1970. A brief notice of Bache's death can be found in the Gazette of the United States y Sept. n, 1798. For a brief publication history of the Aurora^ see Clarence S. Brigham, History and Bibliography of American Newspapers, 1690-1820 (Worcester, Mass., 1947), II, 891. 2 Brigham, II, 930. 521

522 NOTES AND DOCUMENTS October John Fenno, publisher of the Federalist Qazette of the United States, Fenno's son continued the Qazette without interruption. 3 It appears that the executors attempted to balance political concerns with their obligations to the family by advising Margaret Bache to sell the paper. There is some evidence that Bache himself might have suggested it in a memorandum he wrote to Coxe shortly before his death. Whatever the reason, Coxe, acting in concert with Joseph Clay, wrote to Duane shortly after Bache died making inquiries about the paper. Although Coxe's letter has not survived, it is clear from Duane's reply that Coxe was deeply interested in the ^Aurora's future. Coxe seems to have suggested that a number of Republican purchasers might be induced to underwrite the financially ailing but politically necessary ^Aurora. Coxe's questions would naturally have been directed to Duane, who had been Bache's associate on the paper. Moreover, Duane had remained in town during the epidemic, while Margaret Bache had moved her family to her father-in-law's country house, "Settle/' and possibly had access to Bache's books. 4 Duane's reply raises almost as many questions as it answers. For, while it tells us something of the Aurora's circulation and distribution patterns, it does not tell us whether Duane had been offered the editorship of the revived paper. Nor does it tell us whether Coxe and Clay were successful in finding prospective purchasers. Circumstantial evidence suggests that an offer had been made and that a purchaser was found. At all events, Duane was the paper's editor when it reappeared on November i. And, significantly, the style of proprietorship changed shortly after the ^Aurora reappeared. From November i to 13 it was published by Margaret Bache. Beginning with the issue of November 14, it was published "for the heirs of Benjamin Franklin Bache." The change in wording suggests a change in the paper's ownership, but the exact details of the arrange- 3 Bache's will is found as item 35, Book Y, Will books, Philadelphia County (on film at HSP). The first issue under the editorship of John Ward Fenno appeared Sept. 17, 1798. 4 A check of the letter books in the as yet unopened papers of Tench Coxe has failed to yield Coxe's letter. Political angels for newspapers were certainly not unusual in Pennsylvania. Probably the best known were Joseph Galloway and Thomas Wharton, whose relationship with William Goddard is chronicled in Goddard's The "Partnership:or the History of the Rise and Progress of the Pennsylvania Chronicle (Philadelphia, 1770). On Clay see Biographical Directory of the American Congress, 1774-1949 (Washington, D. C, 1950), 987.

1972 NOTES AND DOCUMENTS 5^3 ment must await further investigation when the Tench Coxe papers are opened to scholars. In certain other respects the Duane letter is more satisfactory. It confirms, for example, the symbiotic relationship between a newspaper and the printing office, and, indeed, that the printing office was the more important part of the relationship. One learns, too, that time-worn business habits of printers still obtained in 1798: the fact that separate sets of books were kept for the paper and for the printing office illustrates the survival of venture accounting. And, under Bache, it appears that the circulation and distribution patterns of the zaurora did not differ markedly from those of other Philadelphia newspapers, whatever their political persuasion. Philadelphia's papers went south and west, following the city's trade. Subscription rates within the city and advertising rates seem to have been about the same as those of the competition; at least they squared with the Qazette of the United States. h On the day Duane wrote to Coxe an advertisement appeared in the Qazette of the United States. In it Duane denied the rumor that the ^Aurora was dead. He stated, somewhat disingenuously, that it was only a "want of hands" that kept the paper from reappearing. And, on November 1 the ^Aurora did resume publication. But who was footing the bill? Historical Society of Pennsylvania PETER J. PARKER 6 The term venture accounting is used here to describe that system of business recordkeeping which treats each business activity as a separate venture, the profit or loss for which is individually determined on pages in the ledger. To be sure, modern businesses use ledgers, but what is suggested here is a set of attitudes unconcerned with determining what one's real over-all position is. One of the best documented distribution patterns is that of William Bradford's Pennsylvania Journal. See the "List of Subscribers... 1775..." in the Col. William Bradford Papers, HSP.

524 NOTES AND DOCUMENTS October Philadelphia, October 15 th, 1798 Tench Coxe, Esq r Sir, A report having been spread in town on Saturday that M rs Bache was dead, I thought it expedient to go to Settle, and ascertain the course I had to pursue in the event of the report being true. I was happy, however, to find her all children and all the family in perfect health. Your Queries to me which I had forwarded to her as you desired she returned; there are several of them to which I can give no answers. 1. About 700 Subscribers in Philadelphia 2. About 5 to 600 in the country 3. Cannot estimate the proportion in Pennsylvania 4. Very few north Except N. York, where there are 40. 5. The annual Subscription 8 dollars, the Aurora sent at the charge of the proprietor, other daily papers charge a dollar extra. 6. For the daily paper, half-a-year paid in advance. (The subscription includes the daily and 3 times a week paper, for the latter the subscription for a year or half year is always paid in advance.) 7. Advertisements are inserted 1 square 3 times for a dollar, half a dollar for a single insertion 8. I do not know what articles are meant to be transferred, beside the proprietorship of a share in the property of the paper 9. I cannot anticipate the probable terms of payment on Security. I should presume from my conversation at Settle that credit was out of the consideration; but more of this when I have the pleasure of seeing you. 10. As to the inducements to purchasers, and M r B's doubts, these would require a separate explanation which I shall give as well as I can in a future letter. 11. This query is very comprehensive. I must therefore answer it in a future letter. 12. The neat annual income I don't know; I never looked into any of Mr. B's regular books it was out of my province. 13. I cannot say precisely what the outstanding arrears are, on either account of paper, advertisements, or common printing, but from some conversations which I had with Mr. B. I suppose that there is due south of the Delaware between 15 & 20,000 Dollars! Mark this plain observation from experience Newspaper debts are the worst of all others! 14. I cannot form an idea of the value of the Office that might be expected to continue; but I am sure the Separation of the paper from the Office would essentially injure both.

1972 NOTES AND DOCUMENTS 525 15. Since the 1st of July there has been near 200 additional subscribers, there have been some since Mr. B's death, but I have not the letters by me to ascertain the number; great anxiety is expressed about the revival of the paper, and I presume upon many new Subscribers immediately as it is published. The remaining answers I shall take with me tomorrow to Germantown, where I am very anxious to see you and Mr Clay, if possible together, in order to mention some matters of the utmost interest to the Aurora. Excuse the paper and hasty writing. Your faithful and grateful ser* Wm Duane