The Patowmac Guardian, and Berkeley AdvertiserNumber 1 of Vol. I–Number 207 of Vol. 4. Shepherd's-Town [later Martinsburg]: Printed and Published by N. Willis, at his Printing-Office, in New-Street, Monday, November 15, 1790–Monday, November 3, 1794
203 mostly four-page issues (407 x 257 mm) printed on bifolia of laid paper, printed in three columns (lacking Nos. 30, 40, 43, 92; No. 62 printed on a smaller bifolia; Nos. 63–66, 70, 170, 171 printed on single leaves only); first issue creased and a bit soiled, some browning, soiling, and marginal fraying throughout, text very occasionally shaved at foot or head, very occasional abrasion or wear causing loss of text, a quarter column of text neatly clipped from No. 203. Disbound, with many issues loose. (Despite the condition issues noted, the individual issues are sound, easily handled, and perfectly legible.)
An unusually extensive run, extending almost four years, of the first newspaper printed in the area that would become West Virginia, including what is evidently a unique survival of the inaugural issue. Clarence Brigham's History and Bibliography of American Newspapers was able to locate no issue earlier than 27 June 1791 (no. 33)—and this remains the earliest issue located by the Library of Congress's "Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers." Indeed, the vast majority of the issues included in the present run seem to be unrecorded, with only single or scattered numbers from the first four years of publication available at a handful of institutions, including the American Antiquarian Society, the Houghton Library, the Library of Virginia, the New York Public Library, and the University of Kentucky Library.
Willis inaugurated The Patowmac Guardian, and Berkeley Advertiser with a open letter "To the Public," in which he argued that "a Press conducted with a spirited prudence, has a manifest disposition to preserve the rights of freedom—to guard the glorious acquisitions of liberty—and to weaken despotic growth before it becomes too formidable to be subdued." He further claims that the recently ratified Federal Constitution, as well as "the obvious certainty of the great Federal City being established in the vicinity of this fertile retreat," make the establishment of a free and independent newspaper in western Virginia especially appropriate. His newspaper, Willis promises, will cover domestic politics, foreign politics, agriculture, commerce, manufactures and useful arts, essays and extracts, works of wit and fancy, and instructive and entertaining anecdotes.
Domestic politics, in particular, dominated the pages of the Patowmac Guardian, including official proceedings of the House of Representatives, congressional acts, and presidential proclamations, including Washington's proclamation of 25 September 1794 escalating the response to the Whiskey Rebellion. The state politics of Virginia and Kentucky also receive extensive coverage.
A blog post by the West Virginia University Libraries, reposted by the Library of Congress on its "Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers" site, provides a succinct summary of The Patowmac Guardian and Berkeley Adveriser:
"Nathaniel Willis was the first of several great literary men in his family, including his grandson, author and poet, Nathaniel Parker Willis. Willis published the Independent Chronicle and Universal Advertiser in Boston during the American Revolution. He also participated in the Boston Tea Party and served as an adjutant in the Continental Army. Willis sold his interest in the Chronicle in 1784 and relocated to Winchester, Virginia, as the editor of Willis’s Winchester Gazette & Public Advertiser. He moved to Shepherdstown in 1790 and began to print the Potowmac Guardian and Berkeley Advertiser before moving a third time to Martinsburg, where the paper underwent two name changes (the Potomak Guardian and Berkeley Advertiser in 1795 and the Potomak Guardian in 1798). Willis presented his paper as a source of national and international news that curious readers could comment on through letters to the editor. Although the content on the first page varied, the second and third usually contained articles on major events and speeches from significant political figures. The fourth concluded with poetry, titled the 'Seat of the Muses,' and a series of advertisements.
"The Early Republic was a fruitful era for newspaper content. The Age of Revolutions could be felt in France, Haiti, Greece, and Latin America. Anglo-Americans watched with interest from the United States in the aftermath of their own revolution. The adherents of Jeffersonian Republicanism who patronized the Potowmac Guardian and Berkeley Advertiser scanned its columns for the latest updates from France. They praised the French Revolution and celebrated 'the cause of democratic republicanism' in France, drawing comparisons between the French and American Revolutions. The Seat of the Muses published a poem 'by a citizen of Belfast' echoing the sentiments of Jefferson’s adherents: 'Should France be subdu’d—Europe’s liberty ends/if she triumphs—the WORLD will be free.' So 'let ev’ry true Patriot unite in her cause/a cause of such moment to man/let all whose souls spurn at tyrannical laws/lend her all the assistance they can.' Although the poet was presumably writing for an Irish audience, Jeffersonians recognized the call to 'spurn at tyrannical laws' as their own.
"Willis and his Jeffersonian audience used the press to denounce laws that seemed tyrannical. They had to remain vigilant against tyranny if they wished to maintain their republican identities. The Jay Treaty (1794) and the Alien and Sedition Acts (1798) afforded several opportunities for protesting tyranny and defending political virtue. The Jay Treaty mitigated the threat of war and promoted peaceful trade between Great Britain and United States during the French Revolutionary Wars. Jeffersonians believed the treaty would undercut republicanism at the expense of France, America’s would-be ally, and strengthen aristocracy. More than that, many felt it was a betrayal of France, who was at war with Great Britain. Willis published a letter that he attributed to the Minister of the French Republic, which lambasted America for scorning her friends in France. 'Those who went to brave tempests and death upon the ocean, forgot all dangers in order to indulge the hope of visiting that American continent where … the French colours had been displayed in favor of liberty,' the author asserted. 'Under the guarantee of the laws of nations … they expected to find in the ports of the United States an asylum as sure as at home.' Instead, they found a British-American alliance. Indignant Jeffersonians sympathized with the French and burned effigies of John Jay in contempt.
"The Alien and Sedition Acts impacted Willis personally as a newspaper editor. The Sedition Act criminalized the making of false statements directed at the federal government during the Quasi War, an undeclared naval war with France. Critics of the act argued that Federalists were using the Quasi War to justify the suppression of dissent from Democratic-Republicans. Willis announced his opposition to the Sedition Act when he changed the header of the Potomak Guardian in 1799. The new header read, 'Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press.' The audience of the Potomak Guardian agreed, sharing their opinions with Willis. A reader calling himself 'A True Republican' condemned the publication of 'impudent and scandalous falsehoods' and believed Congress could 'restrain by law the writing and publishing [of] any thing which tends to prevent the execution of any power vested by the Constitution in the government of the United States.' Those stipulations aside, he could not accept the Alien and Sedition Acts, which he deemed 'dreadful.'
"Willis remained the editor and publisher until October 30, 1799, when Armstrong Charlton succeeded him, publishing the last known issue of the Potomak Guardian on January 8, 1800. Willis professed his intention to leave Martinsburg on December 4, 1799, and subsequently moved to Chillicothe, Ohio, where he established the Scioto Gazette" (https://news.lib.wvu.edu/2021/08/27/empotowmac-guardian-and-berkeley-advertiser-em-and-empotomak-guardian-em/; https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84038410/).
PROVENANCE:Wm. Winship (original subscriber's name written in the margin of the front page of many issues)
The Patowmac Guardian, and Berkeley AdvertiserNumber 1 of Vol. I–Number 207 of Vol. 4. Shepherd's-Town [later Martinsburg]: Printed and Published by N. Willis, at his Printing-Office, in New-Street, Monday, November 15, 1790–Monday, November 3, 1794
203 mostly four-page issues (407 x 257 mm) printed on bifolia of laid paper, printed in three columns (lacking Nos. 30, 40, 43, 92; No. 62 printed on a smaller bifolia; Nos. 63–66, 70, 170, 171 printed on single leaves only); first issue creased and a bit soiled, some browning, soiling, and marginal fraying throughout, text very occasionally shaved at foot or head, very occasional abrasion or wear causing loss of text, a quarter column of text neatly clipped from No. 203. Disbound, with many issues loose. (Despite the condition issues noted, the individual issues are sound, easily handled, and perfectly legible.)
An unusually extensive run, extending almost four years, of the first newspaper printed in the area that would become West Virginia, including what is evidently a unique survival of the inaugural issue. Clarence Brigham's History and Bibliography of American Newspapers was able to locate no issue earlier than 27 June 1791 (no. 33)—and this remains the earliest issue located by the Library of Congress's "Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers." Indeed, the vast majority of the issues included in the present run seem to be unrecorded, with only single or scattered numbers from the first four years of publication available at a handful of institutions, including the American Antiquarian Society, the Houghton Library, the Library of Virginia, the New York Public Library, and the University of Kentucky Library.
Willis inaugurated The Patowmac Guardian, and Berkeley Advertiser with a open letter "To the Public," in which he argued that "a Press conducted with a spirited prudence, has a manifest disposition to preserve the rights of freedom—to guard the glorious acquisitions of liberty—and to weaken despotic growth before it becomes too formidable to be subdued." He further claims that the recently ratified Federal Constitution, as well as "the obvious certainty of the great Federal City being established in the vicinity of this fertile retreat," make the establishment of a free and independent newspaper in western Virginia especially appropriate. His newspaper, Willis promises, will cover domestic politics, foreign politics, agriculture, commerce, manufactures and useful arts, essays and extracts, works of wit and fancy, and instructive and entertaining anecdotes.
Domestic politics, in particular, dominated the pages of the Patowmac Guardian, including official proceedings of the House of Representatives, congressional acts, and presidential proclamations, including Washington's proclamation of 25 September 1794 escalating the response to the Whiskey Rebellion. The state politics of Virginia and Kentucky also receive extensive coverage.
A blog post by the West Virginia University Libraries, reposted by the Library of Congress on its "Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers" site, provides a succinct summary of The Patowmac Guardian and Berkeley Adveriser:
"Nathaniel Willis was the first of several great literary men in his family, including his grandson, author and poet, Nathaniel Parker Willis. Willis published the Independent Chronicle and Universal Advertiser in Boston during the American Revolution. He also participated in the Boston Tea Party and served as an adjutant in the Continental Army. Willis sold his interest in the Chronicle in 1784 and relocated to Winchester, Virginia, as the editor of Willis’s Winchester Gazette & Public Advertiser. He moved to Shepherdstown in 1790 and began to print the Potowmac Guardian and Berkeley Advertiser before moving a third time to Martinsburg, where the paper underwent two name changes (the Potomak Guardian and Berkeley Advertiser in 1795 and the Potomak Guardian in 1798). Willis presented his paper as a source of national and international news that curious readers could comment on through letters to the editor. Although the content on the first page varied, the second and third usually contained articles on major events and speeches from significant political figures. The fourth concluded with poetry, titled the 'Seat of the Muses,' and a series of advertisements.
"The Early Republic was a fruitful era for newspaper content. The Age of Revolutions could be felt in France, Haiti, Greece, and Latin America. Anglo-Americans watched with interest from the United States in the aftermath of their own revolution. The adherents of Jeffersonian Republicanism who patronized the Potowmac Guardian and Berkeley Advertiser scanned its columns for the latest updates from France. They praised the French Revolution and celebrated 'the cause of democratic republicanism' in France, drawing comparisons between the French and American Revolutions. The Seat of the Muses published a poem 'by a citizen of Belfast' echoing the sentiments of Jefferson’s adherents: 'Should France be subdu’d—Europe’s liberty ends/if she triumphs—the WORLD will be free.' So 'let ev’ry true Patriot unite in her cause/a cause of such moment to man/let all whose souls spurn at tyrannical laws/lend her all the assistance they can.' Although the poet was presumably writing for an Irish audience, Jeffersonians recognized the call to 'spurn at tyrannical laws' as their own.
"Willis and his Jeffersonian audience used the press to denounce laws that seemed tyrannical. They had to remain vigilant against tyranny if they wished to maintain their republican identities. The Jay Treaty (1794) and the Alien and Sedition Acts (1798) afforded several opportunities for protesting tyranny and defending political virtue. The Jay Treaty mitigated the threat of war and promoted peaceful trade between Great Britain and United States during the French Revolutionary Wars. Jeffersonians believed the treaty would undercut republicanism at the expense of France, America’s would-be ally, and strengthen aristocracy. More than that, many felt it was a betrayal of France, who was at war with Great Britain. Willis published a letter that he attributed to the Minister of the French Republic, which lambasted America for scorning her friends in France. 'Those who went to brave tempests and death upon the ocean, forgot all dangers in order to indulge the hope of visiting that American continent where … the French colours had been displayed in favor of liberty,' the author asserted. 'Under the guarantee of the laws of nations … they expected to find in the ports of the United States an asylum as sure as at home.' Instead, they found a British-American alliance. Indignant Jeffersonians sympathized with the French and burned effigies of John Jay in contempt.
"The Alien and Sedition Acts impacted Willis personally as a newspaper editor. The Sedition Act criminalized the making of false statements directed at the federal government during the Quasi War, an undeclared naval war with France. Critics of the act argued that Federalists were using the Quasi War to justify the suppression of dissent from Democratic-Republicans. Willis announced his opposition to the Sedition Act when he changed the header of the Potomak Guardian in 1799. The new header read, 'Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press.' The audience of the Potomak Guardian agreed, sharing their opinions with Willis. A reader calling himself 'A True Republican' condemned the publication of 'impudent and scandalous falsehoods' and believed Congress could 'restrain by law the writing and publishing [of] any thing which tends to prevent the execution of any power vested by the Constitution in the government of the United States.' Those stipulations aside, he could not accept the Alien and Sedition Acts, which he deemed 'dreadful.'
"Willis remained the editor and publisher until October 30, 1799, when Armstrong Charlton succeeded him, publishing the last known issue of the Potomak Guardian on January 8, 1800. Willis professed his intention to leave Martinsburg on December 4, 1799, and subsequently moved to Chillicothe, Ohio, where he established the Scioto Gazette" (https://news.lib.wvu.edu/2021/08/27/empotowmac-guardian-and-berkeley-advertiser-em-and-empotomak-guardian-em/; https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84038410/).
PROVENANCE:Wm. Winship (original subscriber's name written in the margin of the front page of many issues)
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