Click image to enlarge On the Missouri Compromise...   Maine & Missouri join the Union...
Show image list »
On the Missouri Compromise...   Maine & Missouri join the Union...   - Image 1
On the Missouri Compromise...   Maine & Missouri join the Union...   - Image 2
On the Missouri Compromise...   Maine & Missouri join the Union...   - Image 3
On the Missouri Compromise...   Maine & Missouri join the Union...   - Image 4
On the Missouri Compromise...   Maine & Missouri join the Union...   - Image 5
On the Missouri Compromise...   Maine & Missouri join the Union...   - Image 6
On the Missouri Compromise...   Maine & Missouri join the Union...   - Image 7

On the Missouri Compromise... Maine & Missouri join the Union...

Item # 544535

Sorry, but this item is no longer available. Please be in touch at info@rarenewspapers.com if you would like to be placed on a want list or are interested in a potential alternate issue.

March 11, 1820
NILES' WEEKLY REGISTER, Baltimore, March 11 1820

* On the Missouri Compromise
* Maine and Missouri become states of the Union

The top of the front page has an article which begins: "The bills for the admission of Maine and Missouri into the union have been respectively signed by the president the the United States and become laws. The latter without restriction as to slavery..." (see).
Also on the front page is an article headed: "The Slave Question" which was a major issue of the time and would not be resolved before the Civil War over 40 years later. This article carries over to take all of page 2 and most of page 3.
Among other reports in this issue are: "Legislature of Delaware" "Banks--and National Currency" which is very lengthy, and various reports from Congress including a note signed in type: James Monroe.
This issue is complete in 16 pages, measures about 6 1/2 by 10 inches. Scattered foxing, generally nice.

This small size newspaper began in 1811 and was a prime source for national political news of the first half of the 19th century. As noted in Wikipedia: "Niles edited and published the Weekly Register until 1836, making it into one of the most widely-circulated magazines in the United States and himself into one of the most influential journalists of his day. Devoted primarily to politics, Niles' Weekly Register is considered an important source for the history of the period."