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Home Item #706704
Slave reward ads, 20 illustrated ship advertisements...
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Slave reward ads, 20 illustrated ship advertisements...

Item # 706704 ·
FEDERAL GAZETTE & BALTIMORE DAILY ADVERTISER, July 5, 1796

* Rare 18th century American publication

Curiously, five different type fonts are used to print the title in the masthead. The front page features 20 illustrated ship ads, making it very displayable.
The back page has an ad beginning: "For Sale, A Healthy Negro Girl...", plus no fewer than 3 reward ads for runaway slaves, each with details.
Four pages, two small binding holes near the spine, nice condition.

Background: The significance of this 1796 issue lies in its role as a stark, unvarnished "balance sheet" of early American life, capturing the precise moment Baltimore transitioned from a colonial town into a major federalist commercial power. By placing "For Sale" ads for a "Healthy Negro Girl" alongside shipping manifests and merchant notices, the publication documents the total normalization of human commodification within the city's economic infrastructure. These advertisements serve as vital, albeit tragic, primary sources for social historians; the "Reward" ads, in particular, provide a rare form of "accidental biography," recording the physical descriptions, clothing, and defiant acts of resistance by enslaved individuals whose lives were otherwise excluded from the formal historical record. As a document printed on 18th-century rag paper during the final year of George Washington’s presidency, it survives as a tangible witness to the deep contradictions of a young republic—a nation rapidly expanding its banking and maritime wealth while simultaneously refining the brutal legal and commercial mechanisms of the domestic slave trade.
Price
$46.00
100% Authentic: Original printing, never a reproduction.