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Much on Pensacola, Florida...



Item # 692848

November 23, 1839

THE NEW-YORKER, New York, Nov. 9, 1839  Taking half a column on the front page and all of page 2 is a very detailed article: "Pensacola, West-Florida". It becomes with some history, then delves into life there, its beauty, its commercial enterprises, etc. Bits include: "The Bay of Pensacola was discovered in the early part of the 16th century...Pensacola now contains 2,400 inhabitants, of whom the majority are Spanish or French...For upward of 20 miles around Pensacola the soil is a very white sand..." and so much more.
This was published by the famed Horace Greeley, begun some seven years before his more famous 'New York Tribune' which print its first issue. Although he would work at several newspapers prior to the 'New Yorker', this would be his first successful venture, eventually reaching a circulation of 9,000.
Long active in politics, Greeley served briefly as a congressman from New York and was the unsuccessful candidate of the new Liberal Republican Party in the 1872 presidential election against incumbent President Ulysses S. Grant.
Sixteen pages, 9 1/2 by 12 inches, good condition.

Item from Catalog 342 (released for May, 2024)

Category: Pre-Civil War