Please click the
icon to follow us on Twitter.on this day the oldest multi-page
newspaper in North America, Publick Occurrences both Forreign and
Domestick, began its life as a humble four pages of six inch by ten inch
paper (one page blank for readers to write their own news and hand
around).
Printed by Richard Pierce, the newspaper was published by Benjamin Harris,
a well known publisher who had also done a paper in London but England in
1686 with the uprising of the Catholics under James II. Shortly after
settling in America, Harris opened a coffeehouse and published the New
England Primer, the Colonies' first textbook.
Single-sided newspapers had been printed for some time in Massachusetts,
and Harris decided a new business venture in newspapers would be
profitable. He would publish monthly, commenting on the significant
happenings i.e., the news, though the early journalism was nearly gossip.
One news article told of atrocities performed by Indians who were
political allies of Britain, which became treated as seditious libel
despite its truth. Shortly after its first edition, the government stepped
in with a proclamation:
"Whereas some have lately presumed to Print and Disperse a Pamphlet,
Entitled, Publick Occurrences, both Forreign and Domestick: Boston,
Thursday, Septemb. 25th, 1690. Without the least Privity and Countenace of
Authority. The Governour and Council having had the perusal of said
Pamphlet, and finding that therein contained Reflections of a very high
nature: As also sundry doubtful and uncertain Reports, do hereby manifest
and declare their high Resentment and Disallowance of said Pamphlet, and
Order that the same be Suppressed and called in; strickly forbidden any
person or persons for the future to Set forth any thing in Print without
License first obtained from those that are or shall be appointed by the
Government to grant the same".
Harris was shut down and briefly jailed. Everyone that knew him assumed he
would turn back to the safer business of textbooks, but something had
pushed Harris too far. He had fled England fearing government, and yet
government had found him in Boston as well. If he backed down his whole
life, he may be outwardly successful, but he could not call it a life well
lived. Overtly, he continued his publication of the Primer and maintained
a good life. Covertly, he prepared the second edition of Publick
Occurrences.
Printed in late October and handed out on the street, the paper contained
editorials as well as selections from John Locke's Two Treatises of
Government, emphasizing the social contract and stating that men gave
rights to the government and not the government to men. Further pages
quoted John Milton's Aeropagitica, a tract against censorship written in
1644, with lines like "as good almost kill a man as kill a good book. Who
kills a man kills a reasonable creature, God's image; but he who destroys
a good book, kills reason itself, kills the image of God, as it were in
the eye". The newspaper ended with another blank page excepting a line at
the top from Milton, "Give me the liberty to know, to utter, and to argue
freely according to conscience, above all liberties".
Though Harris had printed secretly and at a loss, the paper spread quickly
through Boston and spilled into the rest of Massachusetts Colony. Furor
arose from the liberty-minded colonists, especially as Publick Occurrences
became known in Rhode Island where religious suppression had hurt many.
The government hurried to destroy what copies they could find and jailed
Harris again, though they had no proof that it was his paper.
Harris was acquitted when a third edition of Publick Occurrences was
printed in November, quoting John 8:32, "The truth will set you free". The
press had gone underground, as Harris had planned knowing that he would be
arrested again, where it funded by donations from colonists who picked up
the free copies. Unable to stop the paper, the government cracked down
upon those who hated it, which caused uproar from even those who did not
approve of printing without a license. After years of investigations and
fruitless arrests, the colony finally removed its requirement for license
in 1694.
Having won freedom of the press, Massachusetts went through a newspaper
boom and bust. Harris made and lost a great fortune, returning to
comfortable income with his coffee shop, textbooks, almanacs, and Publick
Occurrences. He decided to stay in Boston, where he died in 1716. While
most of his estate went to his son, he purchased a farm that he bequeathed
to what would become the Publick Occurrences Foundation to maintain
printing the newspaper for "aeternal publickation" with its harvests.
Publick Occurrences continued to report on all of the news of the day,
helping to spark the American Revolution in 1775. It remained something of
a "subversive" newspaper, speaking out against the War of 1812 as well as
the Mexican War as outright imperialism. A new golden age broke out for
the paper during and after the Civil War, but then it became largely
drowned out by papers during the turn-of-the-century wars between Pulitzer
and Hearst. The paper nearly folded during the 1930s, printing only a
handful of copies per month. However, as American mood changed to oppose
the Nazis, the strong words of Publick Occurrences began the war cry. Its
popularity would fade again as the radicalism of the Sixties subsided.
In 1990, to celebrate the beginning of its fourth century, Publick
Occurrences launched online the developing Information Superhighway. The
re-branded PO quickly added electronic forums to its digital publication,
allowing for the voice of all. Other newspapers and websites emulated the
system, soon beginning a craze for individuals "pubbing" short articles
with observations, opinions, and links to sites, photos, and video.