Revolutionary Networks: The Business and Politics of Printing the News, 1763–1789
There is a $10 per person fee (no charge for MHS Fellows and Members or EBT cardholders).
During the American Revolution, printed material played a crucial role as a forum for public debate. Joseph Adelman argues that printers—artisans who mingled with the elite but labored in a manual trade—used their commercial and political connections to directly shape Revolutionary political ideology and mass mobilization. Moving through the era of the American Revolution to the war’s aftermath, this history details the development of the networks of printers and explains how they contributed to the process of creating first a revolution and then the new nation.