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1773 dated Gentleman's Magazine - Americana

Inv# AM2121
Country: England
State(s): Massachusetts
Years: 1773

Small size "Gentleman's Magazine" measures 5" x 8 1/4". Small excerpt from magazine: Wheatley 1773 Account of Her Master. Historic report entitled: "Some Account of Phillis, a learned Negro Girl." Full column item begins: "Proposals having just been published for printing by subscription, some poems written by Phillis, a negro servant of Mr. Wheatley, of Boston, in New England" and includes letter from her master explaining her history and editor's request to purchase book to help secure her freedom. Also: British canal map, Voltaire, Clive in India.

The Gentleman's Magazine was a monthly publication established in London, England, by Edward Cave in January 1731. It continued to be published without interruption for nearly two centuries, ceasing in 1922. This magazine was the first to adopt the term "magazine" (derived from the French word meaning "storehouse") to describe a periodical. Samuel Johnson began his first regular writing position with The Gentleman's Magazine. The complete original title was The Gentleman's Magazine: or, Trader's Monthly Intelligencer. Cave's innovative approach involved compiling a monthly summary of news and commentary on a wide range of subjects that would interest the educated public, including commodity prices and Latin poetry.

The magazine featured original contributions from a group of regular writers, along with extensive quotations and excerpts from other publications and books. Cave, who served as the editor under the pseudonym "Sylvanus Urban," was the first to utilize the term magazine in this context. Contributions were often presented in the form of letters addressed to "Mr. Urban." Each issue prominently displayed an illustration of St John's Gate in Clerkenwell, which represented Cave's residence and effectively served as the magazine's "office."

Condition: Good
Item ordered may not be exact piece shown. All original and authentic.
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