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Robert Bell (publisher)

Robert Bell (1732–1784) was a Scottish immigrant to the British colonies in America and became one of many early American printers and publishers active during the years leading up to and through the American Revolution. Bell became widely noted for printing Thomas Paine's celebrated work, Common Sense, a highly influential work during the revolution that openly criticized the British Parliament and their management and taxation of the British-American colonies. Bell and Paine later had a falling out over profits and publication issues.[1][2] As a dedicated patriot, Bell printed many pamphlets and books before and during the revolution, many of which "glowingly" expressed his patriotic views.[3] He also reprinted a number of popular English works, presenting them to the colonies for the first time. He ran an auction house which sold rare books in Lancaster, and in later life he toured the colonies selling off his massive book collection.[3][4] After Bell's death, his printing press and other items were sold at a Philadelphia auction house to another prominent printer at an unusually high price.[5][6]

Auction house listing of rare books sold by Robert Bell, 1780

Early life and family edit

Robert Bell was born in Glasgow, Scotland, and was of the Quaker persuasion. Growing up in Scotland he was taught the book-binding trade. He traveled to Berwick-upon-Tweed, and continued in that trade for sometime. From there he moved to Dublin and became a bookseller, which at first seemed promising but after a few years the enterprise failed. He married in Dublin, and was for some time the partner of George Alexander Stevens, an English playwright and poet. Bell emigrated to the British colonies in 1767, and established himself as an auctioneer of books, where he soon became a full time bookseller in Philadelphia.[1][3]

Publisher edit

Bell arrived in Philadelphia from Dublin in 1767.[7][a] In 1769, or early in 1770, Bell established a printing press and shop in Philadelphia in a building which previously housed the Union Library, located next door to Saint Paul's Church, on Third street. He soon became known as an auctioneer of books, once referring to himself on record, 7 February 1774, as a "Professor of Book Auctioneering."[3] Unlike many other printers, Bell did not own or work for any newspaper, had no government contracts and had to rely on his own prospects.[9]

Bell was the first to present a number of popular English works from a wide selection in every class of literature current in England in simple affordable printing and binding. His successful practice of offering inexpensive editions soon compelled other printers to offer publications where the common citizen could thereby obtain works of literature they would otherwise be unable to afford. Bell biographer David Landis maintained in his 1908 essay that such a sales practice put Bell as a publisher way ahead of his time.[4][3]

As a book seller one of Bell's earliest advertisements appeared in the 14 April 1768, issue of Benjamin Franklin's Pennsylvania Gazette. In July he advertised his first publications in the Pennsylvania Chronicle "which introduced to the people of this continent the first American edition of two works of those duo immortals and staunch friends": The History of Rasselas, Prince of Abissinia, written by Doctor Samuel Johnson in 1763, and The Traveller, written by Oliver Goldsmith in 1764:[3][7] In 1772, Bell published Blackstone's Commentaries in four volumes, which saw a good subscription rate in Philadelphia. Prior to this he published William Robertson's biography of Emperor Charles the Fifth. These two works are considered Bell's first successful publications while in Philadelphia.[1][10] He also published Sterne's Sentimental Journey, Robertson's History of Scotland in three volumes, Leland's History of Ireland in four volumes, Robinson Crusoe, Paradise Lost, along with, plays, poems, and novels innumerable.[4]

There was a paper shortage in the American colonies in the several years leading up to the Revolutionary War, and grew more serious during that war as the demand for paper increased. Before 1765 most of the paper used by colonial printers and newspapers was imported, while the struggling colonial paper mills, mostly located in Pennsylvania, were not able to meet the demands of the many printers that emerged during the war.[11] Bell worked with the public in an effort to collect rags used in the production of paper. Along with other printers, Bell printed advertisements in various Pennsylvania newspapers for the call and collection of rags used in paper manufacturing, along with essays on paper making and the materials used for its production. This was yet another effort that would bring the colonies together in a common cause.[12][13]

American Revolution era edit

 
Front cover of Thomas Paine's Common Sense, with "Printed and sold by: R. Bell" inscribed at bottom

In the years leading up to and through the American Revolution, Bell printed many pamphlets and books which ardently expressed his patriotic ideas and sentiments. As a printer in Philadelphia[b] he worked tirelessly in that effort more than most printers. By 1776 he was especially busy when he printed a continuation of letters to the Legislature on American Independence. A second edition of "Plain Truth" was partly printed on coarse blue paper, which, as Bell stated, "constituted the law of necessity," and he added, further, "The Patriot surmounteth every difficulty," etc.[3]

Bell was commissioned by Thomas Paine to print his work, Common Sense, which has been widely considered the most inciteful and influential work of the revolutionary era,[15][16][17][c] as it advocated American independence, now ripe in the minds of colonists, and openly criticized the British Crown and Parliamentary rule over the colonies.[14][19] Paine originally had intended for his work to be printed in the various colonial newspapers in a series of articles, but they were concerned that British colonial authorities very likely would threaten or confiscate their printing operations.[d] On the recommendation of Benjamin Rush, who thought highly of Bell, referring to him as the "Republican printer", and thought him courageous enough to print what became a politically volatile work,[21][22][e] Paine complied and turned over his manuscript to Bell. Paine made an agreement with him that if the publication should prove to be an unprofitable venture that he would cover any losses he incurred. To further make the prospect attractive, Paine agreed to give Bell half of any profits realized. The other half Paine intended to purchase wool mittens for the troops going to Quebec, giving a written order on Bell to two officers of the Continental Army. Bell at once set to printing the work with great enthusiasm, feeling just as strongly about the idea of independence as Paine. Bell set the price of the pamphlet at two shillings per copy.[23][f] For fear of recrimination, Paine had the first edition of Common Sense published anonymously.[14] At the time of its printing there was a serious paper shortage in the colonies, compounded by the revolution.[25] Bell placed an advertisement in the 10 January 1776, issue of William Bradford's newspaper, The Pennsylvania Journal, following with one in The Pennsylvania Evening Post on 27 January, owned by Benjamin Towne. Common Sense was favorably received throughout the colonies and sold very quickly.[26][25]

Paine's work received some criticism, most notably in a pamphlet by James Chalmers, writing under the assumed name of Candidus[g] entitled The Plain Truth, also printed by Bell, which was not received well by a patriotic populace who drove Chalmers into exile.[14] Bell also received heavy criticism for publishing Chalmers' work from patriots who assumed Bell was lending Chalmers support for appearing to oppose independence and the ideas set forth in Paine's work. In his own defense, in reference to Plain Truth, Bell inserted in another publication a vindication of the liberty of the press which he described as "Extracted from an Old Pamphlet, Published in the Year 1756, Entitled Plain Truth." The author of this "Old Pamphlet", like that of Chalmers named Plain Truth, was Benjamin Franklin. Bell used the words of Franklin, who, like Bell, was a strong proponent of independence and freedom of the press, in vindication of a pamphlet against these ideals.[27]

 
The Military Guide for Young officers, printed by Robert Bell, J. Humphreys, 1776 (this copy signed by John Adams)[28]

Bell and Paine fell into disagreement about payment and publishing terms over Common Sense which began three weeks after the first advertisement of Paine's work appeared in the Pennsylvania Journal. Bell had claimed that he had not made any profit printing and publishing Common Sense and proceeded to publish an unauthorized edition. The disagreement grew into a controversy between the two which was covered in the local newspapers. Bell's second advertisement in the Evening Post included an attack on Paine's work, while Paine was still an anonymous figure. Paine responded by taking his business to Bell's competitor, the Bradford brothers, William and Thomas, who printed a third edition that included Paine's name on the cover, with a note appended declaring that Bell's second edition was unauthorized.[29] The third edition became the standard text which became widely known to this day. It also contained an appendix, in which Paine included an “Epistle to the Quakers”. During the course of the sordid affair the attacks on the work and each other's character continued, mostly by Bell.[14][30][31]

In 1776, Bell, James Humphreys and Robert Aitken together reprinted and published The Military Guide for Young Officers, a military, historical, and definitive dictionary which included passages from essays on the recruiting, arming, supplying, training and discipline of British infantry and cavalry.[32]

Later life edit

After the Revolutionary War Bell became an acclaimed book auctioneer whose name was recognized from Virginia to New Hampshire. As an auctioneer he sold most of his books, which he referred to as his "jewels and diamonds", in New York, Boston, Baltimore, Norfolk, among other towns.[1] While on a book-selling trip to Richmond, Virginia, Bell became ill and died there on 16 or 23 September 1784; the accounts vary on the exact date.[3]

Shortly after Bell's death, the contents of his shop, which included a printing press, office furniture, tools and books, were put up for auction. His books and other items sold for a few dollars, while the bidding for his printing press started with Mathew Carey for the modest amount of ten dollars. After fierce back and forth bidding between Carey and Colonel Eleazer Oswald, the editor of the Independent Gazette, Bell's press was finally awarded to Carey for one hundred and fifty dollars, the average price for a new press.[5][6]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Philadelphia historian John Thomas Scharf places the date of Bell's arrival in Philadelphia at 1766.[8]
  2. ^ Philadelphia at this time was the leader in colonial politics as it concerned revolutionary thought, a booming mercantile city, and was at the center of colonial resistance to British rule over the colonies in the 1770s.[14]
  3. ^ Revolutionary icon Samuel Adams praised Paine's work: "Common Sense and The Crisis undoubtedly awakened the public mind, and led the people loudly to call for a declaration of independence."[18]
  4. ^ Before the revolution more than 1200 colonial printers were prosecuted for sedition and libel for printing similar articles or literature.[20]
  5. ^ In his autobiography Rush refers to Robert Bell as Thomas Bell. p. 85
  6. ^ Between 120,000 and 150,000 copies of Common Sense were printed in the first year alone. It became the first American best-seller.[24]
  7. ^ Samuel Adams frequently used this pen name in his articles also.

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d Thomas, 1874, Vol. I, pp. 260–261
  2. ^ Aldridge, 1984, p. 41
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Landis, 1908, Essay
  4. ^ a b c Hildeburn, pp. vii–viii
  5. ^ a b Hindman, 1960, pp. 98–99
  6. ^ a b Adelman, 2013, p. 539
  7. ^ a b Parker, 1966, p. 32
  8. ^ Scharf, 1884, vol. I, p. 309
  9. ^ Parker, 1966, p. 32
  10. ^ Parker, 1966, p. 39
  11. ^ Leonard, 1950, p. 488
  12. ^ Wroth, 1938, pp. 148–149
  13. ^ Leonard, 1950, p. 495
  14. ^ a b c d e Saillant, 2015, Encyclopedia article
  15. ^ Conway & Cobbett, 1892, Vol I, p. 60
  16. ^ Kaye, 2006, p. 64
  17. ^ Aldridge, 1984, pp. 45, 108
  18. ^ Hosmer, 1899, p. 343
  19. ^ Ferguson, 2000, p. 123
  20. ^ Eldridge, Journal, 1995, p. 337
  21. ^ Butterfield (ed.), 2019, Vol II, p. 1008
  22. ^ Conway & Cobbett, 1892, Vol I, p. 68
  23. ^ Aldridge, 1959, pp. 39-40
  24. ^ Ferguson, 2000, p. 466
  25. ^ a b Thomas, 1874, p. 261
  26. ^ Larkin, 2005, p. 51
  27. ^ Aldridge, 1984, p. 188
  28. ^ Simes & Dalrymple, 1776, cover page
  29. ^ Scharf, 1884, vol. I, p. 309
  30. ^ Larkin, 2005, pp. 51–56
  31. ^ Kaye, 2006, p. 267
  32. ^ Simes & Dalrymple, 1776, cover page

Bibliography edit

  • Adelman, Joseph M. (Fall 2013). "Trans-Atlantic Migration and the Printing Trade in Revolutionary America". Early American Studies. University of Pennsylvania Press. 11 (3): 516–544. doi:10.1353/eam.2013.0026. JSTOR 23547682. S2CID 144423922.
  • Aldridge, Alfred Owen (1984). Thomas Paine's American ideology. Newark: University of Delaware Press. ISBN 978-0-8741-32601.
  • Conway, Moncure Daniel; Cobbett, William (1892). The life of Thomas Paine. Vol. I. New York, London, G.P. Putnam's Sons.
  • Conway, Moncure Daniel; Cobbett, William (1892). The life of Thomas Paine. Vol. II. New York, London, G.P. Putnam's Sons.
  • Eldridge, Larry D. (July 1995). "Before Zenger: Truth and Seditious Speech in Colonial America, 1607–1700". The American Journal of Legal History. Oxford University Press. 39 (3): 337–358. doi:10.2307/845791. JSTOR 845791.
  • Ferguson, Robert A. (July 2000). "The Commonalities of Common Sense". The William and Mary Quarterly. Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture. 57 (3): 465–504. doi:10.2307/2674263. JSTOR 2674263.
  • Hildeburn, Charles Swift Riché (1885). A century of printing : the issues of the press in Pennsylvania, 1685-1784. Philadelphia: Press of Matlack & Harvey.
  • Hindman, Jane F. (1960). Mathew Carey, pamphleteer for freedom. New York, P.J. Kenedy.
  • Hosmer, James Kendall (1899). Samuel Adams. Boston New York, Houghton, Mifflin and company.
  • Kaye, Harvey J. (2006). Thomas Paine and the promise of America. New York: Hill and Wang. ISBN 978-0-8090-93441.
  • Landis, David Bachman (1908). Robert Bell, printer (PDF). Lancaster County Historical Society.
  • Larkin, Edward (2005). Thomas Paine and the Literature of Revolution. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-1394-45986.
  • Leonard, Eugenie Andruss (October 1950). "Paper as a Critical Commodity during the American Revolution". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. University of Pennsylvania Press. 74 (4): 488–499. JSTOR 20088183.
  • Parker, Peter J. (Spring 1966). "The Philadelphia Printer: A Study of an Eighteenth-Century Businessman". The Business History Review. The President and Fellows of Harvard College. 40 (1): 24–46. doi:10.2307/3112300. JSTOR 3112300. S2CID 156852880.
  • Rush, Benjamin (2019). Butterfield, Lyman Henry (ed.). Letters of Benjamin Rush. Vol. II. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-6916-55918.
  • Saillant, John (2015). "Common Sense". The Encyclopedia of Greater Philadelphia. Retrieved 14 October 2021.
  • Scharf, John Thomas; Westcott, Thompson (1884). History of Philadelphia, 1609–1884. Vol. I. Philadelphia, L. H. Everts & co.
  • Simes, Thomas; Dalrymple, Campbell (1776). The military guide for young officers. Philadelphia : Re-printed by J. Humphreys, R. Bell, and R. Aitken, printers and booksellers.
  • Thomas, Isaiah (1874). The history of printing in America, with a biography of printers. Vol. I. New York, B. Franklin.
  • Thomas, Isaiah (1874). The history of printing in America, with a biography of printers. Vol. II. New York, B. Franklin.
  • "Common Sense". Thomas Paine Society. Retrieved 12 October 2021.
  • Wroth, Lawrence C. (1938). The Colonial Printer. Portland, Me., The Southworth-Anthoensen press.

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Robert Bell 1732 1784 was a Scottish immigrant to the British colonies in America and became one of many early American printers and publishers active during the years leading up to and through the American Revolution Bell became widely noted for printing Thomas Paine s celebrated work Common Sense a highly influential work during the revolution that openly criticized the British Parliament and their management and taxation of the British American colonies Bell and Paine later had a falling out over profits and publication issues 1 2 As a dedicated patriot Bell printed many pamphlets and books before and during the revolution many of which glowingly expressed his patriotic views 3 He also reprinted a number of popular English works presenting them to the colonies for the first time He ran an auction house which sold rare books in Lancaster and in later life he toured the colonies selling off his massive book collection 3 4 After Bell s death his printing press and other items were sold at a Philadelphia auction house to another prominent printer at an unusually high price 5 6 Auction house listing of rare books sold by Robert Bell 1780 Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Publisher 2 1 American Revolution era 3 Later life 4 See also 5 Notes 6 Citations 7 BibliographyEarly life and family editRobert Bell was born in Glasgow Scotland and was of the Quaker persuasion Growing up in Scotland he was taught the book binding trade He traveled to Berwick upon Tweed and continued in that trade for sometime From there he moved to Dublin and became a bookseller which at first seemed promising but after a few years the enterprise failed He married in Dublin and was for some time the partner of George Alexander Stevens an English playwright and poet Bell emigrated to the British colonies in 1767 and established himself as an auctioneer of books where he soon became a full time bookseller in Philadelphia 1 3 Publisher editBell arrived in Philadelphia from Dublin in 1767 7 a In 1769 or early in 1770 Bell established a printing press and shop in Philadelphia in a building which previously housed the Union Library located next door to Saint Paul s Church on Third street He soon became known as an auctioneer of books once referring to himself on record 7 February 1774 as a Professor of Book Auctioneering 3 Unlike many other printers Bell did not own or work for any newspaper had no government contracts and had to rely on his own prospects 9 Bell was the first to present a number of popular English works from a wide selection in every class of literature current in England in simple affordable printing and binding His successful practice of offering inexpensive editions soon compelled other printers to offer publications where the common citizen could thereby obtain works of literature they would otherwise be unable to afford Bell biographer David Landis maintained in his 1908 essay that such a sales practice put Bell as a publisher way ahead of his time 4 3 As a book seller one of Bell s earliest advertisements appeared in the 14 April 1768 issue of Benjamin Franklin s Pennsylvania Gazette In July he advertised his first publications in the Pennsylvania Chronicle which introduced to the people of this continent the first American edition of two works of those duo immortals and staunch friends The History of Rasselas Prince of Abissinia written by Doctor Samuel Johnson in 1763 and The Traveller written by Oliver Goldsmith in 1764 3 7 In 1772 Bell published Blackstone s Commentaries in four volumes which saw a good subscription rate in Philadelphia Prior to this he published William Robertson s biography of Emperor Charles the Fifth These two works are considered Bell s first successful publications while in Philadelphia 1 10 He also published Sterne s Sentimental Journey Robertson s History of Scotland in three volumes Leland s History of Ireland in four volumes Robinson Crusoe Paradise Lost along with plays poems and novels innumerable 4 There was a paper shortage in the American colonies in the several years leading up to the Revolutionary War and grew more serious during that war as the demand for paper increased Before 1765 most of the paper used by colonial printers and newspapers was imported while the struggling colonial paper mills mostly located in Pennsylvania were not able to meet the demands of the many printers that emerged during the war 11 Bell worked with the public in an effort to collect rags used in the production of paper Along with other printers Bell printed advertisements in various Pennsylvania newspapers for the call and collection of rags used in paper manufacturing along with essays on paper making and the materials used for its production This was yet another effort that would bring the colonies together in a common cause 12 13 American Revolution era edit nbsp Front cover of Thomas Paine s Common Sense with Printed and sold by R Bell inscribed at bottomIn the years leading up to and through the American Revolution Bell printed many pamphlets and books which ardently expressed his patriotic ideas and sentiments As a printer in Philadelphia b he worked tirelessly in that effort more than most printers By 1776 he was especially busy when he printed a continuation of letters to the Legislature on American Independence A second edition of Plain Truth was partly printed on coarse blue paper which as Bell stated constituted the law of necessity and he added further The Patriot surmounteth every difficulty etc 3 Bell was commissioned by Thomas Paine to print his work Common Sense which has been widely considered the most inciteful and influential work of the revolutionary era 15 16 17 c as it advocated American independence now ripe in the minds of colonists and openly criticized the British Crown and Parliamentary rule over the colonies 14 19 Paine originally had intended for his work to be printed in the various colonial newspapers in a series of articles but they were concerned that British colonial authorities very likely would threaten or confiscate their printing operations d On the recommendation of Benjamin Rush who thought highly of Bell referring to him as the Republican printer and thought him courageous enough to print what became a politically volatile work 21 22 e Paine complied and turned over his manuscript to Bell Paine made an agreement with him that if the publication should prove to be an unprofitable venture that he would cover any losses he incurred To further make the prospect attractive Paine agreed to give Bell half of any profits realized The other half Paine intended to purchase wool mittens for the troops going to Quebec giving a written order on Bell to two officers of the Continental Army Bell at once set to printing the work with great enthusiasm feeling just as strongly about the idea of independence as Paine Bell set the price of the pamphlet at two shillings per copy 23 f For fear of recrimination Paine had the first edition of Common Sense published anonymously 14 At the time of its printing there was a serious paper shortage in the colonies compounded by the revolution 25 Bell placed an advertisement in the 10 January 1776 issue of William Bradford s newspaper The Pennsylvania Journal following with one in The Pennsylvania Evening Post on 27 January owned by Benjamin Towne Common Sense was favorably received throughout the colonies and sold very quickly 26 25 Paine s work received some criticism most notably in a pamphlet by James Chalmers writing under the assumed name of Candidus g entitled The Plain Truth also printed by Bell which was not received well by a patriotic populace who drove Chalmers into exile 14 Bell also received heavy criticism for publishing Chalmers work from patriots who assumed Bell was lending Chalmers support for appearing to oppose independence and the ideas set forth in Paine s work In his own defense in reference to Plain Truth Bell inserted in another publication a vindication of the liberty of the press which he described as Extracted from an Old Pamphlet Published in the Year 1756 Entitled Plain Truth The author of this Old Pamphlet like that of Chalmers named Plain Truth was Benjamin Franklin Bell used the words of Franklin who like Bell was a strong proponent of independence and freedom of the press in vindication of a pamphlet against these ideals 27 nbsp The Military Guide for Young officers printed by Robert Bell J Humphreys 1776 this copy signed by John Adams 28 Bell and Paine fell into disagreement about payment and publishing terms over Common Sense which began three weeks after the first advertisement of Paine s work appeared in the Pennsylvania Journal Bell had claimed that he had not made any profit printing and publishing Common Sense and proceeded to publish an unauthorized edition The disagreement grew into a controversy between the two which was covered in the local newspapers Bell s second advertisement in the Evening Post included an attack on Paine s work while Paine was still an anonymous figure Paine responded by taking his business to Bell s competitor the Bradford brothers William and Thomas who printed a third edition that included Paine s name on the cover with a note appended declaring that Bell s second edition was unauthorized 29 The third edition became the standard text which became widely known to this day It also contained an appendix in which Paine included an Epistle to the Quakers During the course of the sordid affair the attacks on the work and each other s character continued mostly by Bell 14 30 31 In 1776 Bell James Humphreys and Robert Aitken together reprinted and published The Military Guide for Young Officers a military historical and definitive dictionary which included passages from essays on the recruiting arming supplying training and discipline of British infantry and cavalry 32 Later life editAfter the Revolutionary War Bell became an acclaimed book auctioneer whose name was recognized from Virginia to New Hampshire As an auctioneer he sold most of his books which he referred to as his jewels and diamonds in New York Boston Baltimore Norfolk among other towns 1 While on a book selling trip to Richmond Virginia Bell became ill and died there on 16 or 23 September 1784 the accounts vary on the exact date 3 Shortly after Bell s death the contents of his shop which included a printing press office furniture tools and books were put up for auction His books and other items sold for a few dollars while the bidding for his printing press started with Mathew Carey for the modest amount of ten dollars After fierce back and forth bidding between Carey and Colonel Eleazer Oswald the editor of the Independent Gazette Bell s press was finally awarded to Carey for one hundred and fifty dollars the average price for a new press 5 6 See also editEarly American publishers and printers Benjamin Franklin William Goddard publisher List of early American publishers and printersNotes edit Philadelphia historian John Thomas Scharf places the date of Bell s arrival in Philadelphia at 1766 8 Philadelphia at this time was the leader in colonial politics as it concerned revolutionary thought a booming mercantile city and was at the center of colonial resistance to British rule over the colonies in the 1770s 14 Revolutionary icon Samuel Adams praised Paine s work Common Sense and The Crisis undoubtedly awakened the public mind and led the people loudly to call for a declaration of independence 18 Before the revolution more than 1200 colonial printers were prosecuted for sedition and libel for printing similar articles or literature 20 In his autobiography Rush refers to Robert Bell as Thomas Bell p 85 Between 120 000 and 150 000 copies of Common Sense were printed in the first year alone It became the first American best seller 24 Samuel Adams frequently used this pen name in his articles also Citations edit a b c d Thomas 1874 Vol I pp 260 261 Aldridge 1984 p 41 a b c d e f g h Landis 1908 Essay a b c Hildeburn pp vii viii a b Hindman 1960 pp 98 99 a b Adelman 2013 p 539 a b Parker 1966 p 32 Scharf 1884 vol I p 309 Parker 1966 p 32 Parker 1966 p 39 Leonard 1950 p 488 Wroth 1938 pp 148 149 Leonard 1950 p 495 a b c d e Saillant 2015 Encyclopedia article Conway amp Cobbett 1892 Vol I p 60 Kaye 2006 p 64 Aldridge 1984 pp 45 108 Hosmer 1899 p 343 Ferguson 2000 p 123 Eldridge Journal 1995 p 337 Butterfield ed 2019 Vol II p 1008 Conway amp Cobbett 1892 Vol I p 68 Aldridge 1959 pp 39 40 Ferguson 2000 p 466 a b Thomas 1874 p 261 Larkin 2005 p 51 Aldridge 1984 p 188 Simes amp Dalrymple 1776 cover page Scharf 1884 vol I p 309 Larkin 2005 pp 51 56 Kaye 2006 p 267 Simes amp Dalrymple 1776 cover pageBibliography editFurther information Bibliography of Early American publishers and printers Adelman Joseph M Fall 2013 Trans Atlantic Migration and the Printing Trade in Revolutionary America Early American Studies University of Pennsylvania Press 11 3 516 544 doi 10 1353 eam 2013 0026 JSTOR 23547682 S2CID 144423922 Aldridge Alfred Owen 1984 Thomas Paine s American ideology Newark University of Delaware Press ISBN 978 0 8741 32601 Conway Moncure Daniel Cobbett William 1892 The life of Thomas Paine Vol I New York London G P Putnam s Sons Conway Moncure Daniel Cobbett William 1892 The life of Thomas Paine Vol II New York London G P Putnam s Sons Eldridge Larry D July 1995 Before Zenger Truth and Seditious Speech in Colonial America 1607 1700 The American Journal of Legal History Oxford University Press 39 3 337 358 doi 10 2307 845791 JSTOR 845791 Ferguson Robert A July 2000 The Commonalities of Common Sense The William and Mary Quarterly Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture 57 3 465 504 doi 10 2307 2674263 JSTOR 2674263 Hildeburn Charles Swift Riche 1885 A century of printing the issues of the press in Pennsylvania 1685 1784 Philadelphia Press of Matlack amp Harvey Hindman Jane F 1960 Mathew Carey pamphleteer for freedom New York P J Kenedy Hosmer James Kendall 1899 Samuel Adams Boston New York Houghton Mifflin and company Kaye Harvey J 2006 Thomas Paine and the promise of America New York Hill and Wang ISBN 978 0 8090 93441 Landis David Bachman 1908 Robert Bell printer PDF Lancaster County Historical Society Larkin Edward 2005 Thomas Paine and the Literature of Revolution Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 1394 45986 Leonard Eugenie Andruss October 1950 Paper as a Critical Commodity during the American Revolution The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography University of Pennsylvania Press 74 4 488 499 JSTOR 20088183 Parker Peter J Spring 1966 The Philadelphia Printer A Study of an Eighteenth Century Businessman The Business History Review The President and Fellows of Harvard College 40 1 24 46 doi 10 2307 3112300 JSTOR 3112300 S2CID 156852880 Rush Benjamin 2019 Butterfield Lyman Henry ed Letters of Benjamin Rush Vol II Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 6916 55918 Saillant John 2015 Common Sense The Encyclopedia of Greater Philadelphia Retrieved 14 October 2021 Scharf John Thomas Westcott Thompson 1884 History of Philadelphia 1609 1884 Vol I Philadelphia L H Everts amp co Simes Thomas Dalrymple Campbell 1776 The military guide for young officers Philadelphia Re printed by J Humphreys R Bell and R Aitken printers and booksellers Thomas Isaiah 1874 The history of printing in America with a biography of printers Vol I New York B Franklin Thomas Isaiah 1874 The history of printing in America with a biography of printers Vol II New York B Franklin Common Sense Thomas Paine Society Retrieved 12 October 2021 Wroth Lawrence C 1938 The Colonial Printer Portland Me The Southworth Anthoensen press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Bell publisher amp oldid 1174832102, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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