Hugh Gaine
Hugh Gaine | |
---|---|
Born |
1726 or 27 Ireland |
Died | April 27, 1807 |
Occupation | Publisher |
Hugh Gaine (c. 1726 - April 27, 1807) was an 18th-century American printer, bookseller, and newspaper publisher.
Gaine was born in Belfast, Ireland about 1726 and came to New York in 1745, where he later started publishing the New York Mercury. When the British moved on New York City early in the American Revolutionary War, he crossed the river to Newark, New Jersey and published a lukewarm pro-independence newspaper. After deciding the British were going to win the war, he returned to New York and began publishing in their favor, publishing accounts highly favorable to the British.[1]
Though Gaine's newspaper ventures were a failure (he exited the field by 1783), he did do well in book publishing.[2][3][4]
References
- ↑ Chopra, Ruma. Printer Hugh Gaine Crosses and Re-Crosses the Hudson, in New York History, Vol. 90, No. 4 (Fall 2009), pp. 271-85
- ↑ Fellow, Anthony. American Media History, pp. 46-48 (3d ed. 2012)
- ↑ Chopra, Ruma. Choosing Sides: Loyalists in Revolutionary America, pp. 14-15 (2013)
- ↑ Ford, Paul Leicester, ed. The Journals of Hugh Gaine: Printer (1902)
External links
- Lorenz, Alfred Lawrence. HUGH GAINE, A COLONIAL PRINTER-EDITOR'S ODYSSEY TO LOYALISM (Southern Illinois University Press 1972)
- Hugh Gaine receipt book, 1767-1799, The New York Public Library, Archives & Manuscripts (includes biography)
- Hugh Gaine's Catalogue of Books (1792) (full text, Google books)
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