The New England Almanack (Leavitt) - 1844 (USA) Slavery

$30.00 CAD

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                 NO. XLVIII.
The New England Almanack, 
           on an improved plan
                for the year 
                    1844
Being  bissextile, or leap year, and, of the Independence of the United States of America, the sixty-eight  until July the Fourth, thence the sixty-ninth year
By Dudley Leavitt Teacher of Mathematics and Astronomy
              Concord N.H.
   Published by John. F. Brown

 

Nice graphic on title page of sun-dial

Information includes:

- # of Free White Persons in the United States (by age and gender)
- List of Governors in N.H. since it became a State
- lunar and solar eclipses
- monthly calendars with sunrise and sunset, moon changes, high water, predicted weather,, etc.
- engraving for each month
- courts ( federal and New England states)
- rates of postage
- times of state elections, meetings of Legislature, and seats of government
- distances, moneys, weights, and measures mentioned in the Bible
- successful treatments of a cancer (recipe for a potion!)
- musical miscellany
- historical facts
- vessels of war in the United States
- #  of free colored persons in the United States
- # of slaves
- roads
Ad for Book and Job Printing (Concord N.H.)

 

First edition, 48 pages (incl. cover), 12mo 7 3/4" X 5"

Condition: Poor-Good. Nips, tucks and small tears throughout. Tears and folds of cover, as well as some missing paper (not affecting text)-. Generally something on most pages.  Age stains. Some owner comments in the calendar pages.

Scarce pre-Civil War document in a well-used state. Couple of slavery references.

Dudley Leavitt (1772 – September 20, 1851) was an American publisher. He was an early graduate of Phillips Exeter Academy in his native town of Exeter, New Hampshire, and later moved to Gilmanton where he first edited a newspaper and taught school. Within a few years, Leavitt relocated to Meredith, where in addition to teaching school and farming, he began publishing in 1797 Leavitt's Farmers Almanack, one of the nation's earliest farmers' almanacs. A polymath, Leavitt poured his knowledge of disparate fields including mathematics, language and astronomy into the wildly popular almanacs, which outlived their creator, being published until 1896.

But the almanac, which he dubbed Leavitt's Farmers' Almanack and Miscellaneous Yearbook, became such a success that after a while Leavitt shelved many of his other activities to focus on it. The once-farfetched idea was a runaway hit. By 1846, for instance, Leavitt's almanacs were selling some 60,000 copies for that year's two editions – a tremendous number for the era.

Leavitt aimed the almanacs at the general population of New England, supplying tips on everything from farming to the weather to astronomy. As word spread about the publication, readership jumped, and the publication became a fixture throughout the region. The almanacs were sold at general stores, and later at grocery stores and drug stores. Leavitt was aided in some of the almanac's calculations geared towards agriculture by his nephew, astronomer William B. Leavitt.

WIKIPEDIA


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