The Beginning of Newspaper Politics

John Fenno was a penmanship teacher from Boston who had failed at keeping an inn, managing a shop and working in the export business before working as a journalist for the Boston Centinel. There he gained recognition for his defense of the Constitution.   With the backing of prominent Bostonians, he moved to the nation’s capital in New York City in 1789 He established the Gazette of the United States. He quickly gained the notice of Alexander Hamilton, who supported Fenno’s vow to “support the Constitution & the Administration formed upon its national principles.” Fenno sought   to provide the government with an official newspaper to defend Washington, his administration, and its policies. In 1790, Thomas Jefferson returned from France, concerned that those in power would misuse or abuse federal authority. He courted Fenno, encouraging him to promote his more liberal views. Fenno, however, remained loyal to Hamilton, who later funneled the Senate’s printing business to him. Hamilton also lent him sizeable sums of money in 1790 and 1791. When the nation’s capital moved to Philadelphia, Fenno and his Gazette of the United States followed it there.[1]

After failing to persuade Fenno to change his views, Jefferson approached Benjamin Franklin Bache, the favorite grandson of Benajmin Franklin, about using his newspaper as a rival platform to Fenno’s explicitly pro-Administration Gazette. Bache, who edited the Philadelphia General Advertiser (later the Aurora), declined the offer.   Undeterred, Jefferson surreptitiously recruited James Madison’s roommate from Princeton, poet Philip Freneau, to publish the National Gazette. To help finance Freneau’s efforts, Jefferson gave him a position as a State Department translator, and directed government printing jobs his way. Remaining behind the scenes, Jefferson worked through James Madison, John Beckley and Henry Lee, careful never to mention the National Gazette in his correspondence with Freneau. The newspaper appeared in October 1791.[2]

Freneau was a one-time sea captain, imprisoned by the British at the end of the Revolutionary War, a radical, and a low-paid journalist working in New York City, when Jefferson recruited him to publish a paper. The National Gazette, published semiweekly, criticized Washington, and his administration, especially Alexander Hamilton and his financial policies. Articles were written under pseudonyms cloaking the identities of Jefferson, Madison and his emerging Democratic-Republican associates. Soon Washington loathed the National Gazette, calling the editor “that Rascal Freneau.”

Hamilton and Jefferson began to quarrel, using their respective gladiators of the quill, Fenno and Freneau, to shield themselves from public recognition. Washington urged them to tone down their polemics, but Hamilton and Jefferson were not dissuaded. Benjamin Bache, along with his assistant William Duane, and James Reynolds, jumped into the fray, denouncing Washington as well.

Mathew Carey, never fond of faction, was incensed. He found the “coarse and vulgar” assaults by Reynolds “did more to injure the cause of Democracy than all the efforts of its enemies could have done in five years.” He voiced the opinion of many in the Irish-American community, proud of what America and George Washington had accomplished during the Revolution.[3]

Unlike other newspaper publishers, Freneau had no financial involvement in the National Gazette. Like Mathew Carey, he encountered the difficulties of distributing the publication nationally. Freneau was a poet and a writer, and seemed to despise serving his subscribers with regularity.   The newspaper lost money, and an important investor warned that he would discontinue his financial backing. When the Yellow Fever struck Philadelphia both Fenno and Freneau stopped publishing their newspapers. Fenno resumed publication, but Freneau did not. [4]

Benjamin Bache and the Aurora supplanted it. Benjamin Franklin tried to steer Bache away from politics and into type founding. Bache had been exposed to revolutionary ideals in France. After Franklin’s death in 1790, Bache threw aside the approval of his social peers, and the profitability of type founding to pursue political journalism. Bache infamously criticized George Washington. After the demise of the National Gazette, Bache was ready voice the viewpoints of Jefferson’s new party.[5]

His wife Margaret was at his side. She was a daughter of a plantation owner from St. Croix and stepdaughter of a well-regarded Philadelphia physician. She enthusiastically supported Bache descending the social scale and associating with Democratic-Republicans from lower class neighborhoods. When Bache was out of town she capably managed the newspaper.[6]

 TRANSITION TO PUBLISHERHamilton’s Report on Manufactures

[1] American National Biography, John Fenno; Jeffrey Pasley, “’The Tyranny of Printers’: Newspaper Politics in the Early American Republic (Charlottesville: University Press, 2001) 51.

[2] Pasley, Tyranny of Printers, 63-6.

[3] David A. Wilson, United Irishmen, United States: Immigrant Radicals in the Early Republic (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1998) 42.

[4] Pasley, Tyranny of Printers, 76-7.

[5] Pasley, Tyranny of Printers, 80-92.

[6] Pasley, Tyranny of Printers, 92.

1760 – 1839