The American Museum (magazine)

The American Museum (also known as, The American Museum; or Repository of Ancient and Modern Fugitive Pieces &c. Prose and Poetical and The American Museum, or, Universal Magazine) was a monthly American literary magazine published by Mathew Carey in the late-18th century. The American Museum "shares with the Columbian Magazine the honor of being the first successful American magazine."[1]

Carey established the magazine in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, using $400 that was given to him by Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette. Carey published a total of 72 issues (twelve volumes) of the magazine—one each month from January 1787 to December 1792. The magazine reprinted significant historical documents of American history and also some original work.

In its first edition, The American Museum republished Thomas Paine's Common Sense.[1] The proposed Constitution of the United States was first published in the magazine. Contributors to the magazine included John Adams, Timothy Dwight IV, Benjamin Franklin, Philip Freneau, Alexander Hamilton, Francis Hopkinson, David Humphreys, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, Benjamin Rush, John Trumbull, George Washington and Noah Webster.

The American Museum had approximately 1,250 subscribers, including many of the notable men of the United States.[1] (In the July 1787 edition, Carey included a list of subscribers, which included Benjamin Franklin, John Jay, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and George Washington.) However, many of the subscriptions were credit accounts and the magazine was not profitable. As a result, Carey was forced to stop publication at the end of 1792.[2]

Notes

  1. Frank Luther Mott (1930). A History of American Magazines, 1741–1850 (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press) pp. 100–103.
  2. Edd Applegate (August 17, 2012). The Rise of Advertising in the United States: A History of Innovation to 1960. Scarecrow Press. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-8108-8406-9. Retrieved March 22, 2020.
gollark: Do you know what that *is*?
gollark: Some definitions of omnipotence exclude logically impossible stuff.
gollark: That's stupid.
gollark: "Conventional thought" includes stuff like the law of the excluded middle, which is important or any statement you make about god is basically meaningless because the opposite is true.
gollark: God can also be beetroot for entirely arbitrary reasons.
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