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The Farmer's Weekly Museum

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Farmer's Weekly Museum (1793–1810) was a newspaper published in New Hampshire. In addition to reprinting public documents and reports, it was a leading literary journal of the 1790s.[1] Based in Walpole, New Hampshire, it was published from 1797 until 1799[2] and was preceded by the New Hampshire and Vermont Journal.[3] D. Carlisle was the publisher.[3]

Joseph Dennie served as the paper's editor from 1796 until 1798.[4]

Oxford Reference dates it from 1793 until 1810, with contributors including founder Isaiah Thomas, T.G. Fessenden, John Davis, Joseph Dennie, and Royall Tyler.[5][6]

References

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  1. ^ Lora, Ronald; Longton, William; Longton, William Henry (1999). The Conservative Press in Eighteenth-and Nineteenth-century America. ISBN 9780313310430.
  2. ^ "The farmer's weekly museum, Newhampshire and Vermont Journal at Stanford Libraries".
  3. ^ a b "The Farmer's weekly museum Newhampshire and Vermont journal. [volume] at Library of Congress".
  4. ^ "Farmer's Weekly Museum | newspaper, Walpole, New Hampshire, United States at Encyclopædia Britannica".
  5. ^ "Farmer's Weekly Museum entry at Oxford Reference".
  6. ^ "Joseph Dennie | American author".
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