Join the Revolution!
Enjoy this blog post by our awesome student assistant, Mirna Zaher. Mirna is a senior at Kennesaw State University studying International Affairs and Anthropology. Mirna loves working with our collection of historic newspapers. Today, she is discussing her experience working with newspapers from the Revolutionary War era. . .
There are many cool and interesting things here in our collections at KSU. The best collections are always the ones that surprise you and give you a connection to the past that you did not previously have. One such collection for me is our collection of Revolutionary War-era newspapers. The Revolutionary War shaped our nation in the largest of ways and birthed the American principles that we still abide by today. Through our historic newspaper collection, we have the ability to look at events as they unfolded in the same way people living at the time would have done.
From this collection, several newspapers and articles are worth noting. For example, there is a copy of the Connecticut Gazette from the morning of September 28, 1781. For those of you that do not know the significance of this date, it is the first day of the Battle of Yorktown, the battle in which America won the war. Going through this paper, it was clear to see that the battle was about to spark. It references the British Fleet heading to Yorktown, the French fleet located off the coast, and that American troops were in Chesapeake Bay. It is like a scene straight out of Hamilton. Reading about this particular battle allows you to lay out the battle and see the mistakes made by the British that only someone who lives after the fact could do. An interesting thing I spotted in another paper was the famous “Join or Die” propaganda piece we all learn about in high school. This highly influential illustration helped push the colonies to rise up against England. Seeing this illustration first hand rather than in a textbook is almost surreal. Above all, some of the most amazing finds in these newspapers are the many references to our Revolutionary War heroes: George Washington, Samuel Adams, Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, John Laurens, John Hancock and so on. Reading contemporaneous articles about these individuals is an enlightening experience. Modern-day textbooks tend to focus on their role and importance from a historical sense, but these eighteenth-century newspapers also give us a glimpse into their humanity, which is something that I think, is easy to lose in any discussion about history.
Handling these newspapers and looking through their contents really made me appreciate the large amount of effort that our founders put forth to ensure our freedom. These newspapers are definitely worth exploring if you are interested in America and our amazing history.












