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Hannah Bunce Watson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American newspaper publisher (1749-1807)

Hannah Bunce Watson Hudson (28 December 1749 – 27 September 1807)[1] was anewspaper publisher from the U.S. state ofConnecticut, whose printed output supported theAmerican Revolutionary War.[2] She was the first woman to become a newspaper editor in Connecticut, and one of the first in the United States.[1]

Biography

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In December, 1777, beforeGeorge Washington had become the firstPresident of the United States, and whileJonathan Trumbull wasGovernor of Connecticut, the newspapers inBoston, Massachusetts that supported the Revolution had been shut down by the British, and inNew York City only pro-BritishTory papers were being published. TheConnecticut Courant, then the oldest and largest newspaper in theThirteen Colonies with a circulation of 8,000, remained open. In December of that year the owner and publisher, Ebenezer Watson, died ofsmallpox. His widow, Hannah Bunce Watson, already caring for five children under the age of 7 and with little printing training, took on the additional burden of publishing theCourant. She made theCourant employee George Goodwin a business partner,[3] and used the paper to support the war effort against the British.[2]

The paper supplied battle descriptions from the colonies, news and analysis of Colonial and British home events, and criticisms of the BritishParliament. Excluding advertising and short local items, the paper carried only nine non-political articles during this period.[4]

In January 1778, Tory supporters set fire to the mill that provided paper to theCourant, and Watson and Goodwin announced its imminent closure. The day after the fire, Watson and Goodwin printed a "half sheet" edition of the paper. Then "she and the widow [Sarah] Ledyard, co-owner of the mill, petitioned Connecticut's legislature...for a loan to rebuild the mill."[1] Within a day, theConnecticut General Assembly authorized the establishment of astate lottery to support the rebuilding of the mill, and theCourant maintained publication without interruption.[1]

In 1779 Watson married Barzillai Hudson, who took over her share of the printing business,[2] and in 1837 theConnecticut Courant became the dailyHartford Courant, which is today the largest daily newspaper in Connecticut.[5]

She was inducted into theConnecticut Women's Hall of Fame in 1994.[3]

Personal life

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Hannah Bunce was the daughter of Aaron and Hannah Bunce. She was born in Hartford, Connecticut, on 28 December 1749. She became the second wife of Ebenezer Watson in 1771. After his death, she married a second time to Barzillai Hudson in 1779.[a] She died 27 September 1807 in Hartford.[1]

Notes

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  1. ^They had four children: Henry, Olive, Lavinia, and Hannah.[6] Henry marriedMaria Trumbull[7] and later became the mayor ofHartford, Connecticut.[6]

References

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  1. ^abcde"Connecticut Newspaper Pioneers".Connecticut State Library. Archived fromthe original on 2013-08-05. Retrieved2013-08-08.
  2. ^abcHumphrey, Carol Sue (2011).Voices of Revolutionary America: Contemporary Accounts of Daily Life. Greenwood. p. 256.ISBN 978-0-313-37732-7.
  3. ^ab"Hannah Bunce Watson".Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame. Retrieved2013-08-08.
  4. ^Hannah Bunce Watson: Patriot Printer in the American Revolution.Education Resources Information Center. August 1978. Retrieved2013-08-08.
  5. ^"Hartford Courant launches new website, sans pay-wall".Yale Daily News. 28 February 2013.
  6. ^ab"Hannah B. Watson: A Pioneering Patriot".Hartford Courant. October 19, 2014. pp. M10. RetrievedMarch 7, 2021.
  7. ^Brown, Chandos Michael (2014-07-14).Benjamin Silliman: A Life in the Young Republic. Princeton University Press. p. 346.ISBN 978-1-4008-6022-7.

Further reading

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  • Claghorn, Charles Eugene. 1992. Women Patriots of the American Revolution: Biographical Dictionary. Scarecrow P.
  • Grundset, Eric, Briana L. Diaz, and Hollis L. Gentry. 2011. America's Women in the Revolutionary Era: A History through Bibliography. Washington, D.C.: National Society Daughters of the American Revolution.

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