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Notes

 
[1]

Massachusetts Centinel, April 23, 1788, published the Arret for the encouragement of commerce between the United States and France.

[2]

Joseph Dorfman, The Economic Mind in American Civilization 1606-1865 (1946), I, 463; Eloise Ellery, Brissot de Warville A Study in the History of The French Revolution (1915), pp. 37, 48; Frederick L. Nussbaum, Commercial Policy in The French Revolution (1923), pp. 194-195.

[3]

J. P. Brissot de Warville, New Travels in the United States of America 1788 (1964), p. 16, n. 18.

[4]

A translated extract on the American Fur Trade was published by the Independent Chronicle, July 17, 1788; a translated extract from the introduction was published by the Massachusetts Centinel, August 2, 1788.

[5]

Massachusetts Centinel, July 26, 1788.

[6]

Massachusetts Centinel, July 30, 1788.

[7]

Clifford K. Shipton, Isaiah Thomas Printer, Patriot and Philanthropist 1749-1831 (1948), p. 51.

[8]

George Richards Minot, The History of the Insurrection in Massachusetts in the Year Seventeen Hundred and Eighty-Six and the Rebellion Consequent Thereon (Worcester, 1788).

[9]

Joseph de Nancrede to Isaiah Thomas, Boston, August 5, 1788 (American Antiquarian Society).

[10]

Logographic Press, Catalogue of Books, single sheet (British Museum); "John Walter," Dictionary of National Biography.

[11]

Massachusetts Centinel, July 30, 1788.

[12]

J.-P. Brissot, Correspondance et Papiers (Paris, [1912]), p. 198; Papiers Roland, Ms 9534, fol. 335 (Bibliothèque Nationale).

[13]

Harvard et La France (Paris, 1936), p. 176; Harvard University Corporation Records, September 8, 1788, III, 322 (Harvard University Archives).

[14]

Allen J. Barthold, History of the French Newspaper Press in America 1780-1790 (Ph.D. Dissertation, Yale University, 1931), pp. 169-173, 233; Massachusetts Centinel, February 11, 1789; Prospectus of the Gallo-American Society in Etienne Claviere and J. P. Brissot de Warville, Considerations on The Relative Situation of France, and the United States of America (London, 1788), pp. 321-323.

[15]

Barthold, History of the French Newspaper Press in America, p. 200.

[16]

J. P. Brissot de Warville to Joseph Nancrede, Paris, January 20, 1790, L. J. Papineau Papers (Public Archives of Canada).

[17]

J. P. Brissot de Warville to Joseph Nancrede, Paris, July [?] 23, 1792, L. J. Papineau Papers (Public Archives of Canada). Translated by Madeleine B. Stern.

[18]

J. P. Brissot de Warville, A Discourse upon the Question, Whether the King shall be tried? (Boston, 1791), p. 28. The Advertisement of the Translator appears on pp. iii-iv.

[19]

Brissot de Warville to Nancrede, Paris, July [?] 23, 1792, Papineau Papers. Translated by Madeleine B. Stern.

[20]

Ibid.

[21]

Joseph Nancrede to Citizen Edmond Charles Genêt, Boston, September 30, 1793, Edmond Charles Genêt Papers (Library of Congress).

[22]

Joseph Nancrede to Citizen Edmond Charles Genêt, Boston, September 20, 1793, Edmond Charles Genêt Papers (Library of Congress).

[23]

Reflexions de J. P. Brissot, July 25, 1793, L. J. Papineau Papers (Public Archives of Canada). Nancrede's papers were bequeathed to L. J. Papineau.

[24]

Jacob Blanck, Bibliography of American Literature I (1955), # 882 and # 887; Robert F. Durden, "Joel Barlow in the French Revolution," The William and Mary Quarterly, 8 (1951), 327-354.

[25]

Salem Gazette, June 9, 1812. Nancrede was the bearer of Joel Barlow to P. S. Du Ponceau, Paris, February 23, 1812, L. J. Papineau Papers (Public Archives of Canada).

[26]

Joseph Nancrede was naturalized on "the third Tuesday of February 1799" in the Supreme Judicial Court of Suffolk County, Boston (information from William E. Lind, Research Consultant, National Archives and Records Service).

[27]

Centinel Extra. Joseph Nancrede's fixed-Priced-Catalogue; Being chiefly a collection of Books lately imported in the Minerva and Gallen, from London (Boston, [1803]), pp. 3 and 12; John Malham, The Naval Gazetteer; or, Seaman's Complete Guide (Boston: Spotswood & Nancrede, 1797), advertisement at end of Vol. II: "Books Published by Joseph Nancrede"; Joseph Nancrede, Catalogue of Books Just Imported from London (Boston, 1798), pp. 8 and 38; Joseph Nancrede, Fixed-Price-Catalogue Of a large collection of Books (Boston, [1803?]), pp. 4 and 21.

[28]

Catalogue of Books to be Sold by Thomas, Son & Thomas, at their Bookstore, in Worcester, Massachusetts. October MDCCXCVI (Worcester, [1796]), p. 22.