A LIST OP EARLY AMERICAN BROADSIDES, 1080—1800, BELONGING TO THE LIBRARY OF TUB AMERICAN ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY. With an Introduction and Notes BY NATHANIEL PAINE. Wmwter, It. % PRESS OE CHARLES HAMILTON. 311 Main Street. 18 9 7. One Hundred Cories Reprinted from the Proceedings of THE American Antiquarian Society, April, 1897. EARLY AMERICAN BROADSIDES, 1680-1800. Samuel F. Haven, LL.D., the late librarian of the American Antiquarian Society, in a report presented in April, 1872, called attention to Broadsides and their value as material for history and said, “ they imply a great deal more than they literally express and disclose visions of the interior condition of society such as cannot be found in formal narratives.” Dr. Haven, in company with the late Charles Deane, LL.D., had, a few years previously, ex- amined with great interest the large and valuable collection of Broadsides in the library of the Society of Antiquaries of London and in the above mentioned report alludes to it with some particularity. Mr. W. H. Overall, formerly librarian of the Corpora- tion of London, presented a paper on Broadsides, at a meeting of the Library Association of the United King- dom, held in February, 1881, in which he speaks of the valuable collection of the Society of Antiquaries, and of the historical information derived from this class of litera- ture. He also suggests that an index of all collections of OO this kind would be of great value to historical students.1 The Boston Public Library has a valuable collection of this class of historical literature, and has from time to time published fac-similes of the more important ones.2 With the report of Dr. Haven in mind, the writer has 1A catalogue of the Printed Broadsides in the possession of the Society of Antiquaries, compiled by Robert Lemon, was published in 1860. 2 Boston Public Library Bulletins, October, 1892, and January and October, 1893. 4 looked over the collection of Broadsides belonging to the American Antiquarian Society and, as supplementary to his “Early American Imprints” presented in October, 1895, has made a list of the American Broadsides in the Society’s library, printed from 1680 to 1800 inclusive, in the hope that it may be of some use to students who have occasion to consult our library. This list, which includes about two hundred titles, has several of historical interest, notably those prirtted during the Revolutionary period, there being over sixty issued between 1772 and 1779, most of which were printed at Boston. The earliest printed broadside found in the collection of the American Antiquarian Society, is dated London, 1660; it is a “Proclamation Against Vicious, Debauch’d and Prophane Persons,” issued by authority of Charles 11. at Whitehall, and printed by Christopher Baker and John Bell, Printers to the King’s Most Excellent Majesty. The earliest American Broadside that has yet come to light is a Proclamation for Fast issued by the General Court of Massachusetts in 1680-1. There is a large col- lection of this class of Broadsides, there being nearly one hundred annual Fast and Thanksgiving Proclamations printed before 1800, besides several issued for special occa- sions, but as all these have been so fully described by our associate, Rev. W. DeLoss Love, Jr., in his “ The Fast and Thanksgiving Days of New England,” it was not deemed necessary to include them in the present list. But few of the Broadsides mentioned have been