Rare Time Magazine Special July Jul 4 1776 and 50 similar items
RARE TIME magazine SPECIAL July Jul 4 1776 1976 THOMAS JEFFERSON INDEPENDENCE
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View full item details »
Shipping options
Seller handling time is 1 business day Details
$6.00 to United States
Offer policy
OBO - Seller accepts offers on this item.
Details
Return policy
Refunds available: See booth/item description for details
Purchase protection
Payment options
PayPal accepted
PayPal Credit accepted
Venmo accepted
PayPal, MasterCard, Visa, Discover, and American Express accepted
Maestro accepted
Amazon Pay accepted
Nuvei accepted
Item traits
Category: | |
---|---|
Quantity Available: |
Only one in stock, order soon |
Condition: |
Very Good |
Publication Year: |
1976 |
Publication Name: |
Time |
Language: |
English |
Seller Notes: | |
Topic: |
News, General Interest |
Publication Frequency: |
Weekly |
Listing details
Seller policies: | |
---|---|
Shipping discount: |
Items after first shipped at flat $1.00 | Free shipping on orders over $40.00 |
Posted for sale: |
March 28 |
Item number: |
1733554681 |
Item description
Exclusive MORE MAGAZINES detailed content description, below! *
T I M E
The news-magazine of the century, with all the news, features, and vintage ADS --
Exclusive MORE MAGAZINES detailed content description, below! *
ISSUE DATE:
July 4 1776 (1976)
IN THIS ISSUE:-
[Detailed contents
description written EXCLUSIVELY for this listing by MORE MAGAZINES! Use 'Control F' to search this
page.] *
This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
SPECIAL BICENTENNIAL EDITION: July 4 1776, published 1976.
COVER: THOMAS JEFFERSON, INDEPENDENCE.
ABOUT THIS ISSUE:
One summer day in his 80th year, ex-President John Adams wrote to his old friend and former rival, Thomas Jefferson. "Who shall write the history of the American Revolution?" Adams asked. "Who will ever be able to write it?"
Answered Jefferson: "Nobody; except merely its external facts
... The life and soul of history must for ever be unknown....
Historians cannot quite accept that judgment, and neither can journalists. This issue is an attempt to reconstruct,
with the tools of both history and journalism, and in our distinctive newsmagazine format, at least part of the life and
soul of the events that gave birth to our nation. As one of
TIME's contributions to the Bicentennial celebration, we began over a year ago to plan an issue devoted to the news in
those sultry first days of July 1776, written and edited more
or less as it would have been if TIME had existed in those
days. Under the supervision of Senior Editor Otto Friedrich,
a team of 14 researchers set to work poring through archives,
letters, diaries and contemporary newspapers, seeking the
myriad colorful details that would have been sought by a
good reporter transplanted into the 18th century. As the research accumulated -- a mountain of some 1,600 pages, over
50 percent more than the amount filed by our correspondents for a regular issue -- a dozen writers were assigned to
apply, figuratively, their quill pens. Scholarly judgment and
historical guidance were provided by Robert A. Rutland of
the University of Virginia, editor of the Madison papers.
Trying to move TIME two centuries back presented problems. A typical one: how to explain what 18th century
money was worth. Answer: the 1776 dollar, which
meant either the Spanish silver dollar or Continental paper redeemable in Spanish silver, would be worth, on the basis of
new U.S. Commerce Department figures, about eleven of today's dollars, and the pound sterling about 50 dollars.
We were able to retain most of our usual department headings, with some obvious omissions (Television, Cinema). Apart
from these, the Law section was left out because law and lawyers had burst the bounds of the legal profession and were
making news in all the great political events of the moment.
No issue of TIME is confined entirely to one week's news.
Background and trends leading up to the present must be in-
cluded, and so it is in this case. But we are not attempting to
deal with the whole Revolution. The Battle of Bunker Hill is
old news by now, and Valley Forge is yet to come. Here are
the other main ground rules we established:
-- We held our presses until Tuesday, July 9, so we could
report that day's proclamation of the Declaration of Independence -- which Congress had voted the previous Thursday -- in front of George Washington and his troops in New York.
Any event that happened after that, we could not have known,
but we made use of later documents in which actors in the
drama of 1776 wrote their recollections.
-- News traveled slowly in 1776 -- the American victory
at Fort Sullivan on June 28, for example, was not reported in
Philadelphia until July 19. But we assumed that there was a
way of getting distant American news into print within a
week of the event. For overseas news, we allowed a month.
-- We did not try to write in 18th century style or to follow the day's usage -- David Hume, for example, complained
of such neologisms as "colonize" and "unshakable." We did
try, however, to avoid glaring anachronisms.
-- Most of our pictures are from the 18th century. In some
cases, when no illustrations of some key scene or figure existed, we assigned artists to produce them specially for this
issue. Since there is no known Jefferson portrait earlier than
1786, for example, we showed Charles Willson Peale's 1791
portrait to Illustrator Louis Glanzman and asked him to use
it as a model for the younger man on our cover. James Wyeth's similarly commissioned painting appears on page 6. And
on a few occasions we accepted a chronological lapse: the
Trumbull painting of Jefferson before Congress (page 5) was
painted in 1787 and contains inaccuracies, but so many Americans have seen the replica in the Capitol that it
has become an image of the era.
This 1776 issue has been a very entertaining
and immensely stimulating project for us, and we hope that
it will be the same for our readers. But we also hope that it
will be far more. At a time when Americans are questioning
the very meaning of their nation's basic beliefs, it is refreshing and reassuring to return to our origins, to our fundamental values, and to try to illuminate how earlier Americans saw the world and their place in it. Above all, it is
fascinating to see how they dealt with issues that still confront us today. "Taking a retrospective view of what is passed,"
said George Mason, author of the Virginia declaration of
rights, "we seem to have been treading upon enchanted
ground."
* NOTE: OUR content description is GUARANTEED accurate for THIS
magazine. Editions are not always the same, even with the same title, cover and issue date.
This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31
Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X
11". COMPLETE and in VERY GOOD/NEAR FINE condition -- no address label. (See photo)
A great snapshot of the time, and
a terrific Birthday present or Anniversary gift!
Careful packaging, Fast shipping, ALL
GUARANTEED --

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