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Niles’ Registers from 1820 – unearthing interesting content (part 1)

Earlier this year Timothy Hughes Rare & Early Newspapers offered free issues of 200-year-old Niles’ Registers [1] with a request for collectors to let us know if they found interesting, historical or unusual content within the issue they received. Below is the 1st installment of their “finds”. Enjoy.

Collector L.D.  from New Jersey –

“Niles’ Weekly Register” – April 1, 1820.

Located on the front page.

Well I can’t say that I’m an expert on 1820s vernacular, I read this article from the edition I received and it seems (more than) a bit odd. “Covering the country with smiles” sounds like something that would’ve been said in today’s way of speaking, but not something that would’ve been said 200 years ago. Thoughts?

Collector J.T. from Georgia –

“Niles’ Weekly Register” – November 11, 1820.

In the “Foreign Articles” section Page 15 of 16.

Interesting find – News of the suicide of the first and last King of Haiti.

“HAYTI”

“King Henry has committed suicide by blowing out his brains. One account says that he did the deed in July, and that the event was kept secret to secure the succession of his son; and another that it happened about the 1st of October. But it seems certain that he is dead. He had been struck with a paralytic, and no longer able to command his troops, they became mutinous, and revolted at St. Marks – he ordered five regiments to march and punish the insurgents — they refused, and then his kingship made his exit. A body of 6000 troops……. etc.”

Wikipedia History reports that, “His son and heir was assassinated 10 days later.”

For historical references see: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=q7lfSjjMNU8 [2]
and
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Henry-Christophe [3] “… He built the famous Citadelle Laferrière, a fortress south of his capital at Cap-Haïtien. In August 1820 he suffered a paralytic stroke. When his condition was learned, revolts broke out. In despair over his failure to pacify the country, he shot himself at Sans-Souci palace (the citadel and palace were designated UNESCO World Heritage sites in 1982), and his kingdom became part of the Haitian republic in 1821. …”
Also:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henri_Christophe [4]