Project Gutenberg, Google Books and the Internet Archive have been incredibly valuable to historians. I’ve personally downloaded hundreds of old books in pdf form, that I’ve been able to read, highlight, annotate, and link to my own documents, to enrich my research and improve my understanding of the past. Google has been places I can’t afford to go and has scanned books that 25 years ago I probably wouldn’t have known existed. And the ability to “mine” all these old texts with keyword searches means that I can use a wide variety of sources for a project like my search for all the Massachusetts Darwins, that I’d never have the time to look at one by one for each individual.
But sometimes there’s no substitute for seeing and touching the actual book. In addition to the antiquarian coolness of handling something old, the physical properties of old books are sometimes very meaningful. I learned this lesson when I saw a little book a few years ago at the American Antiquarian Society.
I had been interested in Dr. Charles Knowlton (1800-1850) for a couple of years. A lifelong resident of western Massachusetts, he was famous for publishing The Fruits of Philosophy, the first book on birth control by an American. Between 1832 and 1835, Knowlton was fined in Taunton, imprisoned in Cambridge, and then dragged into court again in Greenfield. To further illustrate the radical nature of Knowlton’s birth control message and the social forces that opposed it, over fifty years later Londoners Charles Bradlaugh and Annie Besant were tried by the Queen’s Bench for republishing Knowlton’s book!
There is a copy of The Fruits of Philosophy available on Google, full text. Printed in San Francisco, it’s an 1891 reprint of Bradlaugh and Besant’s reprint, suggesting that Knowlton’s material remained interesting to readers for generations after it’s initial publication. I thought this text had already told me all I needed to know about Knowlton’s book, so I asked to see the originals at the American Antiquarian Society out of a purely geeky desire to hold something that Knowlton might have once handled himself.
The Society’s two copies of The Fruits of Philosophy arrived at the librarian’s table in small cardboard boxes. As I carried them back to my desk, I thought they might contain fragments of the books or torn pages. When I opened the first box, I was surprised to find inside it a complete, palm-sized book in a blue cloth hard cover. In an “aha” moment of clarity, I remembered that when Knowlton was released from prison in Cambridge in 1833, he made a speech in which he referred to the Fruits as his “little book.” Later, in his 1835 article on the “Excitement in Ashfield,” he again said he had been persecuted for publishing a “little book.” It had never occurred to me that he was speaking literally.
The Fruits of Philosophy was contraband when it was published. Knowlton was fined, imprisoned, and continually harassed for several years after its printing. Boston publisher Abner Kneeland was tried and imprisoned for blasphemy, but people familiar with his case at the time understood he had been targeted for his role in publishing of the 1834 edition of the Fruits, and for advertising it constantly in his paper, The Investigator. It is completely obvious, in this context, why buyers of the book would have wanted it to be little, pocket-sized, easily concealable. But the obvious had never occurred to me, looking at the Google scan of the 1891 reprint.
The threadbare blue cover of the Society’s 1832 edition, and the poor production values (the title page has a faint double-strike) also tell us about the way the first edition of the The Fruits of Philosophy was produced and about how it was probably passed from hand to hand secretly, by women who had decided by the 1830s that they ought to have some say in their reproductive lives. It’s easy to imagine women (and sometimes maybe their husbands) palming the little book and handing it off literally under the noses of church and civil authorities who sought to suppress it. The 1834 “Kneeland” edition used higher quality type, paper, and binding, but significantly it retained the tiny dimensions of the original. We’re very lucky that a few of these books have survived, to tell the story that surrounds, but is not included in the printed words.
The video below includes photos of the little books:
I join you in love of old books, Dan. Great treasures. In my search for history of times in which ancestors lived, old books have provided helpful descriptions of life way back….. one also a bit of new knowledge about an ancestor!
Thanks for a great read.
A wonderful example, Dan!