Abstract

On Tuesday, August 9, 1864, the New York Times published an unassuming editorial titled “Adirondack.” 1 Despite consuming nearly a full column down the right side of the page, to a causal reader that day the topic might have seemed trivial, or at the very least indistinguishable from the news that surrounded it. Included was a report of the city’s expenses for the coming year, intelligence of Admiral Farragut’s campaign against the port of Mobile, and a letter praising the good people of New York for providing blackberry wine “for our noble and suff ering soldiers” entrenched in their third year of civil war. 2

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