Celebrations Today – March 13
Holidays and observances
- Anniversary of the election of Pope Francis (Vatican City)
- Christian feast day:
- Blessed Irmã Dulce Pontes
- Earliest day on which Friday of Sorrows can fall, while April 16 is the latest; observed on Friday before Good Friday.
- Euphrasia of Constantinople
- Gerald of Mayo
- James Theodore Holly (Episcopal Church (USA))
- Leander of Seville
- Leticia
- Nicephorus
- Roderick
- Sabinus of Hermopolis
- Kasuga Matsuri (Kasuga Grand Shrine, Nara, Japan)
- National Elephant Day (Thailand)
Celebrations Today – USA: March 13
National Coconut Torte Day
National Earmuff Day
National Good Samaritan Day
National Jewel Day
National K9 Veterans Day
National Open an Umbrella Indoors Day
National Napping Day – Day after Return of Daylight Saving Day
National Alfred Hitchcock Day
National Baked Scallops Day
World Day Against Cyber Censorship
Today in US History: March 13
Enoch Brooks’ Curious Book
A Curious Hieroglyphick Bible
Worcester, Mass.: Isaiah Thomas, 1788.
American Treasures of the Library of Congress
Inside the Library of Congress’ copy of a rare children’s Bible, someone carefully wrote “Enoch Brooks’ Book, Princeton, March 13th, 1789″ in permanent ink. The inscription likely refers to Enoch Brooks of Princeton, Massachusetts, though he may have been too young to write it himself. Now a rare artifact of Americana, Brooks’ book is one of only a few known copies of A Curious Hieroglyphick Bible, printed in 1788 by Isaiah Thomas in nearby Worcester, Massachusetts. This book was the first American version of a novelty Bible that replaced some words with pictures to encourage children’s interest as well as their reading skills. With nearly five hundred woodcuts by American artists, this Bible was also the most ambitious woodcut volume produced in America up to that time.
A Curious Hieroglyphick Bible is one of more than a hundred children’s book titles published by Isaiah Thomas (1749-1831). A preeminent early American printer and pioneer publisher of children’s literature, Thomas began his apprenticeship as a young boy in Boston, working under Zechariah Fowle. Over the course of a long career, Thomas published more than four hundred titles in many editions, for adults as well as for children, including the first dictionary printed in America. Also a bookseller, he eventually owned more than twenty bookstores in several states.
“A little Boy and Girl reading,”
A Little Pretty Pocket-Book: Intended for the Instruction and Amusement of Little Master Tommy, and Pretty Miss Polly, 78,
Worcester, Mass.: Isaiah Thomas, 1787.
Children’s Literature, Rare Book and Special Collections
Masthead and part of front page of The Massachusetts Spy
Paul Revere, engraver,
Boston: Isaiah Thomas, 1774 July 7.
American Women
One of Thomas’ most significant ventures was The Massachusetts Spy, a newspaper he founded with Fowle in 1770. Widely read and exceedingly anti-British, his paper so angered Tory authorities that just three days before the battles of Lexington and Concord in April 1775, Thomas was forced to smuggle his press out of Boston. He fled to Worcester, Massachusetts, where he quickly set up shop and remained as a resident for the next fifty-six years.
After the war, Thomas created the highly regarded Massachusetts Magazine, a literary publication and authored A History of Printing in America (1810)—the nation’s first such history, and still a significant resource today. His most enduring legacy, however, is the American Antiquarian Society (AAS), which he established in Worcester in 1812, serving as its president until his death. Thomas willed his considerable library to the AAS. From his original 8,000-item collection, the Society’s library has grown to include copies of two-thirds of everything printed in the United States through 1821. It remains one of the most complete collections of early American printed works in existence. By contrast, the Library of Congress holds more than 16,000 U.S. imprints from 1640 to 1800, which is almost half of all that were printed.
- See the full list of Library of Congress holdings of works printed by Isaiah Thomas, as well as those written about him, by searching the Library of Congress online catalog. Search using Isaiah Thomas as a keyword.
- Explore the Library of Congress’ extensive holdings of early American printed materials in online collections including An American Time Capsule: Three Centuries of Broadsides and other Printed Ephemera and Documents from the Continental Congress and the Constitutional Convention, 1774-1789. Early printed works can also be found in the American Treasures of the Library of Congress.
- These collections are only a sample of the unique materials found in the Rare Book and Special Collections Reading Room, now totaling over 800,000 items, including books, broadsides, pamphlets, theater playbills, title pages, prints, posters, photographs, and medieval and Renaissance manuscripts. The cornerstone of these holdings is Thomas Jefferson’s book collection, sold to Congress in 1815 after the British burned the United States Capitol.
- Read a variety of fully-digitized children’s books, many with elaborate illustrations, as well as The Lewis Carroll Scrapbook, among the Rare Books and Special Collections digitized materials.
- Learn more about significant American Bibles in the Library’s collections, including the First Complete Bible Printed in America, Lincoln’s Inaugural Bible, The Woman’s Bible and The St. John’s Bible. View a videocast on The Bible in American Public Life by scholar Mark Noll.
Today in History – March 13-External Links
Today’s Weather in History
Today in Earthquake History
This Day in Naval History
Today’s Document from the National Archives
Today’s Events, Births & Deaths –Wikipedia
Today in History by AP
On this Day -1950 to 2005 – Today’s Story–BBC
On This Day: The New York Times
This Day in History –History.com
Today in Canadian History – Canada Channel
History of Britain that took place On This Day
Russia in History –Russiapedia