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On page 3 of the Gazette, the original nine amendments, less than a week after their introduction in the House by Father of the Constitution, then-Congressman James Madison. Equally important, the only newspaper of record was the Gazette, offered here.) Renowned antiquarian William Reese characterizes this issue as "Essentially the earliest version of any form of the Bill of Rights obtainable." (The previous day, the New York Daily Advertiser printed the news, however that issue is considered uncollectible, the Library of Congress database fails to find a single confirmed copy in institutional hands. The newspaper's "biggest supporter was Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton, who organized its initial funding and was a primary, albeit anonymous, contributor of letters and essays"-Chronicling America, Library of Congress. An organ of George Washington's Federalist Party, the Gazette enjoyed entree to the First Congress, meeting a few blocks away in Manhattan.
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Newspaper, Gazette of the United States, N.Y. Including what would become the First and Second Amendments. The Earliest Obtainable Version - in any form -ฤก-1.