Acadian Recorder – Nova Scotia, Anthony Henry Holland, 1813

Front page of the first issue of the Acadian Recorder, No. 1, Vol. 1. Image courtesy of the Nova Scotia Archives.
Portrait of Anthony Henry Holland.
Left arrow
right arrow

Notes

Anthony Henry Holland (1785–1830) started a newspaper in 1813 that would become one of Nova Scotia’s longest running papers. He was born in Halifax into a German family and was the godson of Anthony Henry, who was the first King’s Printer and the second printer in Nova Scotia, following John Bushell. In all likelyhood, Holland probably served his apprenticeship in Anthony Henry’s office.

When Holland was in his early twenties, he spent time in the United States and went to work for William W. Clapp, publisher of the Gazette of Maine, Hancock and Washington Advertiser in Bucksport, Maine. In 1811, Clapp sold the paper to Anthony Holland. A year later, Holland announced he was suspending the paper while he was ‘out of town’. That absence was permanent – likely prompted by the tensions leading to the War of 1812 – and by 1813, he was back in Halifax.

At that time all the other newspapers in Halifax were very conservative and avoided any discussion of politics. Holland, who was more inclined to reform, said, in the prospectus for the Acadian Recorder; “Rational and fair discussion of political principles, and candid investigation of the conduct and characters of public men and public measures will never be rejected.”

Right from the start, Holland, young and aided by wartime prosperity, made the Recorder one of the most significant journals in the province. Holland believed strongly in moderation and rational discussion as a solution to most problems but there were a couple of times when he managed to antagonize authorities. He was a proud Nova Scotian but did not like Britain’s leadership in London, nor did he like the American ideas about freedom. He also must have been in great shape; to ensure his newspaper was first with the highly desired foreign news, he would row out to intercept a news packet while his competitors waited on the dockside the next morning.

In 1821, Holland added his brother Philip John as his partner and two years later, left the newspaper business to him. Philip John continued until 1836, when he sold the paper to Hugh William Blackadar and John English. The Acadian Recorder is one of the oldest running papers in Canada and kept on until 1930 when it ceased publication. 

While still operating the Recorder, Holland established a paper mill, c1819, in the Bedford Basin and continued to run the mill after he left the newspaper business. The Acadian Paper mill was the second in Canada and the first in Atlantic Canada and produced both newsprint and brown wrapping-paper. On August 20, 1875, the mill was destroyed by fire and was never rebuilt. From 1839 to 1841, Charles Fenerty experimented with wood fibres at this mill. He produced the first sheet of paper made from wood pulp in North America. 

Anthony Henry died in 1830 at the young age of 45 in a ‘driving accident’ most likely of the horse-and-buggy variety. He is buried in the graveyard of the Little Dutch Church in Halifax.

We will be posting more like this. If you have work or insights that you would be willing to share with the CTA we would like to hear from you. Please contact us to contribute.

Artifact

Article Data

arrow icon

Date

1813

Title

Acadian Recorder

Description

Newspaper

Newspaper

Publication

Client

Credits

Agency:
Studio:
Creative_Director:
Art_Director:
Design:
Typography:
Hand_Lettering:
Calligraphy:
Illustration:
Art:
Author:
Writing:
Printing:
Biography:

Principal Typefaces

Text: Unknown (possibly Caslon)
Find more:

Language

English

Holding

Nova Scotia Archives

Copyright Status

arrow icon

We will be posting more like this. If you have work or insights that you would be willing to share with the CTA we would like to hear from you. Please contact us to contribute.