![]() ![]() More than 120,000 copies of the forty-six page pamphlet were sold in just three months. ![]() Thomas Paine's Common Sense has been called the "single most influential political work in American history" and is credited with "turning the American mind toward the thought of independence." The first edition appeared in book stalls on January 9, 1776, and was an immediate publishing success. Paine then authorized William and Thomas Bradford to publish this enhanced edition, which includes an appendix and "An Address to the People Called Quakers." It had been Paine's intention to devote his share of the profit from the sale of Common Sense to buy winter clothing for the Continental army, but Bell insisted that no profit had been realized from the first printing. ![]() This edition was authorized by Paine due to a dispute over royalties between the author and Robert Bell, the original publisher. The Law Library purchased Common Sense by Thomas Paine as its 999,999th volume.* The pamphlet is one of the first editions of the "Enlarged Version," published by William and Thomas Bradford on February 14, 1776. ![]()
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