In 1781 he kept his printing-office in Boston, at "the lower end of State-Street, over Mr. Simon Eliot's snuff-store".[5] He moved to Worcester in 1788, "having been humiliatingly neglected ... for printing a free paper".[6] By 1791 he had returned to Boston.[7] Around 1796 he lived on Temple Street.[8]
Around 1803 he worked "as a compositor in the office of Samuel Etheridge, in Charlestown".[9] In 1813 "he held the office of Messenger to the Governor and Council of the Commonwealth."[10][11]
He later became a traveling bookseller. He died on an expedition to the Western States.[10]
^Joseph Tinker Buckingham. Specimens of Newspaper Literature: with personal memoirs, anecdotes, and reminiscences, Volume 1. Redding and Co., 1852. Google books
^Resolves of the General Court of the commonwealth of Massachusetts passed at the sessions, in October 1812, and January 1813 published agreeably to a resolve of January 11, 1812.