Back in May last year, I wrote a post covering a few free
online newspaper websites (you can see it here). The other day I noticed one of the
subscription newspaper services promoting their access to the Illustrated
London News, and I thought, “That’s odd, I was sure there was a free website
for that.”
And, indeed, there is: John Weedy’s Collection of the ILN from Victorian times to 1973. Browse his site to experience the
sensational and the factual. Listed for
each issue are headlines, sometimes obituaries, fascinating cover pages and other illustrations. You can also choose a specific year to
explore using the grid section of the page.
This led me to revisit the free newspaper sites I have
bookmarked on my web browser, some of which I've listed below. Then as now, journalists wrote and published stories from around the world, so
you shouldn’t dismiss searching for your relatives in newspapers from other
countries – you could find them mentioned in the last place you’d expect.
📜 Papers Past – the website of the National Library of New Zealand, which contains not only
newspapers but magazines, journals, letters, diaries, and parliamentary papers. Search using your own terms, or explore by title or region.
📜 Trove – hosted by the Australian National Library. I covered this site in last year’s post, and yesterday they posted an appeal for help in
correcting the text in their online news collections. Since much of the indexed text has been interpreted by computer, there are errors that will be obvious to human eyes
and easy to edit. This is a great way to
“give back” to the research resources you enjoy at no cost, as it will increase
the accuracy of search results. Learn more about the project here.
📜 Chronicling America – the United States Library of Congress hosts digitised newspaper images from
1789 to 1963. These are searchable by
keywords, dates and states, or if you know the name of the newspaper, by title.
📜 Old Fulton New York Postcards – despite the name, this low-tech site covers newspapers from the U.S. and
Canada for 1795-2007. Enjoy listening to
some vintage radio drama while you search the site, and be sure to peruse the
Help page, which also includes a link to let you browse the historical photos and papers that
the site holds.
I couldn’t finish this whistle-stop tour of free newspaper
collections without mentioning the fantastic services provided by public
libraries and archives around the world.
If you like nothing more than leafing through the original newspapers
your ancestors would have read, this is a superb option. Contact your nearest library or record
repository to find out about their hard-copy collections.
No comments:
Post a Comment