Newspapers we should add next
Tell us what publications would be of most use to you. You can be as general (Victorian cycling magazines) or specific (South Wales Argus) as you wish! We take on board all of your suggestions but are bound by copyright restrictions and our agreements with publishers, these form the boundaries of what we may publish online.
151 results found
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West Lancashire Evening Gazette
West Lancashire Evening Gazette, 1960-1979. A treasure trove of Blackpool entertainment stories and adverts. Also, if possible, the annual What's On magazines (Blackpool 71, Blackpool 72 etc) that were published each season by the Gazette.
7 votes -
London Story Paper
London Story Paper was a newspaper based in london, middlesex. Published 1888-1899.
3 votes -
North Devon Journal and Western Times from 1951 onwards
These two papers from 1951 to say mid 1970's would be a great help both with local and family history
9 votes -
East Kent Mercury
East Kent Mercury (Deal, Kent)
Supplied services to all ships anchored in the Downs and had Naval Dockyard5 votes -
Stornoway Gazette
It would be good to see the news in this far flung group of islands
60 votes -
Williamson's Liverpool Advertiser
I am researhing my ancestor, a ships captain, who sailed out of Liverpool at this time.
24 votes -
The Manchester Observer
The radical newspaper that sparked the events of the Peterloo Massacre. Published from 1795 -1821.
10 votes -
Clare Champion
Most influential newspaper in Co. Clare
14 votes -
Ellesmere Port News
Probably the earliest newspaper dedicated to events in Ellesmere Port. There appears to have been at least two Issues: Number 1, 5th December 1908 and Number 2, 12th December 1908, but were any more published?
12 votes -
Manchester City News
When I was a child in the 1950s this was the newspaper we searched for references to events we had attended - Rose Queens etc which other newspapers hadnt room for. It also had a useful series on each of the Manchester suburbs at one time and was widely read in South Manchester.
14 votes -
55 votes
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Kentish Independent
Need information on a family business that was in Bexley during this period.
8 votes -
Irish Tribune
This was the first newspaper printed in England for Irish Catholics. Published weekly by Charles Diamond in Newcastle upon Tyne between December 1884 and December 1895, the Irish Tribune claimed a readership of 4,000,000 Irish Catholics living in England, mixing local Catholic and Nationalist news, with tales from Irish history, fiction and fashion. The British Library holds almost 600 editions of this key source for the study of Irish Catholics in England in the nineteenth century.
6 votes -
Faulkner's Dublin Journal
Published by Jonathan Swift's publisher, George Faulkner.
(1725-1825)63 votes -
291 votes
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Jewish Chronicle
An essential reference source for the Jewish community in England and Wales, which would aid those researching Jewish ancestry enormously.
16 votes -
St. James's Gazette: An Evening Review and Record of News (1880–1905)
This paper's contributors included J. M. Barrie (helping him make his name), Edmund Gosse, Sidney Low, and Margaret Oliphant. I constantly find it cited for reviews of late-Victorian books, but I have a lot of trouble finding the reviews and reading them.
0 votesOpen - Added to digitisation plan · AdminThe British Newspaper Archive (Head of Data Development, The British Newspaper Archive) respondedSharin,
Thank you for getting in touch. We are super keen to include the St. James’s Gazette in the British Newspaper Archive project. So, the good news is that it is on our digitisation plan! As you can imagine we have a huge list to digitise. We will scan this as soon as possible. Please do keep an eye on the site!Best wishes,
Team BNA
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Howdenshire Chronicle, Pocklington Weekly News, and Market Weighton Advertiser
This newspaper covered a wide geographic area in the East Riding. Apart from the Hull newspapers the East riding is not well covered
91 votes -
The Territorial Service Gazette
From 1908 -1925 which covers the period of the Great War - many photographs from relatives and friends who are looking for loved missing in action as this was the paper read by the men in trenches - it's an invaluable source of information for WW1 historians, genealogist, schools, colleges etc
77 votes -
Barrow Times
Barrow is (after Middlesbrough) the Victorian boom town and the Barrow Times was its key organ in the 19thC.
40 votes
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