Skip to main content

British Newspaper Archive now live

Received this promotional blurb today and thought it worth signing up to...

The British Newspaper Archive microsite is now live at www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk

Why not encourage friends and family to register now to be the first to know when the newspapers go online?!
Please use the links to post on Facebook, Tweet about us. Stumble, tell all!
I have now set up a Twitter account (@TheBNA1): http://twitter.com/#!/TheBNA1. Please follow us!

This exciting digitisation collaboration between brightsolid and The British Library means that unlike many other newspaper digitisation projects, we have been able to scan some of the rarest and most fragile newspapers in the collection.

The Archive will be an invaluable resource to all types of researchers and we have chosen some examples to demonstrate this (http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/archive-examples.php).  

Full text searching will be available and users will be able to refine their search to focus on:
Family notices – birth, marriage and death notices, related announcements including engagements, anniversaries, in memoriam, birthdays and congratulations
Obituaries – a wealth of contemporary information on the lives of notable individuals and ancestors
News articles – national events, along with issues of local and regional importance – the first draft of history and a window into the world of the past
Illustrations – photographs, engravings, graphics, maps and editorial cartoons
Advertisements – including classifieds, shipping notices and appointments
Letters – letters to the editor written by the newspaper’s readers – illuminating contemporary debates, aspirations and anxieties

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Wilson Collection, a new free New Zealand Index

Exciting to see this new free index called " The Wilson Collection " launched on 1 March 2021. Thanks must go to Diane Wilson and her "chocolate fish team" who have gathered information from a range of sources around New Zealand for more than forty years, and have decided to share it freely with us all via this website. Those of you that have heard my family history lectures over the years you will recognize my tips for the first time you visit any new site: SCROLL DOWN read THE WHOLE SCREEN move your mouse around to see which images are CLICKABLE find the HELP and read it So bearing in mind that many of you will click straight away on search , here are my three key tips: Search Tips  once you have pressed on the Search Index link at the top of the home page 1. Scroll down and read the site help on searching 2. Scroll UP to see the index sources: Clicking on any topic will show the information about the individual indexes within this collection. For instance the NZ ...

Be Quick about your Ancestry Quick Links

As new features roll out on websites, developers have to make room for changes, and what often happens is that rarely used features move or may even disappear. One of my favourite tools on the Ancestry home page for many years has been the Quick Links feature and the upgrade which is being rolled out is going to limit Quicks Links once the updated site is bedded down. So NOW is the time to think about this feature. If you already use it - it is time to review, if you have never used it - now is the time to check it out and see if you "wish you had known about it earlier" . This is the notice on the recently updated home page: Why use it? Quick links is a tool which directly takes you to specific Ancestry Datasets or Collections. I have a long list of specific data sets that I regularly use for UK, Australia and New Zealand as they rarely turn up near the top of any global search and require a bit of filtering to find. As I use many datasets for these countries on a regular ...

New Clues from our AncestryDNA Ethnicity

When some of us were sleeping on the night of Wednesday 13th/Thursday 14th April 2022 - Ancestry rolled out an update to our Ethnicity results. We get updates every now and then, my last one was September 2021 and before that July 2020. As science and technology advances, the information a service can provide us changes. So most of us are used to this change and getting updates from all the DNA companies about our Ethnicity. But this one comes with steak knives, you know those wait there is more adverts? The more   you will be finding along with this Ethnicity update is called SideView™ technology , showing us our ‘ethnicity inheritance’ . Here is what mine looks like. This new technology gives Ancestry scientists an ability to show us which side of our family our Ethnicity Regions came from, without having tested our parents: Don't forget to scroll down and because it is the first time - remember to read the help information in the right hand panel: My Dad came from South Ea...