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Newspaper archive freebee

Posted: February 16th, 2024, 5:14 am
by GoSeigen
Newspapers.‌com has free access from now until midnight on Monday. That's four days to dig out some salacious articles about your ancestors. :-)

Certainly my wife's family were in the crime pages on a very regular basis -- I am still regularly finding articles about incidents I hadn't seen before so the complete list will be truly impressive. :shock:


GS

Re: Newspaper archive freebee

Posted: February 16th, 2024, 10:24 am
by GoSeigen
Oh no, sorry if I have misled anyone. I just tried to use the site and found it was not giving free access. When I re-read the email I'd received I see that access is only via the link in the email, which I presume you receive if you are already registered with the site.

When I used the link it worked fine, but I'm not sure if that will help anyone who isn't registered. However the link resolves to this url so maybe it will work:

https://go.newspapers.com/freeaccess?xid=6051&utm_source=Internal&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=FebFA_Feb-2024


GS

Re: Newspaper archive freebee

Posted: February 16th, 2024, 10:42 am
by XFool
Does this include Dublin, late 19th, early 20th century?

Re: Newspaper archive freebee

Posted: February 16th, 2024, 11:49 am
by clissold345
GoSeigen wrote:...

When I used the link it worked fine, but I'm not sure if that will help anyone who isn't registered. However the link resolves to this url so maybe it will work:

https://go.newspapers.com/freeaccess?xid=6051&utm_source=Internal&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=FebFA_Feb-2024


GS


Yes the link seems to work. It says I have free access until 19th Feb @ 11:59PM, and I did one search.

Re: Newspaper archive freebee

Posted: February 20th, 2024, 7:34 am
by GoSeigen
Well that was rewarding!

My wife has a rare name, such that any individual in the world with that name is probably a fourth cousin or closer. That makes searching for information a breeze. However they were a large family and fragmented by emigration, so there's a whole branch we know little about that I have been researching. Not only was this clan replete with career criminals, they also lived in a time and place (early c20 USA) where every little event got documented in some local rag or other.

So I just spent the weekend trawling through hundreds of newspaper articles about the family and putting together a decent history for a few of the people and most usefully, one couple died young and I managed to find an obituary naming two of their daughters who previously have been quite elusive (parents unmarried and MMN as common as Smith or Brown!).

Happy days...


GS