Newspapers
and
Genealogy
James
M.
Beidler / james@beidler.us
Outline:
- What
do
we look for in newspapers as genealogists?
Vital events – births, marriages,
deaths (obituaries and death notices)
- Notices
of
family reunions
- Genealogy
columns
- Articles
about
ancestors
- Shipping
notices,
estate notices, etc.
- Perspectives
on
the times
- “Things
found
on the way to something else”
Today’s
online
newspaper offerings
- Ancestry.com
–
“Historical Newspaper Collection”
http://www.ancestry.com
- ProQuest
Historical
Newspapers
Black Newspapers Collection
Civil War Era
- NewsBank
Inc.
– “America’s GenealogyBank”
http://www.newsbank.com/Genealogists/
- Accessible
Archives
http://www.accessible.com/accessible/index.html
- Google
News
Archives
http://news.google.com/archivesearch
- Pennsylvania
Civil
War Newspapers
https://secureapps.libraries.psu.edu/digital/projects.cfm?type=newspapers
- Other
Web
sites
- Directory
of
Digitized Pennsylvania Newspapers
http://www.statelibrary.state.pa.us/libraries/cwp/view.asp?a=254&pm=1&Q=147157
- Library
of
Congress – “Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers”
- Scans
1880-1910
- Information
1690-present
http://www.loc.gov/chroniclingamerica/index.html
-
(+)
U.S. Newspaper Genealogy by George G. Morgan
The
following
is a Plus Edition article written by and copyright by George
G. Morgan. Please do not forward it to others without the author's
permission.
Newspapers
are
the chronicles of life in a community. The size of that community
is determined by the scope and interest of the publication and by the
population which that newspaper serves. The Wall Street Journal, for
instance, focuses on financial and investment news and serves a
specific niche, while the New
York
Times
has a global news scope and provides information for readers with many
different interests. Other publications may confine their focus and
content to a narrower audience. This might include the Christian
Observer,
America’s
oldest Presbyterian news publication that dates back to 1913.
Let’s look at where and how you can glean valuable information from
some major online newspaper collections.
Modern
genealogists
are fortunate to have at their disposal so many newspapers
that have been digitized and indexed. Many of these are available on
the Internet in various places. Ancestry.com has well over a thousand
newspaper titles available in its Historical Newspaper Collection as
part of an annual subscription. Other digitized newspaper collections
may be available through your local public library and through academic
libraries. If you have a valid library card with that institution, you
may be able to access these database collections remotely from your
home computer. Otherwise, you may have to visit the library and use its
computers to access the materials.
ProQuest
LLC,
based in Ann Arbor, Michigan, is one of the largest providers of
digitized newspaper products. Its ProQuest Historical Newspapers™
program contains every issue of each title, including the complete
paper, cover-to-cover, with full-page text and article images in easily
downloadable PDF format. Its titles include the New
York
Times, Atlanta Constitution, Chicago Tribune,
and
others. ProQuest also has two other important portions of this
collection, the Black Newspapers Collection and the Civil War Era. The
Black Newspapers Collection provides access to the New
York
Amsterdam News, Pittsburgh Courier, Los Angeles Sentinel, Atlanta
Daily World, and
more.
The Civil War Era is a collection of newspapers and pamphlets
covering the slavery and anti-slavery movements of the 1840s and 1850s,
all the way through General Robert E. Lee's surrender at Appomattox
Courthouse and the end of the U.S. Civil War. While equally as
important, the Black Newspapers Collection and the Civil War Era
databases are not as widely available as the ProQuest Historical
Newspapers collection. Libraries’ and archives’ budgets and size of
interested patron populations may prevent them from having all of the
ProQuest collections. You may have to search in other areas and
repositories for them.
America’s
GenealogyBank
is a product of NewsBank, Inc., headquartered in Naples,
Florida, one of the premier providers of Web-based services. America’s
GenealogyBank contains more than 97 million articles spanning the years
1690 to 1977 from more than half a million issues of more than 1,300
historical U.S. newspapers. It also includes a Historical Books
collection with 11,700 digitized and indexed books published between
1801 and 1900. The Historical Documents Collection contains materials
from 1790 to 1980, including military records and casualty lists,
pension requests, the American State Papers (1789-1838), genealogical
content from the U.S. Serial Set (1817-1980), and more.
Google,
producer
of the world’s most highly used Internet search engine, has
also been involved with digitizing and indexing newspapers. The Google
News Archives is available for free at http://news.google.com/archivesearch.
The
St
Petersburg
Times
[Florida] recently announced that its entire archives, 1901 to 2007, is
now available at the Google News Archives. To search for content from
its newspaper, the press release instructed users to enter “st.
petersburg times” followed by the keyword(s) for the search in the
search box. It works well but, unfortunately, there is no list of the
publications included in the archives. The Google News Archive is in
its early implementation stage and may require some fine-tuning.
However, please use it and provide feedback to the company. In
addition, you will find that Google’s service provides access via
subscription to NewsArchive.com for some of the other digitized
newspapers. Both Google News Archive and NewsArchive.com can uncover
many details. For example, I found information about my favorite aunt’s
social activities between 1938 and 1944. What a wonderful addition to
my understanding of her life events!
Newspapers
have
been using computers since the mid-1980s and may therefore have an
archive of text (or full-page images). These archived materials may be
available at the newspaper’s website. However, you can usually expect
to pay a small fee to access and print the materials you want to
obtain.
Search
Suggestions
Digitizing
newspapers
is a difficult process. It involves scanning the page to
generate a digital image, and it also requires the use of Optical
Character Recognition (OCR) software to “read” every word and to
generate an index file. The newspaper printing process itself can
compromise the accuracy of the content of that index. Newsprint paper
can vary in quality, but it was never intended to last for a long
period of time. The paper is porous and may absorb ink differently on
different pages. OCR software attempts to recognize each character, but
this may be difficult due to shadows in the porous newspaper, different
rates of ink absorption, smeared ink, discoloration of the newsprint,
and stains. Some of the indexing may be compromised as a result. As you
search newspaper indexes, consider the imperfections that may have been
introduced by the OCR process.
Before
you
search any digitized newspaper collection or database, make the
time to read the help area and search suggestions. These will tell you
how the collection is organized, how the specific search works, and how
to get the most out of your search. For example, one collection may
support proximity searches while another may not. (A proximity search
is one in which two words are searched and results are presented when
the words are adjacent to one another as well as within x
number of words. For example, a proximity search for “John Smith” might
result in matches to “John Smith” and “John A. Smith” and “John
Augustus Smith”.
Look
at
the Advanced Search facility and the fields on which you can conduct
searches. Read the Help section for information on maximizing your
search effectiveness. Don’t be afraid to use alternate spellings. If
the database allows the use of wildcard characters as substitutes for
possible spelling variations, use those as well. The Help text will
tell you what is and is not supported.
Don’t
limit
your review of the search results to announcements of births,
marriages, and deaths. Remember that public notices are published in
newspapers following an individual’s death in order for the estate to
collect and pay debts. Consider using shipping notices in port cities
to determine the dates on which specific ships or ships sailing between
specific ports arrived and departed. Look for tax lists and delinquency
listings published in newspapers. Society news can render fascinating
details about an ancestor or family member, especially in older
newspapers. Use religious newspapers, trade and union publications,
pamphlets and tracts, and any other digitized, indexed materials.
Newspapers
and
other printed resources can be an incredible source of everyday
details about your ancestor. They can also provide insights into the
lives of residents in a specific location at a point in time. The
digitization efforts with newspapers and similar publications that have
been done and that are under way promise to open up more and more
details of our ancestors’ lives. Make sure that you investigate the
availability of digital collections and invest some research time into
these great electronic resources.