Images for over 7,000 ads printed in U.S. and Canadian newspapers and magazines between 1911 and 1955. Ad*Access concentrates on five main areas: Radio, Television, Transportation, Beauty and Hygiene, and World War II.
AP Images is an electronic library containing the AP’s current photos and a selection of pictures from the print and negative library along with text, graphic and audio material.
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Includes the following collections: African American Newspapers: The 19th Century (1827-1902); American County Histories to 1900; The Civil War: A Newspaper Perspective (November 1860 – April 1865); Godey’s Lady’s Book (1830-1898); The Lily (1849-1856); The Pennsylvania Gazette (1728-1800); The Pennsylvania Genealogical Catalogue: Chester County (1809-1870); The Pennsylvania Newspaper Record: Delaware County (1819-1870); South Carolina Newspapers (1732-1780); Virginia Gazette (1736-1780).
Hundreds of African American newspapers from more than 35 states, including many rare and historically significant 19th-century titles. Coverage: 1827-1998.
An extensive collection of amateur publications that were written, edited, and published primarily by young people, aged 12-20, during the second half of the 19th century.
Cover-to-cover reproductions of important American newspapers, 1690s-1922. Includes these regional papers: Advance; American Watchman; Delaware and Eastern-Shore Advertiser; Delaware Gazette; Delaware Patriot; Delaware State Reporter; Delaware Statesman; Mirror of the Times; Monitor, or Wilmington Weekly Repository; Peninsular News and Advertiser; Pennsylvania Gazette; Philadelphia Inquirer 1860-1922.
Search the The Baltimore Afro-American (1893-1988); Chicago Defender (1910-1975); New York Amsterdam News (1922-1993); The Philadelphia Tribune (1912-2001); Pittsburgh Courier (1911-2002).
Digitized images of issues of newspapers including American and Commercial Daily Advertiser, Baltimore Whig, Cambridge Chronicle, Cecil Whig, Centreville Observer, Ellicott City Times, Kent County News, Maryland Gazette, Maryland Journal, and Maryland Republican.
Gale Primary Sources. Newspapers is an integrated platform that combines Gale’s digital newspaper archives into a single cross-searchable interface. This broadens and enhances the ability to discover primary source documents from multiple news sources from the 17th through 21st centuries. The platform includes 22 newspaper and periodical collections including The Times, The Times Literary Supplement, The Economist, The Illustrated London News, Punch, and collections including British Library Newspapers, Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers and more.
Provides the full text of hundreds of U.S. and international news sources. The database includes the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Boston Globe, and the Times (London), as well as hundreds of other news sources and newswires. It also includes the News Journal (Wilmington). Coverage varies by title.
Translated and English-language news and information compiled from non-U.S. media sources, including news agencies, newspapers, and radio and television stations. Coverage is 1995-2013.
More than 30 nineteenth- and early twentieth-century African newspapers from Ghana, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, and elsewhere. Part of the World Newspaper Archive.
More than 35 nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Latin American newspapers from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Cuba, Guatemala, Mexico, Peru, Venezuela, and elsewhere. Part of the World Newspaper Archive.
Newspapers published in India, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka between 1864 and 1922 in languages including English, Bengali, and Gujarati. Part of the World Newspaper Archive.
The largest single archive of 17th and 18th century news media available from the British Library, collected by the Reverend Charles Burney (1757-1817). Nearly 1,270 newspapers and news pamphlets from the United Kingdom, 1604-1800.
Jewish newspapers published in various countries, languages, and time periods. Includes Ha-Zman, Noar, Davar, Ha-Zvi, Ha-Magid, Ha-Levanon, Israël, Bulletin de l’Alliance, and Palestine Post.
The collection contains 60 million scanned pages, covering 250 years. Google shut down the project in 2011, but the scanned pages are still available. Search results can include content that is freely accessible as well as content that requires a fee.