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Access within the British Library is free. Starting in 2021, some newspaper pages from the years 1720–1880 are free to view online. [18] Full online access is by subscription, based on daily or item charges, £14.99 for one month or £8.34 per month for an annual subscription, as of December 2024.
This is a list of online newspaper archives and some magazines and journals, including both free and pay wall blocked digital archives. Most are scanned from microfilm into pdf , gif or similar graphic formats and many of the graphic archives have been indexed into searchable text databases utilizing optical character recognition (OCR) technology.
Flook was a British comic strip which ran from 1949 to 1984 in the Daily Mail newspaper. It was drawn by Wally Fawkes (of the jazz group Wally Fawkes and the Troglodytes), who signed the strips as "Trog". It was the first newspaper comic strip to be published by the New Zealand newspaper Otago Daily Times, where it ran
Google is digitizing microfilm from old newspapers and bringing it online to you -- free. It's springing for the cost to put the old film online, opening up vast amounts of local American history ...
Carol Day was a strip created by painter David Wright, and continued after his death by Kenneth Inns. It was published initially in 1956 in the Daily Mail, but later in 1971, it was in the Sunday Express. Carol was an ex-fashion model and was drawn as being very elegant.
The Sphere (newspaper) Spirit of Freedom, and Working Man's Vindicator; Sporting Chronicle; Sporting Life (British newspaper) The Sporting Times; Sports Argus; The Sportsman (1865 newspaper) The Sportsman (2006 newspaper) Staffordshire Mercury; The Star (1788) The Star (1888–1960) The Stool Pigeon (newspaper) Straight Left; The Sun (1792–1876)
Arizona Memory - 200,000 sources, incl Arizona Historical Digital Newspapers and Arizona Highways; Anchorage Daily Times (1915 to 1992) provided by the Atwood Foundation.; BC Historical Newspapers (1865–1994) – database covering 169 British Columbia newspapers, with over 12 million pages available; provided by the University of British Columbia.
The Daily Mail was Britain's first daily newspaper aimed at the newly literate "lower-middle class market resulting from mass education, combining a low retail price with plenty of competitions, prizes and promotional gimmicks", [22] and the first British paper to sell a million copies a day. [23]