Why study regional and local newspapers?

The British Newspapers, 1600-1950 series, the most comprehensive digital collection of regional newspapers from across the UK, is a key resource for studying local history. Part V, releasing in March 2016, will soon take the total number of pages covered by the series to over 5.5 million, with an impressive 161 newspaper titles. Academic Advisor to Parts I and II of the series, Dr Martin Conboy, described the series as an ‘enormously rich’ resource, which has already proved of great value to a range of scholars. But why invest in regional and local papers? What makes regional papers valuable to students and researchers?

Local and regional newspapers offer a range of research opportunities, including – through Gale Artemis: Primary Sources – setting national press perspectives against regional titles to understand how opinions on a local level could contrast those on a national scale. The national press provided detailed overviews of key social, political and cultural stories of the day, but there were differences in how these stories were transmitted and received in different localities. The regional element offered by British Newspapers, 1600-1950  is therefore a vital enhancement to research, complementing Gale’s broad coverage of the national UK press through The Times, The Daily Mail, The Telegraph and more. The case study below, continuing in the downloadable PDF, offers just one example of how local and regional papers in 19th Century British Newspapers can be used to provide a new perspective.

Case Study: British Emigration, from the late-nineteenth century

Throughout the nineteenth century, it was not uncommon for large numbers of people to emigrate away from the United Kingdom (UK), hoping to find better employment prospects overseas. This movement can almost be split into two parts: the first half of the nineteenth century (characterised by rural emigration) and the second half (characterised by urban emigration). The former part was typified by farmers or skilled artisans and craftsmen from traditional trades, while the latter saw a predominance of young male labourers and agricultural workers.

However, this process was, at times, highly contested. As the articles below will demonstrate, conditions overseas did not always live up to expectations. Despite the desire of ‘Emigration Agents’ and other government officials to encourage emigration, particularly as a resolution to poverty, the variable conditions emigrants encountered on arrival suggest a more sombre picture.

By focussing our attention upon a specific period and location – Australia in the 1870s and 1880s – a clear image of the contested ‘emigration trade’ can be gained. Above all, it highlights the differences in viewpoints which existed across the national and regional press, and the benefits to be gained from searching across both.

Continue Reading here [PDF] >>

About the Author

I work in the Publishing team here at Gale as a Publishing Assistant. During my first ten months in the role, I have put my History degree to good use in an array of tasks too varied to mention here! They have included working on our upcoming release of the Telegraph Historical Archive and researching topics for our Gale newsletters. Outside of Cengage, I enjoy keeping fit and following all-things football.