Free access to 19thC British newspapers - back in business!
Moderator: Global Moderators
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Currie
- Posts: 3924
- Joined: Fri Jun 22, 2007 3:20 am
- Location: Australia
Hello Maz,
I’ve had the New South Wales State Library access for quite a while. I haven’t seen it advertised anywhere and you usually only come across these things by chance. I was very pleased to see the 19c British Newspapers crop up on it only about six weeks ago. It’s also available in South Australia. Some states are much more equal than others when it comes to this sort of thing.
I posted a list in the Australia section recently http://talkingscot.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=11832
All the best,
Alan
I’ve had the New South Wales State Library access for quite a while. I haven’t seen it advertised anywhere and you usually only come across these things by chance. I was very pleased to see the 19c British Newspapers crop up on it only about six weeks ago. It’s also available in South Australia. Some states are much more equal than others when it comes to this sort of thing.
I posted a list in the Australia section recently http://talkingscot.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=11832
All the best,
Alan
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Maz
- Posts: 26
- Joined: Wed Oct 24, 2007 9:14 am
- Location: Australia
Hello Alan
Must have been lucky that I found it and saw the British newspapers - thought they had been there all the time.
Being so far away from the 'top half of the world' where all of my ancestors came from sometimes makes it difficult in researching (thank goodness for the internet). Though I think sometimes the availability of Australian resources is very good (thinking of the WW1 information availble on the net for free) compared to the UK.
Maz
Must have been lucky that I found it and saw the British newspapers - thought they had been there all the time.
Being so far away from the 'top half of the world' where all of my ancestors came from sometimes makes it difficult in researching (thank goodness for the internet). Though I think sometimes the availability of Australian resources is very good (thinking of the WW1 information availble on the net for free) compared to the UK.
Maz
Maz
Researching Bruce, MacQueen, MacMillan, Nicolson, MacIntosh, MacKinnon, Campbell, Lamont (to name just a few) from Isle of Skye
Also Hadden and Lamb from Kincardine
Researching Bruce, MacQueen, MacMillan, Nicolson, MacIntosh, MacKinnon, Campbell, Lamont (to name just a few) from Isle of Skye
Also Hadden and Lamb from Kincardine
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Chris Paton
- Posts: 433
- Joined: Sun Jan 14, 2007 9:14 pm
Haha... access is still possible! 
Go to http://access.gale.com/gdctrial/index.html to register and fill in all the fields, and you will be able to get two weeks free access again. Make sure that you choose "international" in the state field. For the Institution name and Institution address, I just typed in "home" for each. The Gale team will then e-mail you a password etc.
Once you receive an e-mail from Gale, use your e-mail address and the password and login supplied by Gale once again at the above web address. You will then arrive at a different page that seems to want you to register again, but if you look at the right of the page there is an option to allow you to sign in with the details you have just used - this will allow you acces once more to the land of milk and honey...!
This was from the Your Family Tree magazine forum - one of the posters there has said that when your two weeks are up you can simply register again. Can't vouch for that, but it is worth a shot!
Chris
Go to http://access.gale.com/gdctrial/index.html to register and fill in all the fields, and you will be able to get two weeks free access again. Make sure that you choose "international" in the state field. For the Institution name and Institution address, I just typed in "home" for each. The Gale team will then e-mail you a password etc.
Once you receive an e-mail from Gale, use your e-mail address and the password and login supplied by Gale once again at the above web address. You will then arrive at a different page that seems to want you to register again, but if you look at the right of the page there is an option to allow you to sign in with the details you have just used - this will allow you acces once more to the land of milk and honey...!
This was from the Your Family Tree magazine forum - one of the posters there has said that when your two weeks are up you can simply register again. Can't vouch for that, but it is worth a shot!
Chris
Tha an lasair nad anam aig meadhan do bhith
Nas làidir 's nas motha na riaghaltas no rìgh.
Nas làidir 's nas motha na riaghaltas no rìgh.
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kenspeckle
- Posts: 178
- Joined: Sat Dec 08, 2007 6:30 am
- Location: born in Glasgow now living in Huon Valley Tasmania
Gale
I have had NSW Library card for some time now and its only recently that Gale has been added to it I reckon they are giving trials so that we will pester our local library to take it on which is not a bad idea !
I just wish I could join the National Library in Scotland they have some choice stuff in ebooks which I thought I could download but it only got as far as sending an email to me with the info on what I was looking at wanting to download so not sure what the rick is there
regards to all from Freezing Tassie
I just wish I could join the National Library in Scotland they have some choice stuff in ebooks which I thought I could download but it only got as far as sending an email to me with the info on what I was looking at wanting to download so not sure what the rick is there
regards to all from Freezing Tassie
researching : Roddick, Stewart, Combe,Lyle , Wilkie, Budge, Kirkwood,Howat, McKinlay, Gunning, Gumprecht, Mirrlees, Muckersie, Greig, Moncrieff, Pattison, Hornibrook, Teape, Brockhoff,Buchanan,
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ankerdine
- Posts: 4
- Joined: Wed May 02, 2007 7:35 am
- Location: Solihull, Warwickshire
Hello Chris
I have used the free trial earlier this year and I was overjoyed with the results. Well, my I found some rather unsettling evidence about my husband's gtx2 and gtx3 grandfather's drunkeness, fines, stealing cheque resulting in penal servitude.
I tried to access the free trial again as you explained on 24 July but no joy. They said my e-mail address wasn't from an institution which I can understand.
I didn't expect this trial to last forever but would it be worthwhile registering through their "gale.marketingtrials@cengage.com"?
What do you think?
Judy Hawker
My Scottish ancestors were Tinsmiths from Kilmaurs and Wigtownshire named Marshall.
I have used the free trial earlier this year and I was overjoyed with the results. Well, my I found some rather unsettling evidence about my husband's gtx2 and gtx3 grandfather's drunkeness, fines, stealing cheque resulting in penal servitude.
I tried to access the free trial again as you explained on 24 July but no joy. They said my e-mail address wasn't from an institution which I can understand.
I didn't expect this trial to last forever but would it be worthwhile registering through their "gale.marketingtrials@cengage.com"?
What do you think?
Judy Hawker
My Scottish ancestors were Tinsmiths from Kilmaurs and Wigtownshire named Marshall.
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Currie
- Posts: 3924
- Joined: Fri Jun 22, 2007 3:20 am
- Location: Australia
Hello Judy,
Newspaper articles are quite often the Icing on the Census and Certificate cake and sometimes the Cream in the middle and the Cherry on top as well.
I doubt that Chris will be able to answer your question. I haven’t tried the method Chris set out, but give it another go, following the directions carefully in case something went wrong the first time. Give anything that looks a possibility a try and see what happens. They can only say no.
Warwickshire Library has a better than average collection of subscription databases available to residents of Warwickshire. It may be worthwhile if you register there and make specific enquiries about the 19th Century British Library Newspapers because the more enquiries they get maybe the greater the chance they will subscribe. http://www.warwickshire.gov.uk/Web/corp ... BA005151AA
Of course if you have someone in the family who is a student at a Further or Higher Education institution in the UK you could possibly sort something out that way. http://www.bl.uk/collections/britishnew ... o1900.html
All the best,
Alan
Newspaper articles are quite often the Icing on the Census and Certificate cake and sometimes the Cream in the middle and the Cherry on top as well.
I doubt that Chris will be able to answer your question. I haven’t tried the method Chris set out, but give it another go, following the directions carefully in case something went wrong the first time. Give anything that looks a possibility a try and see what happens. They can only say no.
Warwickshire Library has a better than average collection of subscription databases available to residents of Warwickshire. It may be worthwhile if you register there and make specific enquiries about the 19th Century British Library Newspapers because the more enquiries they get maybe the greater the chance they will subscribe. http://www.warwickshire.gov.uk/Web/corp ... BA005151AA
Of course if you have someone in the family who is a student at a Further or Higher Education institution in the UK you could possibly sort something out that way. http://www.bl.uk/collections/britishnew ... o1900.html
All the best,
Alan
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LesleyB
- Posts: 8184
- Joined: Fri Mar 18, 2005 12:18 am
- Location: Scotland
Hi all
This seems to work Ok, and seems pretty straightforward:
http://access.gale.com/newstrial/
Best wishes
Lesley
This seems to work Ok, and seems pretty straightforward:
http://access.gale.com/newstrial/
Best wishes
Lesley
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SarahND
- Site Admin
- Posts: 5647
- Joined: Thu Apr 27, 2006 12:47 am
- Location: France
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Currie
- Posts: 3924
- Joined: Fri Jun 22, 2007 3:20 am
- Location: Australia
Excellent Lesley!
(Anyone availing themselves of these demos and free trials should realise that their purpose is to generate business for Gale. Gale only sells to libraries and similar institutions. Contact your County library and ask them to subscribe to the 19th century database and possibly get access to this material on a permanent basis. In the UK, Buckinghamshire, Surrey, City of London, Hampshire, Lancashire, Newcastle City and maybe a couple of other libraries make it freely available online to residents. Why not yours?)
Alan
(Anyone availing themselves of these demos and free trials should realise that their purpose is to generate business for Gale. Gale only sells to libraries and similar institutions. Contact your County library and ask them to subscribe to the 19th century database and possibly get access to this material on a permanent basis. In the UK, Buckinghamshire, Surrey, City of London, Hampshire, Lancashire, Newcastle City and maybe a couple of other libraries make it freely available online to residents. Why not yours?)
Alan
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SarahND
- Site Admin
- Posts: 5647
- Joined: Thu Apr 27, 2006 12:47 am
- Location: France