Tasmania Newspapers

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Tasmania Newspapers

Online Resources[edit | edit source]

A selective index of personal names found in Tasmanian colonial newspapers, 1816-1900. There are a few entries for the years after 1900. The main emphasis is on the names of members of early settler and eminent families, though the scope is sometimes wider. The main data recorded are for births, deaths and marriages, wills and bequests, land grants and property sales. There is a small subsection of topical and geographic subject entries.
The Sydney Dead Persons Society began indexing death notices in the Sydney newspapers. This project has grown into the Ryerson Index which now (July 2013) indexes death notices and obituaries in 222 newspapers and has over 4,000,000 entries.
Digitised version of a handwritten card index to colonial Tasmanian Government records and colonial newspapers compiled by Amelia Lucy Wayn during the period from the 1920s to 1940s. They were then added to by staff employed in the Archives Office in the 1950s.


TROVE[edit | edit source]

Trove is an Australian online library database service which includes full-text searching of digitized archived newspapers.
More than 40 historical Tasmanian newspaper titles are free online on Trove, and more are being added.​​

TROVE.png

In the left sidebar, scroll down to
these buttons.
Here you can filter your search for Tasmania,
and a date if you wish.

Government and Police Gazettes[edit | edit source]

The Tasmanian Index provides references to articles in the three metropolitan Tasmanian newspapers: the Mercury, the Examiner and the Advocate, and to many other Tasmanian journals and regional newspapers. Most articles are indexed, but there are some exclusions (including routine sport reports and results, and reports of court proceedings). The Index also includes references to the contents of a few important early Tasmanian publications such as John West's History of Tasmania (1852) and the Cyclopedia of Tasmania (1900 and 1931).

Australia[edit | edit source]

What information can be found in newspapers[edit | edit source]

Given the relative ease of finding the precise date of births, deaths and marriages, with the right newspaper, you have a good chance of finding:

  • birth notices - generally published within a couple of weeks of birth
  • marriage notices - generally published on the day or sometimes as a "pre-marriage" notice a week or so in advance
  • death notices - generally published within a week or so of death
  • funeral notices - generally published with a week or so of death

In smaller towns, social pages of the newspapers would often write up the details of a wedding. These may appear up to a month or so later; I think the newspapers "saved them up" for days when there was no other social news to report. They often give a quite detailed list of the bridesmaids and groomsmen (often family members) as well as relatives and friends who attended. The dresses of the bride, bridemaids and mothers of the bride and groom are often described in great detail. Others who contributed to the ceremony or reception (singers, musicians, cake icing, etc) are mentioned and again are often relatives.

Similarly, smaller towns often publish obituaries, again appearing some time in the next month or so (possibly waiting for a slow news day). These will often have the full life story and a lot of vital clues can be found within them. Some newspapers will give an account of the funeral, listing the pallbearers and those who sent wreaths etc or simply attended (many of whom will be relatives). Sometimes the funeral and the obituary appear as a combined article.

In larger cities, there is far less likelihood of finding obituaries or accounts of weddings and funerals, unless the person was very well-known.

Engagement notices were often published, but with virtually no other records to provide any clues as to the date of the engagement, finding them tends to be a matter of luck or great persistance (reading through many editions of the newspaper).

Accounts of other events in the lives of your family (sporting achievements, accidents, etc) are frequently reported in the newspapers, especially in smaller towns. However, unless you have some awareness of the event from other sources that provides you with an approximate date, you are unlikely to find them except by luck or persistance. While there is a wealth of information in newspapers, the lack of indexing is a significant barrier to unlocking these valuable resources.