Archive for the ‘Product Updates’ Category

The Digital Detective: Tracking Criminals When the Trail Runs Cold (by Stephen Mihm)

Thursday, October 6th, 2011

[The article below by University of Georgia professor Stephen Mihm first appeared in The Readex Report (Sept. 2008). Last month, an op-ed by Mihm headlined "The Biographer's New Best Friend" was published in The New York Times Sunday Review section. In his Times piece, Mihm quotes historians and biographers James McGrath Morris, Joshua Kendall and Graham Hodges to help explain why "Readex's America's Historical Newspapers...has the potential to revolutionize biographical research."]

The Digital Detective: Tracking Criminals When the Trail Runs Cold

By Stephen Mihm, Associate Professor of History, University of Georgia

When I began work on a history of American counterfeiting between the Revolution and the Civil War, I was faced with some peculiar research problems. With a few rare exceptions, counterfeiting during this period was a crime that was not prosecuted by federal authorities. The problem was instead left to state and local law enforcement officials who were often outnumbered and incompetent. This was partly a consequence of the fact that the paper money in circulation originated not with the federal government, but with hundreds of state-chartered banks. But it was also a reflection of the relative weakness of the federal government’s policing.

And therein lay a serious problem, not only for the police of the day, but for the historian who would attempt to reconstruct this kind of criminal activity. Counterfeiting involved vast numbers of players spread out across state and even national lines. This meant that local law enforcement officials often operated in the dark as to the scope and scale of the network of manufacturers, distributors, retailers and passers of bogus bills. Local law enforcement records—what few have survived—often provide but a fleeting snapshot of an individual counterfeiter who typically posted bail and fled, never to be seen again. What, then, is a historian to do, particularly a historian who wants to reconstruct the entire criminal careers of some of these colorful individuals?

When I began research for A Nation of Counterfeiters, I started keeping tabs on the names of criminals who surfaced at multiple times and places in the historical record. But this is like looking for the proverbial needle in a haystack: you could spend many lifetimes reading through newspapers and other sources, trying to track your quarry. The advent of a new generation of digital resources—particularly America’s Historical Newspapers—made life much easier, and netted results that not only surprised me, but would have stunned the detectives and bounty hunters who spent so much time unsuccessfully tracking counterfeiters in the early republic.

Take a man like Seneca Paige. The epitaph of his gravestone notes that he was a “poor man’s friend,” a not-so-subtle reference to the fact that he was the head of a counterfeiting syndicate that straddled the border between Vermont and Canada. Paige was a notoriously slippery individual, someone who constantly escaped from the clutches of the law. That initially made tracking him almost absurdly difficult. I made a few serendipitous finds in records on both sides of the border, but when I ran searches for “Seneca Paige” or “Seneca Page” in millions of pages of America’s Historical Newspapers, some interesting things turned up.

Paige was everywhere. He showed up first in September 1809, where he was busted in Jersey City after trying to pass a counterfeit note.

He wriggled free in that instance, but was again in the news in April 1812, when a thousand dollar reward for his capture had the desired effect, and Paige was escorted to Baltimore to face charges.

The same key word searches revealed that after being indicted and committed to jail in Baltimore, he made his escape—only to be captured again a year later in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania.

Judging from the news reports, the local authorities weren’t aware that Paige had already escaped from other jails: how could they be? Local law enforcement officials didn’t correspond with one another on a regular basis, and they didn’t have access to every newspaper in the Union. If they had, they might not have been surprised at what happened next: Paige escaped from prison once more, “without breaking any locks or bolts,” as the Commercial Advertiser reported in August 1816.

Paige chose not to push his luck at this point: he apparently relocated to Canada, where he quickly assumed leadership of the so-called “Canada Counterfeiting Company.” And yet news of Paige’s movements continued to drift south of the border, sometimes in court papers, but just as often in the pages of newspapers.

In this particular case, finding Paige required expanding the search, dropping his first name and simply running searches for articles containing both “Paige” or “Page” and “counterfeiter.” When I did this, I found a curious mention of him in a Baltimore newspaper from 1826.

It seems that a man was caught in New Haven with a shipment of counterfeit money concealed in a mahogany dressing case. When examined, he confessed that he had received the bills and the case from “a Mr. Page, in Dunham, Canada.” Dunham was the town where most counterfeit money was manufactured in the 1820s. Again, a serendipitous find, but one that would have been impossible before the advent of digital resources.

America’s Historical Newspapers and other digital resources are extraordinarily powerful tools, enabling historians to reconstruct the movements of fugitives with startling precision. Indeed, with a few keystrokes, a historian working in the 21st century can often reconstruct the movements and careers of obscure criminals two centuries ago with comparable—if not greater—accuracy than the constables and cops who fruitlessly chased them in their own time.

More about the author

Stephen Mihm is the author, with Nouriel Roubini, of Crisis Economics: A Crash Course in the Future of Finance (Penguin Press, 2010) and A Nation of Counterfeiters: Capitalists, Con Men, and the Making of the United States (Harvard University Press, 2007). He is also the co-editor, with Katherine Ott and David Serlin, of Artificial Parts, Practical Lives: Modern Histories of Prosthetics (NYU, 2002).

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World Newspaper Archive: A uniquely comprehensive collection spanning the globe

Monday, October 3rd, 2011

The World Newspaper Archive represents the largest searchable collection of historical newspapers from Asia, Africa and Latin America. Providing new opportunities for fresh insight across wide-ranging academic disciplines, this collection was created in partnership with the Center for Research Libraries (CRL)—one of the world’s largest and most important newspaper repositories.

Every historical newspaper in the World Newspaper Archive has been carefully selected by CRL and its expert advisory boards. In addition, the World Newspaper Archive may be searched with America’s Historical Newspapers for unprecedented coverage of local, national and global issues as well as daily life on four continents in the 19th and 20th centuries. 

African Newspapers, 1800-1922

Explore the issues and events that shaped the continent and its peoples

OverviewTitle ListRequest Trial

 

Latin American Newspapers, 1805-1922

From Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Cuba, Guatemala, Mexico, Peru, Venezuela and elsewhere

OverviewTitle ListRequest Trial

Coming soon! Latin American Newspapers, Series 2, 1822-1922

 

South Asian Newspapers, 1864-1922

Spanning colonial rule and the struggle for independence in India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka

OverviewTitle ListRequest Trial

 

Using the World Newspaper Archive, researchers can compare perspectives and track topics related to repercussions of the Atlantic slave trade; the Zulu Wars; colonial rule in Africa and the Indian subcontinent; Hindu-Muslim conflicts; beginning of Mahatma Gandhi’s non-violent resistance movement; the Mexican Revolution; independence movements in Argentina, Venezuela and neighboring countries; and much more.

For more information or to arrange a product trial at your institution, please contact Readex at 800.762.8182, sales@readex.com or use this form.

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Announcing a Readex Online Seminar: Newspaper Archives for Academic Research and Teaching

Friday, September 23rd, 2011

Readex now offers complimentary 45-minute Webinars led by experts in the history and academic use of newspaper archives. We invite you and your colleagues to register for a lively fall session in which you’ll learn about the fascinating and unique histories of a series of major American newspapers.

We’ll also explore such topics as:

• Why are newspapers often described as not only history’s first draft but also the heart of a community?

• How can general reference and local history researchers best utilize searchable newspaper archives?

• How are teachers at academic institutions of all types and sizes now using newspaper archives in their classrooms?

• How has access to newspaper archives facilitated important published research on American life and history?

• How have the editorial perspectives of individual newspapers changed over time, and how have their political slants shaped and influenced coverage?

• How has news reporting itself developed over time, and how do such transformations mirror evolving social values?

• How can all users more effectively search and enjoy browsing historical newspaper archives?

American newspapers—with their eyewitness reporting, editorials, advertisements, obituaries and human interest stories—have preserved essential records and detailed accounts of nearly every facet of regional and national life. Now searchable online, these regionally diverse archives span centuries of social, cultural, political, military, business, sports and literary history, providing students and scholars with invaluable original reporting and fresh, local-level insights.

Michelle Harper

Our host and key speaker has nearly 15 years of high-level experience with the digitization of archival collections, particularly historical newspapers. She has worked for several leading companies in roles such as Vice President, History Publishing; Director, Special Collections; Director, Product Management; and Publisher, Historical Newspapers.

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Now online: African American Periodicals – from slavery to the modern era

Monday, September 12th, 2011

African American Periodicals, 1825-1995

The essential new complement to African American Newspapers, 1827-1998

African American Periodicals, 1825-1995 features more than 170 wide-ranging periodicals by and about African Americans. Published in 26 states, the publications include academic and political journals, commercial magazines, institutional newsletters, organizations’ bulletins, annual reports and other genres.

These diverse periodicals—which have shaped, and in turn been shaped by, African American culture—will enable new discoveries about lives of African Americans as individuals, as an ethnic group and as Americans. Like African American Newspapers, 1827-1998, this new collection is based upon James P. Danky’s monumental African-American Newspapers and Periodicals: A National Bibliography.

Drawn from matchless holdings of the Wisconsin Historical Society, African American Periodicals ranges over more than 150 years of American life, from slavery during the Antebellum Period to the struggles and triumphs of the modern era. Beyond offering opinions on issues and events of the day, the rare titles in African American Periodicals capture the voices of African American social, political, religious, literary and business history. The publications brought together here—many short-lived and not collected by most libraries—brim with surprises and untold stories.

For more information or to request a collection trial at your institution, please contact Readex at 800.762.8182 or readexmarketing@readex.com.

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ETC (Enhancements, Training and Content): Overview and 2011 Update 2

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

ETC (Enhancements, Training and Content) is an ongoing, multifaceted program that provides Readex customers with one-of-a-kind historical content unavailable online elsewhere. In addition, the ETC program ensures that your library receives the latest and most useful features and functionality, and its training component provides guidance and suggestions for making the most of your Readex collections. ETC also covers online access and storage support.

From the Marietta Journal (September 11, 1890)

Just as Readex is committed to providing its customers with the highest level of ongoing support and maintenance, it is also committed to ensuring that its definitive and comprehensive digital collections continue to grow through the addition of highly relevant new content and features. The ETC program enables you to be certain that you are providing your users and patrons with the most complete and robust digital edition of every Readex collection available at your institution. Through ETC, new content that brings significant enrichment and up-to-date interface functionalities and features will be added periodically. In this manner, ETC will continuously enrich your Readex collections by providing added value and content for your users and patrons for years to come.

The ETC releases for April through August 2011 are complete and include:

  • U.S. Congressional Serial Set: House and Senate Journals from 1969, 91st Congress, 1st session; House and Senate Journals from 1970, 91st Congress, 2nd session.
  • FBIS Reports: Central Eurasia, 1993 (April, May, June): 52 issues, 6,005 pages, 12,064 articles; Central Eurasia, 1993 (July, August): 29 issues, 2,886 pages, 5,596 articles

Releases will continue throughout 2011 on a monthly basis, including additional content for Early American Newspapers, U.S. Congressional Serial Set, and Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS) Daily Reports, 1974-1996.

A new fall schedule of Webinar-based training sessions for all Readex digital collections is available to ETC participants. See our sign-up page to register for a convenient session.

Questions or comments? Please feel free to post them here or email me directly at bkolcun@readex.com.

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What’s New at Readex – Summer 2011

Monday, May 23rd, 2011

To explore our newest collections, please visit Readex at booth 3140 at the 2011 American Library Association conference. Or visit readex.com for detailed product information about these uniquely valuable resources:

African American Periodicals, 1825-1995
This complement to African American Newspapers, 1827-1998, offers “…access to little-known treasures of the Black press; for the first time researchers around the world will gain a full awareness of their content.” — Kathleen Bethel, African American Studies Librarian, Northwestern University. (Request Trial)

Ethnic American Newspapers from the Balch Collection, 1799-1971
Featuring more than 130 newspapers from 25 states—including many rare 19th-century titles—this long-awaited collection presents new opportunities for students and scholars to explore the immigrant experience of many of the most influential ethnic groups in U.S. history. (Request Trial)

Joint Publications Research Service (JPRS) Reports, 1957-1994
Featuring English translations of foreign-language monographs, reports, serials, journal and newspaper articles, and radio and television broadcasts from regions throughout the world, this digital edition contains a wealth of hard-to-find scientific, technical, and social science materials. (Request Trial)

America’s Historical Newspapers: Select
Previously available only by series, every title in  America’s Historical Newspapers can now be acquired by place of publication, including all 50 U.S. states and more than 450 cities. To customize a collection that best meets the needs of researchers at your institution, please use this easy form.

World Newspaper Archive
“I am astonished at the quantity of available material in the Readex digital collections. African Newspapers has been critical to my research.” — Raquel Gomes, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Brazil. Also available: East European, Latin American, and South Asian Newspapers. (Request Trial)

Win a getaway to Florida or Vermont!
Don’t forget about the annual Silent Auction to raise funds for the W. David Rozkuszka Scholarship. Sponsored by Readex and GODORT, this important fundraiser has assisted twelve students with their library education since 1995. Up for bid are vacation stays in scenic Chester, Vermont and sunny Naples, Florida. Bid online today!

We hope to see you in New Orleans at NewsBank booth 3140.

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First release of Ethnic American Newspapers now available for trial

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

Maximum Prepublication Discount Ends Soon

The first release of Ethnic American Newspapers from the Balch Collection, 1799-1971 is live, and this unique new resource is now available for institutional trial.

Created from the newspaper holdings of the former Balch Institute of Ethnic Studies—arguably the best known ethnic research center in America—and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, one of the largest and oldest family history libraries in the nation, this online collection will present more than 130 searchable newspapers, including many rare 19th-century titles.

Two centuries of immigrant life in the U.S.

With an emphasis on Americans of Czech, French, German, Hungarian, Irish, Italian, Japanese, Jewish, Lithuanian, Polish, Slovak and Welsh descent, this unique resource will enable students and scholars to explore often-overlooked aspects of this nation’s history, politics and culture. Nineteenth-century topics include the denial of citizenship to “nonwhites”; the founding of nativist political movements; and the Immigration Act of 1882. In addition to the major contributions of immigrants to business, music, science, education, labor movements and war efforts, later topics include the Naturalization Act of 1906, which for citizenship required immigrants to learn to speak English; the 1942 internment in “War Relocation Camps” of Japanese Americans, several of whom published newspapers; and much more.

An American Ethnic Newspapers collection

Ethnic American Newspapers from the Balch Collection is the third collection in the Readex American Ethnic Newspapers series, which also includes African American Newspapers, 1827-1998 and Hispanic American Newspapers, 1808-1980. It can be cross searched with all other America’s Historical Newspapers series, including Early American Newspapers and 20th-Century American Newspapers.

Request a trial today!

E-mail us at sales@readex.com or call 800.762-8182.

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Libyan Rebel Leaders in FBIS Daily Reports

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

Libyans Raise the Rebel Flag

Khalifa Bilqasim Haftar and Omar al-Hariri, two of the leaders of the reportedly somewhat disorganized military opposition to Col. Muammar Gaddafi in Libya, are not only mentioned in current news reports (see the Sunday, April 3, 2011, edition of The Washington Post), but also in the pages of translations produced and published in the 1980s and ‘90s by the U.S. Foreign Broadcast Information Service.

Here are a couple of the dozens of reports on then Col. Haftar from the FBIS Daily Reports

First, consider this March 28, 1988 report on Col. Haftar’s decision to join the anti-Gaddafi forces.

Click to open full article.

In a 1988 broadcast from Cairo of an account of a meeting of the Arab and Foreign Affairs Committee at the Egyptian Press Syndicate on Sept. 27, the Secretary General of the National Front for the Salvation of Libya, Muhammad Yusuf al-Muqaryif, said “Al-Qadhdhafi’s rule was one of oppression, tyranny, terrorism and sabotage and was entirely against the aspirations of the Libyan people.” Later at the meeting a film of Col. Haftar was shown (see below) on the attempted 1984 assassination of Col. Gaddafi.

Click to open full article.

And on the not-too-distant history of Omar al-Hariri, here is a 1995 account of his release from imprisonment:

Click to open full article.

For information on the Readex digital edition of the Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS) Daily Reports, 1941-1996, please visit our website or contact readexmarketing@readex.com.

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ETC (Enhancements, Training and Content): Overview and 2011 Update 1

Friday, April 1st, 2011

ETC (Enhancements, Training and Content) is an ongoing, multifaceted program that provides Readex customers with one-of-a-kind historical content unavailable online elsewhere. In addition, the ETC program ensures the latest and most useful features and functionality, and provides guidance and suggestions for making the most of your Readex collections. ETC also covers online access and storage support.

Just as Readex is committed to providing its customers with the highest level of ongoing support and maintenance, it is also committed to ensuring that its definitive and comprehensive digital collections continue to grow through the addition of highly relevant new content and features. The ETC program enables you to be certain that you are providing your users and patrons with the most complete and robust digital edition of every Readex collection available at your institution. Through ETC, new content that brings significant enrichment and up-to-date interface functionalities and features will be added periodically. In this manner, ETC will continuously enrich your Readex collections by providing added value and content for your users and patrons for years to come.

The ETC releases for January, February and March 2011 were completed and included: 

ETC releases will continue throughout 2011 on monthly basis, including additional content for Early American Newspapers, U.S. Congressional Serial Set and Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS) Daily Reports, 1974-1996.  Webinar-based training sessions are still available to ETC participants this spring for all Readex digital collections.  See our updated sign-up page for descriptions of each training session.

Questions or comments? Please feel free to post them here or email me directly at bkolcun@readex.com.

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Select historical newspapers published in cities, states, regions or any combination

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011

From Maine to California, the most comprehensive collection of U.S. newspapers published in the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries is America’s Historical Newspapers. Continually expanding, this unique online resource features thousands of historical newspapers published in more than 450 cities from Alaska to Florida. And now, you can create your own customized collection from all available titles published in any U.S. region, state, or city.

Easily build a custom collection that meets your institution’s budget

America’s Historical Newspapers Select is an essential tool for many types of historical research. Students and faculty can easily search any combination of titles within a single, easy-to-use interface, and when your institution’s needs expand, titles from additional locations can be added at any time.

Consider any custom configuration, including:

• Appalachian states

• Coastal Colonial cities

• Confederate States of America

• Deep South

• Ghost Towns

• Great Plains

• Maryland, Virginia, and Washington, D.C.

• New Jersey, New York City and Philadelphia

• New Orleans and Mobile

• Rocky Mountain states

• West Coast

• Your city, your state or your region—or any combination

 Create a collection today!

To get started, use the easy form on the Readex website. Select specific locations to generate a custom list, then click “Request Information” to receive pricing based on your institution’s type and size. For more information, please email us at sales@readex.com or call 800.762-8182.

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