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37,255 Smith Newspaper Letters

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Your search for Smith returned 37,255 matching Newspaper Letters dating from 1704–1999. Newspaper Letters provide a wealth of family history information that you can use to research your deceased ancestors and trace your Smith family tree.

Discover more about your Smith ancestry with genealogy information commonly found in current Smith Newspaper Letters.

  • Full Name of Ancestor
  • Places Your Ancestor Visited & Lived
  • Dates & Places
  • Names of Relatives
  • Names of Friends
  • Names of Family Pets
  • Family Stories
  • Insight into Personal Life & Relationships
  • Insight into Viewpoints & Personality
  • Information about Life Events
  • Information about Travels
  • Plus! Royal Letter Correspondence
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(Results 41 – 50 of 37,255) Refine Search Results

  1. The Pigeon Sweepstakes Postponed. Don Quixote Defends the Dovecote Mr. Bergh Appears by Proxy Mr. Smith

    Date: Saturday, January 6, 1872
    Location: New York, New York
    Paper: New York Herald
    Article type: Newspaper Letter
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  2. The Sultan's "Noble Fight." A Reply By The Rev. Cyrus Hamlin To F. Hopkinson Smith

    Date: Thursday, November 12, 1896
    Location: New York, New York
    Paper: New York Tribune
    Article type: Newspaper Letter
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  3. [Manchester; American; Judge; Eastman; Mrs. William P. Smith; Judge Eastman's; July]

    Date: Thursday, February 17, 1848
    Location: Keene, New Hampshire
    Paper: New Hampshire Sentinel
    Article type: Newspaper Letter
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  4. The Aristocratic Candidate for the Mayoralty, or Robert Smith as a Man, and Robert Smith

    Date: Saturday, April 8, 1843
    Location: New York, New York
    Paper: Evening Post
    Article type: Newspaper Letter
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  5. Hon. William Smith. An Honored Ex-Governor of Virginia

    Date: Friday, May 27, 1887
    Location: Wheeling, West Virginia
    Paper: Wheeling Register
    Article type: Newspaper Letter
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  6. Criticises Sheriff For Retaining Smith Correspondent Says the Deputy Should Be Dismissed--Sheriff Explains

    Date: Sunday, December 8, 1907
    Location: Trenton, New Jersey
    Paper: Trenton Evening Times
    Article type: Newspaper Letter
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  7. For the Federal Gazette Senator Smith on His Own Demerits

    Date: Wednesday, August 23, 1809
    Location: Baltimore, Maryland
    Paper: Federal Gazette
    Article type: Newspaper Letter
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  8. Cadet Smith--A Statement From David Clark

    Date: Sunday, September 24, 1871
    Location: New Orleans, Louisiana
    Paper: Weekly Louisianian
    Article type: Newspaper Letter
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  9. [Mr. Smith; Washington; Opposition]

    Date: Friday, September 23, 1808
    Location: Norfolk, Virginia
    Paper: Norfolk Gazette and Publick Ledger
    Article type: Newspaper Letter
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  10. Keep Hoke Smith In Senate Says This South Georgian The Farmer Should Be Given the

    Date: Friday, August 14, 1914
    Location: Augusta, Georgia
    Paper: Augusta Chronicle
    Article type: Newspaper Letter
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Historical Newspaper Archives Search Tips

Newspaper Archives Last & First Name Search

  • Using both name search fields returns newspaper articles in which the surname is automatically "near2" the first name.
    • This means the newspaper archive search engine automatically finds occurrences of the first and last names within two words of each other.
    • This helps to find occurrences of middle names or initials in the newspaper articles, without having to enter or remember them.
  • The "near2" search command is not order specific—meaning your newspaper search will retrieve the person's name no matter in what order it is mentioned: the first name then last name or the last name then first name.
    • This search default is intended to bring you the most occurrences of the name you are searching for in the online newspaper archives.
  • However, if the person's name is popular, like Smith, try using some of the available search options such as location, date range, and keyword, in order to narrow your search to the specific Smith you are looking for (see below).

Using Advanced Search in the Newspaper Archive Database

  • There are two keyword search boxes to narrow your search for newspaper articles: "Include keywords" box and "Exclude keywords" box (see below).
  • Use the Date search box to enter a specific date or date range of the newspaper content you want to search online.

Using Keywords & Quotation Marks to Search Newspapers

  • All the searches for historical newspaper articles are full-text keyword searches against OCR-generated ASCII text.
  • By using the "Include keywords" box and/or "Exclude keywords" box, you can narrow or expand your online newspaper article search.
  • Put phrases in quotes like "John Adams" in the "Include" keyword box to limit the newspaper article search to that exact name—versus using the last/first name search that brings back results matching John near2 Adams.
  • If you find too many names in the newspaper archive search results, narrow your search even more by typing names or places you do NOT want in your search in the "Exclude" box.

Using Boolean Operators to Search Newspaper Archives

  • Use AND, OR, ADJx (order specific), NEARx (order non-specific) and Wildcards, such as "?" and "*")

Broaden or narrow newspaper search queries

  • by emptying filled-in fields to broaden your search, or filling in empty fields to narrow your search.

Display newspaper search results in different ways, such as:

  • Best matches (this is the newspaper search default)
  • Oldest items (based on newspaper publication dates)
  • Newest items (based on newspaper publication dates)
  • Once changed, the selection will remain the default until you change it again.

Search Newspapers by Date Range

  • If you know the date of the newspaper content you are seeking, then use the "Date" search box.
    • Enter a specific date or a date range—a variety of date formats are accepted.
    • Examples: June 2, 1804, or 1804 - 1849, or June 1804 - August 1949.

Using Colonial English Variant Spellings to Search Old Newspapers

  • Many of the newspapers in the historical newspaper archives are very old, and the searches must deal with Colonial English.
  • The long "s" character was almost identical to the "f" in many texts.
    • When searching old newspaper articles on words containing the letter "s," use the "?" wildcard in place of the "s."
    • Note: this can occur whether it is the first letter, a letter within a word, or at the end of a word.
    • The double "s" is in words like Massachusetts needs to be replaced with two wildcards in historical newspaper searches.

Examples of Searching for Old Newspaper Articles with Colonial English

Modern Spelling Colonial Spellings Suggested Search
Spanish Spanifh Spani?h, ?pani?h
Boston Bofton Bo?ton
Massachusetts Maffachufetts Ma??achu?ett?
  • In addition, type was set by hand for early American newspapers and printers did not always have enough pieces of type to include all of the letters in a word. This resulted in letters being omitted, or sometimes letters that looked similar were used as substitutions.
  • Much of this historic newspaper material did not use standard spellings.
  • Examples of some conventions that were common in old newspapers:
    • Use of name variants - Smith or Smythe
    • Use of "e" in word endings - Chesapeake or Chesapeak
    • Dropping the letter "h" - Philadelphia or Philadelpia
  • Examples of irregular vowel usage:
    • clerk - cleark
    • color - colour
    • Delaware - Deleware
    • Elijah - Elifha
    • Israel - Ifreal - Ifral
    • Jehovah - Javovah
  • Examples of letter e to word endings
    • Brown - Browne
    • Chesapeake - Chefopeak or Chefopeake
    • Clark - Clarke
    • highways - highwayes
  • Examples of interchanging use of the letters "i" and "y"
    • adjoining - adjoyning
    • Pennsylvania - Pensilvania or Penfilvania
    • rails - rayls

Colonial Newspaper Search Notes

  • If in doubt, use wildcards such as the question mark "?" or the asterisk "*" in your colonial newspaper search.
  • A question mark is a single-character wildcard and an asterisk multi-character (allows for up to 5 characters) wildcard.