Viewing search results for "https://www.digitalnc.org/newspapers/the-nation-buffalo-springs-n-c/"
View All Posts
This week we have another 41 titles up on DigitalNC! In this batch we have a lot of new papers from Durham and Beaufort, as well as our first additions from Mocksville, Pine Forest, and Kenansville!
Last month we added our first copies of The Nation from Buffalo Springs. The Nation was a handwritten paper published by John McLean Harrington, a Harnett County man who would painstakingly copy each of his papers by hand for his roughly 100 subscribers. This week we have five more of Harrington’s handwritten papers: The Young American from Buffalo Springs, The Weekly Eagle from Pine Forest, and Harrington, N.C.’s The Times, The Weekly News, and The Semi-Weekly News.
Over the next year, we’ll be adding millions of newspaper images to DigitalNC. These images were originally digitized a number of years ago in a partnership with Newspapers.com. That project focused on scanning microfilmed papers published before 1923 held by the North Carolina Collection in Wilson Special Collections Library. While you can currently search all of those pre-1923 issues on Newspapers.com, over the next year we will also make them available in our newspaper database as well. This will allow you to search that content alongside the 2 million pages already on our site – all completely open access and free to use.
This week’s additions include:
- The Clinton Independent (Clinton, N.C.) – 1856-1858
- Eastern Courier (Hertford, N.C.) – 1895-1896
- The Nation (Buffalo Springs, N.C.) – 1858
- The Young American (Buffalo Springs, N.C.) – 1858
- The Weekly Eagle (Pine Forest, N.C.) – 1860
- The Eagle (Fayetteville, N.C.) – 1868-1873
- The Semi-Weekly News (Harrington, N.C.) – 1860
- The Weekly News (Harrington, N.C.) – 1860-1864
- The Times (Harrington, N.C.) – 1867-1869
- Eastern Carolina News (Kenansville, N.C.) – 1908-1911
- The Chronicle (Albemarle, N.C.) – 1916-1917
- The Enterprise (Albemarle, N.C.) – 1917-1918
- The Albemarle Enterprise (Albemarle, N.C.) – 1919
- The News (Albemarle, N.C.) – 1919
- Stanly County Herald (Albemarle, N.C.) – 1919
- The Stanly News-Herald (Albemarle, N.C.) – 1919
- The Weekly Record (Beaufort, N.C.) – 1887-1888
- The Beaufort Eagle (Beaufort, N.C.) – 1876
- The Herald (Beaufort, N.C.) – 1893
- Beaufort Journal (Beaufort, N.C.) – 1857-1858
- Carteret County Telephone (Beaufort, N.C.) – 1881-1885
- The Clayton Bud (Clayton, N.C.) – 1883-1886
- The Weekly Bud (Smithfield, N.C.) – 1886-1887
- Creedmoor Times-News (Creedmoor, N.C.) – 1915-1919
- Durham Daily Dispatch (Durham, N.C.) – 1880
- The Durham Herald (Durham, N.C.) – 1876
- The Durham County Republican (Durham, N.C.) – 1884
- The Truth (Durham, N.C.) – 1884
- Daily Record (Durham, N.C.) – 1898
- The Daily Reporter (Durham, N.C.) – 1885
- The Durham Weekly Globe (Durham, N.C.) – 1889-1892
- Durham Globe (Durham, N.C.) – 1895-1896
- Saturday Night (Durham, N.C.) – 1893
- The Patriot (Greensboro, N.C.) – 1826-1827
- The Carolina Beacon (Greensboro, N.C.) – 1836-1837
- Southern Telescope (Greensboro, N.C.) – 1837
- The Carolina Patriot (Greensboro, N.C.) – 1837-1839
- The Davie Times (Mocksville, N.C.) – 1887-1903
- The Davie Record (Mocksville, N.C.) – 1899-1922
- Chatham Observer (Pittsboro, N.C.) – 1901-1904
- Chatham Citizen (Pittsboro, N.C.) – 1897-1899
- The Day (Oxford, N.C.) – 1890-1892
- The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.) – 1895-1897
- The Evening Tribune (Concord, N.C.) – 1904-1910
- Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.) – 1910-1921
If you want to see all of the newspapers we have available on DigitalNC, you can find them here. Thanks to UNC-Chapel Hill Libraries for permission to and support for adding all of this content as well as the content to come. We also thank the North Caroliniana Society for providing funding to support staff working on this project.
This week we have added issues from 35 different newspaper titles! One of the titles we have is a paper from the now non-existent town of Buffalo Springs, North Carolina. According to this News & Record article, the Harnett County town ceased to exist when the turpentine industry in the area died out. But the intriguing thing about these papers isn’t the ghost of this town, it’s the man who wrote them: John McLean Harrington. Professor and author Michael Ray Smith penned this fascinating paper about Harrington and his newspapers, in which he writes: “Shortly before the Civil War, the son of an affluent Southern family began a journalism career unlike any in his community, his state, or even the nation and produced 305 handwritten newspapers, perhaps the greatest single output of handwritten newspapers by any American journalist.” Harrington had a subscription list of roughly 100 people and would painstakingly copy each individual paper by hand, even though printing presses were widely available at the time. In 1858, when Harrington was writing issues of The Nation, he was only 19 years old. The young man’s ambitions didn’t stop with just being a journalist. He also apparently worked as a bookkeeper, surveyor, educator, sheriff, and postmaster in Harnett County. While his accomplishments were quite impressive, he was also a man of contradiction. Smith writes this of the rural Renaissance man: “He talked of a partner but never revealed the colleague’s identity—if he indeed had one. He discussed the evil of drinking but died an alcoholic. He served as a member of the Confederate militia only to swear an oath that he would always remain a loyal Unionist. Perhaps Harrington tended to do or say whatever was expedient or expected at the time. Maybe he was himself just conflicted in numerous ways.”
Over the next year, we’ll be adding millions of newspaper images to DigitalNC. These images were originally digitized a number of years ago in a partnership with Newspapers.com. That project focused on scanning microfilmed papers published before 1923 held by the North Carolina Collection in Wilson Special Collections Library. While you can currently search all of those pre-1923 issues on Newspapers.com, over the next year we will also make them available in our newspaper database as well. This will allow you to search that content alongside the 2 million pages already on our site – all completely open access and free to use.
This week’s additions include:
- The Tri-Weekly Bulletin (Charlotte, N.C.) – 1865-1881
- Asheville Pioneer (Asheville, N.C.) – 1867-1869
- Weekly Pioneer (Asheville, N.C.) – 1870-1874
- The Carolina Eagle (Hickory, N.C.) – 1871-1872
- Mountain Messenger (Jefferson, N.C.) – 1873
- Battleboro Advance (Rocky Mount, N.C.) – 1871-1873
- The Weekly Ansonian (Polkton, N.C.) – 1876-1877
- The Southern Mail (Hillsborough, N.C.) – 1880
- The Carolina Republican (Lincolnton, N.C.) – 1848-1853
- Yadkin & Catawba Journal (Salisbury, N.C.) – 1828-1833
- The Journal (Salisbury, N.C.) – 1833-1834
- The Hornet (Bixby, N.C.) – 1908
- The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) – 1922-1924
- The Asheville Democrat (Asheville, N.C.) – 1889-1891
- Monthly Gleaner (Asheville, N.C.) – 1894-1895
- Fuller’s Gleaner (Asheville, N.C.) – 1895-1896
- The Dispatch (Bessemer City, N.C.) – 1912
- The Carthage Blade (Carthage, N.C.) – 1887-1895
- The Central Times (Dunn, N.C.) – 1895
- County Union (Dunn, N.C.) – 1895-1899
- The Transylvania Hustler (Brevard, N.C.) – 1893
- The Brevard Hustler (Brevard, N.C.) – 1896
- The Western Carolina Democrat (Bakersville, N.C.) – 1888
- Roan Mountain Republican (Bakersville, N.C.) – 1876-1879
- The Nation (Buffalo Springs, N.C.) – 1858
- Cape Fear News (Fayetteville, N.C.) – 1915-1917
- Central Argus (Hamlet, N.C.) – 1880
- The Stanly Enterprise (Albemarle, N.C.) – 1903-1907
- The Albemarle Enterprise (Albemarle, N.C.) – 1912-1916
- The Stanly News-Herald (Albemarle, N.C.) – 1920-1922
- The Beaufort News (Beaufort, N.C.) – 1920-1922
- The State Dispatch (Burlington, N.C.) – 1908-1909
- Daily Carolina Times (Charlotte, N.C.) – 1864-1869
- The Standard (Concord, N.C.) – 1900-1902
- The Battleboro Progress (Battleboro, N.C.) – 1880
If you want to see all of the newspapers we have available on DigitalNC, you can find them here. Thanks to UNC-Chapel Hill Libraries for permission to and support for adding all of this content as well as the content to come. We also thank the North Caroliniana Society for providing funding to support staff working on this project.