For the most part the women’s movement was ignored by the press. When newspapers in the 19th century did address women’s rights and suffrage, it was from the negative perspective. Women realized early on that newspapers could reach greater numbers of people than the conferences and lectures most often attended by wealthy women.
Month: September 2018
From the INP Archives: Women Diversifying Illinois Newspapers
September 27, 2018
The INP and Newspaper Digitization at Illinois
September 27, 2018
Newspaper digitization at University of Illinois began in 2004, under the leadership of Professor Mary Stuart, History Librarian and head of the History and Philosophy Library. At the time, Stuart was developing a plan to merge the History and Philosophy Library with the Newspaper Library, to form a single unit: the History, Philosophy, and Newspaper […]
How the INP Began
September 26, 2018
The INP began in 1987, as part of the United States Newspaper Program (USNP), a project funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities(NEH) to identify, catalog, and preserve American newspapers. Since that time, the INP has been staffed by librarians from the Illinois State Historical Library (ISHL), the Chicago Historical Society (CHS), and the […]
A Brief History of Newspapers in Illinois
September 26, 2018
Newspapers have played an important role in Illinois history since their introduction four years prior to statehood. In 1813, Matthew Duncan, a friend of Illinois Territorial Governor Ninian Edwards, secured a contract to print the first edition of the Illinois Territorial Laws. In 1814, Duncan began publishing the Illinois Herald at Kaskaskia, subsequently the state’s […]