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Archiver > CASANFRA > 2006-09 > 1157244931
From: Doug Urbanus <>
Subject: Re: [CASANFRA] Copying Death obit to a News Papers back East (Timeperiod)
Date: Sat, 2 Sep 2006 17:55:31 -0700 (PDT)
In-Reply-To: <6420749d470bff4abde1dc32ab9f6323@adelphia.net>
There was no Reuters, AP or UPI during this era. It's my understanding that newspapers were widely distributed. This is how news of one section of the country was disseminated to another section. I'm not aware whether or not there was any formal distribution network or method. The "Please Copy" was a standard way of alerting a paper that an item was of local interest. So when the item might be printed depended on several variables: how long it might take for a newspaper to reach Boston, whether it was noticed or not, and whether a Boston paper found it worthy of printing.
The Schafers <> wrote: Hello,
I'm posting this to ask for some help or advise.
When a paper such as the SF Examiner says [Boston Papers Please Copy]
in 1880, how long does it take for the other papers to get the info?
I have my ggm dying on April 9, 1880 and it had said [Boston Papers
Please Copy] along with her obit.
I had the Boston Library do the look up and they searched to April
20th. To me that doesn't seem long enough.
If anyone has had any experience in this could you write me. I'm not
sure how the newspapers got the message. Would it be via train?
I'd love some feed back because this maybe my only link.
Thanks,
Cathie
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| Re: [CASANFRA] Copying Death obit to a News Papers back East (Timeperiod) by Doug Urbanus <> |