Irish Times, Dublin Daily Express, The Freeman's Journal, April 1886
James Naughtie locates the heartbeat of history in the front page small ads of the Irish press in April 1886.
James Naughtie unearths the heartbeat of history from more front pages of newspaper classified ads.
One the eve of Gladstone's first Home Rule Bill, three Irish newspapers appeal to their respective readerships for support for the Protestant poor of Dublin or the destitute inhabitants of the west of Ireland.
The Dublin Ladies Sanitary Association is tackling poverty in Dublin while the million and a half residents of Glasnevin cemetery tell their own stories.
Front page news is a relatively late addition to the newspaper business. For most of their first couple of centuries, British newspapers carried classified ads rather than news on their front page. They transformed the hustle and bustle of the marketplace into newsprint, so you could take it home or to the inn to pore over at your leisure.
James travels the country discovering how these front page ads give us a snapshot of time and place, exploring how they weave national and local life together - the heartbeat of history rolling daily or weekly off the presses.
Producer: John Forsyth
A Loftus Media production for BBC Radio 4, first broadcast in August 2019.
On radio
Broadcasts
- Tue 20 Aug 201909:30BBC Radio 4
- Wed 18 Dec 201913:45BBC Radio 4
- Wednesday09:30BBC Radio 4 Extra
