Since 2007, the Digital Library of Georgia has provided access to the state’s historic newspapers, with the majority having been digitized from microfilm produced by the Georgia Newspaper Project. With the launch of the Georgia Historic Newspapers site in July 2017, the DLG has maintained that tradition by bringing together new and existing resources into a single, consolidated website where newspapers dating from 1763 to 2018 are full-text searchable, and can be browsed by city, title, date, keyword, or region.

OUR 2 Millionth PAGE

What is our 2 millionth page? Click on the button and have a look at the front page of the May 27, 1976 issue of the The News Review!

About Our 2 Millionth Page

Mallory Millender published the first issue of the News-Review in Augusta, Georgia, on March 25, 1971. The newspaper, which became the Augusta News-Review in November 1972, identified itself as a “community paper with a predominantly Black readership” that presented the issues of the Central Savannah River Area (CSRA) from a “Black perspective.” In addition to his publishing and editorial duties with the News-Review, Millender was also a professor of French and journalism at Paine College, a historically Black college or university (HBCU) in Augusta. In the 1970s and early 1980s, the News-Review was the sole African-American newspaper published in the city. The publication covered the triumphs of the Black community in the CSRA and the continued fight for social and economic equality in the United States in the post-civil rights era. Staffers of the paper during this period included Pulitzer Prize winning columnist E. R. Shipp and Michael Thurmond, the chief executive officer for DeKalb County and a former representative in the Georgia Assembly. In November 1980, the white printer of the Augusta News-Review attempted to censor a cartoon set for publication in the paper. Millender refused his demand and the printer locked him out of the newspaper offices. With printing assistance from the Atlanta Voice, the use of NAACP offices, and volunteers and donations from across the country, the Augusta News-Review continued to publish weekly. By the following year, the publication had gained complete independence as a Black-owned, Black-produced, and Black-printed newspaper. The Augusta News-Review continued to serve the CSRA for another five years before ceasing publication in March 1985. In its place, Barbara Gordon, who had studied under Millender and served as general manager of the News-Review, published the Metro Courier.


PRESS RELEASE

Read our press release about reaching our 2 millionth page!

INTERACTIVE MAP of Georgia

CONGRATULATIONS FROM DEAN CHARLES N. DAVIS

CONGRATULATIONS from DEAN CHARLES N. DAVIS

Video congratulations from Charles N. Davis, the Dean of the Henry W. Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Georgia


Stories of Life in Georgia

IMPACT STORIES and Newspaper USe

How Have Digitized Historic Newspapers Helped Me Find What I'm Looking For?

Advertisement for the Ding Ho Restaurant


Cover of the Augusta Herald, September 28, 1934 (morning)
(Judith Malone, Perry Branch Manager of the Houston County Public Library)


Cover of the Augusta Herald, September 28, 1934 (morning)
(Lane Fuller, author of the blog Old Georgia Homes)
  • The Jerusalem Post observes Shavuot, the “Feast of Weeks” with Georgia Historic Newspapers

WHAT ARE OUR 5 FAVORITE NEWSPAPER PAGES?

Blog post on our 5 favorite pages from DLG newspaper staff


HOW DO I USE GEORGIA HISTORIC NEWSPAPERS?

Instructional videos on how to use the Georgia Historic Newspapers site

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The 2 Millionth Page Celebration is sponsored in part by GALILEO, the University of Georgia Libraries, Georgia Public Library Service, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the R. J. Taylor, Jr. Foundation, the Knox Foundation (Thomson, Georgia) , and dozens of cultural heritage institutions across the state.