What has happened to the Liverpool Echo?

What has happened to the Liverpool Echo?

Today The Liverpool Echo continues to report both in print and online, but due to budgetary issues in 2008, it was forced to move its printing process outside of Liverpool for the first time. For this newspaper, we have the following titles in, or planned for, our digital archive:

Where can I find complete editions of the Echo newspaper?

Complete editions of the ECHO and the historic Liverpool Mercury, are among more than 200 newspaper titles which can be accessed from today on the British Newspaper Archive. The ECHO has been digitised from 1879, the year it was founded, to 1903.

When was the first Echo newspaper digitised?

The ECHO has been digitised from 1879, the year it was founded, to 1903. Editions of the weekly Mercury have been digitised from its launch in 1811, up until 1900. The pages are drawn from the British Library’s newspaper collections and cover every aspect of local, regional and national news during those years.

What has the Echo got to do with Hillsborough?

The Echo has also devoted a lot of attention to two of the city’s football clubs – Liverpool F.C. and Everton F.C. – and on 16 April 1989, a special 28-page Sunday edition was published in the wake of the tragic Hillsborough Disaster, where 96 Liverpool fans lost their lives during an FA Cup game against Nottingham Forest.

Where is the Daily Echo published?

This newspaper is published by Reach PLC in Liverpool, Lancashire, England . It was digitised and first made available on the British Newspaper Archive in Sep 28, 2012 . The latest issues were added in Apr 10, 2020 .

Where do the pages in Liverpool’s archive come from?

The pages are drawn from the British Library’s newspaper collections and cover every aspect of local, regional and national news during those years. The 19th century, which the archive covers, saw the period of Liverpool’s greatest expansion, when it became known as “the second city of Empire.”

Where can I find complete editions of the Echo and Mercury?

Complete editions of the ECHO and the historic Liverpool Mercury, are among more than 200 newspaper titles which can be accessed from today on the British Newspaper Archive. The ECHO has been digitised from 1879, the year it was founded, to 1903. Editions of the weekly Mercury have been digitised from its launch in 1811, up until 1900.

  • August 6, 2022