Old News

Plain Text Historic Journalism

Archive contains 13 digitized articles.

Title Summary
The Waterford Chronicle
20/05/1846
Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation - Avowed Infidelity
This 1846 review sharply denounces the bestselling book "Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation," accusing its anonymous author of scientific incompetence and dangerous, unchristian deism. The reviewer particularly attacks the author's theory that human morality is not a spiritual matter, but rather a mechanical, natural phenomenon governed by physical and electrical laws.
The Atlas
20/12/1845
Explanations: a Sequel to “*Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation*.
This is a review of 'Explanations', a follow-up book by the anonymous author of *Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation*, in which the author defends his theory of organic development and natural law against scientific critics. The reviewer examines key contested points — the nebular hypothesis, geological evidence for progressive species development, and spontaneous generation experiments — while remaining skeptical but acknowledging the theory's thought-provoking merits.
Liverpool Mercury
3/10/1845
Mercury Extraordinary!
In this October 1845 announcement, the Liverpool Mercury celebrates its growing circulation and temporary page expansion—undertaken to accommodate an influx of advertisements without cutting news content—while confirming the financial success of its recent price increase.
The Liverpool Mercury
3/10/1845
The Edinburgh Review, and Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation
This 1845 article reviews Professor Adam Sedgwick’s incredibly harsh, Edinburgh Review critique of the anonymous, evolution-themed book Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation. While acknowledging the book's scientific flaws, the contributor defends its grand philosophical view of a divinely ordered universe and chides established geologists for intolerantly attacking an outsider's theories.
Dublin Evening Post
17/05/1845
Professor Nichol
The Dublin Evening Post retracts its false attribution of the controversial, atheistical Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation to Professor J.P. Nichol. Professor Nichol formally denies authorship in a public letter, effectively distancing himself from the work's widespread religious criticism.
The Examiner
9/11/1844
Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation
This 1844 literary review highly praises the groundbreaking, anonymously published book Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation, celebrating it as the first major attempt to connect the natural sciences into a cohesive evolutionary history. The reviewer emphasizes that while the book's radical scientific theories on the natural development of life and space might initially startle religious readers, its core philosophy remains deeply reverent, benevolent, and harmonious with spiritual faith.
The Examiner
8/06/1840
The Attempt on the Queen's Life
The Examiner condemns the attempted assassination of Queen Victoria, portraying it as an act driven by notoriety and warning against partisan rhetoric that may have encouraged hostility toward the crown. It also refers to the attacker, Edward Oxford, whose remark that a woman should not rule is cited in the political debate surrounding the incident.
The Examiner
14/06/1840
The Bane and the Antidote
This article fiercely contrasts the Whig government’s Irish Registration Bill with a rival Tory bill proposed by Lord Stanley, branding the latter as a hypocritical attempt to systematically disfranchise Irish voters through relentless annual litigation. While the Whig plan offers a temperate, eight-year revision process to protect honest electors, the author warns that the Tory scheme uses the guise of reform to strip away popular franchises and dismantle the core of the Reform Act.
The Examiner
14/06/1840
The Preparations for War in China
This 1840 article details British confidence ahead of the First Opium War, mocking China's "infatuation" with using converted merchant ships against the superior British Navy. It specifically ridicules a Chinese official's absurd defense proposals, which include cutting off fresh water supplies and using teams of military divers to sneak aboard British warships at night to massacre the crew.
The Examiner
8/03/1840
Election News
This election roundup details the shifting candidate fields and strategic maneuvers between Tory and Liberal factions across several British boroughs. It highlights a concerted push by Radical Reformers to mobilize independent voters, contest Conservative strongholds, and maintain momentum for the Whig ministry.
The Spectator
22/07/1837
Dr. Nichol's Architecture of the Heavens.
This review highly praises Dr. Nichol's Architecture of the Heavens for beautifully popularizing complex 19th-century astronomical discoveries, such as Herschel's nebular hypothesis and cosmic firmaments. The critic commends the book's blend of poetic eloquence and scientific mastery, which frames the birth, mechanics, and ultimate dissolution of worlds as an inspiring testament to divine creation.
Sussex Advertiser
19/02/1749
NO.XXXII. The Continuation of the Adventures of Roderick Random
Part 32 of the adventures of Roderick Random. The narrator listens to a companion's harrowing account of falling into desperate street prostitution and illness after a failed inheritance scam. Moved by her tragic transformation from a wealthy upbringing to extreme poverty, the narrator helps nursing her back to health while they plot an escape from their circumstances.
Sussex Advertiser
19/02/1749
Tuesday's Post
Mid-century European dispatches detail a deadly cold wave in Bohemia and a fatal hospital outbreak in Paris, alongside swirling rumors of French military mobilization for an imminent war in Italy.