Proceedings of the Old Bailey, 1674-1913 – available online

This is incredibly cool:

The Old Bailey Proceedings Online makes available a fully searchable, digitised collection of all surviving editions of the Old Bailey Proceedings from 1674 to 1913, and of the Ordinary of Newgate’s Accounts, 1690 to 1772. It allows access to over 210,000 trials and biographical details of approximately 3,000 men and women executed at Tyburn, free of charge for non-commercial use.

In addition to the text, accessible through both keyword and structured searching, this website provides digital images of all 190,000 original pages of the Proceedings, 5,000 pages of Ordinary’s Accounts, advice on methods of searching this resource, information on the historical and legal background to the Old Bailey court and its Proceedings, and descriptions of published and manuscript materials relating to the trials covered. Contemporary maps, and images have also been provided.

The Old Bailey Proceedings Online link -

I haven’t spent much time exploring it yet, but I love that all the adverts and front matter are included and fully searchable.  I also like the suggestion from the Observer’s article that one could productively use the archive to search for criminal ancestors!

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Becoming Jane

I love that the DVD cover of Becoming Jane doesn’t actually feature Jane at all. And wow, that is a bad picture of James McAvoy. You’re not selling it to me, Beeb.

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The Shadow of Marriage

In a pretty amazing coincidence given the date, a book called The Shadow of Marriage: Singleness in England 1914-60 by Katherine Holden caught my eye at work today. I ordered it up from the library and hope to get stuck into it on Monday.

The book will be particularly interesting to read in light of the Daily Mail’s last-ditch and rather transparently desperate attempt to spin the findings of a very sad study about suicide into a cautionary fable against the perils of spinsterhood.

I am well into the first book from my giant to-read list – Saturday by Ian McEwan. I am completely absorbed thus far, which makes my bus journey to work much less painful. I have a small mountain of McEwan, largely because I read The Child in Time for a postmodernism module at university, loved it, and promptly took advantage of a 3-for-2 offer at Waterstones. I hope they are all as engrossing.

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Books to read in 2008

Secondhand bookshops are some of my favourite places in the world. I love a good (or even a bad) new bookshop too, but there’s something uniquely appealing about a shop full of books that have passed through others’ hands before finding their way to mine. The problem is that once I go into these places, all too many books find their way into my hands and before I know it, I’ve got over 400 books living with me in one room, double-stacked on a very large yet not-large-enough bookcase.

In an effort to free up some space (and hopefully some cash), I’m going to read through as many of the unread books I own as possible this year, selling or donating any which I don’t want to keep. And then, no doubt, buying more books with the proceeds!

The books are listed below, and will be struck through as I read. Wish me luck! Read the rest of this entry »

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