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KM Group archive goes online

Volunteers work on the KM Group's digital archive project
Volunteers work on the KM Group's digital archive project

Volunteers work on the KM Group's digital archive project

Thousands of pages from the KM Group's newspaper archive have gone online today - and there is free access for everyone in the UK.

The family-owned firm is the first regional publisher in the country to digitise volumes of its historic newspapers thanks to a Your Heritage grant and a dedicated group of volunteers.

Tens of thousands of South Eastern Gazette pages, the sister paper of the Kent Messenger, from 1852 to 1912 are being put online as a fully searchable archive.

This covers the greatest period of social and industrial revolution in British history – and an inspiration for the London 2012 opening ceremony.

Moments in Kent's history which feature in the archive include the day Canterbury Cathedral came close to being destroyed; how the county mourned the death of Queen Victoria, and when Charles Dickens helped the injured in a train crash.

A launch event at the Historic Dockyard in Chatham today is being attended by 200 Kent schoolchildren and members of local history groups.

Chatham's Historic Dockyard
Chatham's Historic Dockyard

Chatham's Historic Dockyard plays host to the launch

Project manager Lesley Bellew said she hopes this selection of pages will be the foundation for adding more dates.

She added: “I hope this is just the start of creating a seamless archive of KM Group newspapers for the next generation.

“It is a great resource and should prove invaluable to all age groups from children studying Key Stage 2 to family and local history societies.”

A group of volunteers spent more than 1,000 hours cataloguing, cleaning and repairing the pages.

One volunteer, Janet Welch, said: “Usually I am not one for ironing, but that was part of what we needed to do to get the pages as smooth as possible in readiness for the digitisation.

"I was a bit slow because I kept getting distracted by reading the pages and not getting on with the work.”

KM Group editorial director Ian Carter said: "This is the culmination of a huge amount of work from Lesley and the team of volunteers, and we are immensely grateful for the time they have put in."

The archive will be accessed via this website.

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