Skip to content
Newspapers

/

England

/

Sussex Advertiser

Sussex Advertiser

Add name

|

Add keywords

|

search
push_pin

Place of publication
Lewes, Sussex, England

event_available

Earliest issue: February 16, 1746
Latest issue: December 31, 1879

calendar_today

Years covered
1746 to 1879 (with some gaps)

note

Total issues: 3662
Total pages: 18482

person

Publisher
Unknown

This newspaper was added to our archives on May 12, 2011. The latest issues were added on November 9, 2016.

The Sussex Advertiser was the first newspaper to be published in Sussex and was founded in Lewes in 1746 as the Sussex Weekly Advertiser, or Lewes Journal by Chichester born William Lee. It comprised 4 pages of mainly foreign and domestic news brought by post from London and advertisements mostly for books or patent medicines.

Lee was a supporter of republicanism and a member of the Headstrong Club, a political discussion group which Thomas Paine also frequented and his views were reflected in the Advertiser.

Lee was succeeded by his sons William and Arthur and the Lee family continued its association with the Advertiser into the 19th century. It supported a repeal of Corn Laws and the introduction of Free Trade. It also advocated a favourable extension of franchise and a voluntary principle on religion with no affiliation to any single creed.

In 1842, fire swept through the offices of the Sussex Advertiser. Despite the fact that Baxter, owner of the rival Tory Sussex Express, allowed Frederick Lee to print the Sussex Advertiser on his presses in order that publication could continue, the Lee family never recovered financially. Ownership of the Advertiser passed to George Bacon who at one point owned and controlled a chain of 13 papers from Sussex to Surrey.

The Advertiser became biweekly in 1858 and a “People’s Edition” was published on Saturdays from 1864 until the Advertiser ceased publication in 1904.

For this newspaper, we have the following titles in, or planned for, our digital archive:

  • 1746–86 The Sussex Weekly Advertiser, or, Lewes Journal
  • 1751–99 Sussex Weekly Advertiser, or, Lewes Journal
  • 1751–99 The Sussex Weekly Advertiser, or, Lewes Journal
  • 1773–1820 The Sussex Weekly Advertiser, or, Lewes Journal
  • 1822–42 The Sussex Advertiser, or Lewes and Brighthelmston Journal
  • 1842–43 The Sussex Advertiser
  • 1843–79 The Sussex Advertiser, Surrey Gazette and West Kent Courier

Search Sussex Advertiser family notices

Old newspapers are full of birth, death and marriage notices that reveal colourful details and poignant tributes you won’t find in other records – perfect for growing your family tree.

Birth notices

Birth records only tell half the story. Search for birth announcements in the Sussex Advertiser.

Search birth noticesarrow_right_alt

Marriage notices

What was their wedding like? Look for your ancestors’ wedding announcements in the Sussex Advertiser.

Search marriage noticesarrow_right_alt

Death notices

Discover poignant details in death and in memoriam notices and obituaries in the Sussex Advertiser.

Search death noticesarrow_right_alt

On this day - 21 April 1846

Newspaper clippings

See the clippings people have made recently from our newspaper archives.

Explore Sussex Advertiser and more

Get access to billions of newspaper pages in our full newspaper archive with a free trial.

Explore our newspaper archive

Behind every headline there's a family - including yours. Enrich your family history with stories, moments and experiences you'll only discover in old newspapers in the largest collection of British and Irish newspapers online at Findmypast.

Add name

|

Add keywords

|

search