
They all have the letter codes CO (Colonial Office) or DO (Dominions Office). They have not been digitised, but the originals are held at The National Archives at Kew. To find colonial or dominion government gazettes, search Discovery, our catalogue, using the name of the territory and the phrase ‘government gazettes’. The National Archives has government gazettes – the official newspapers of former British colonies and British dominions. The National Archives is not the best place to start if you’re looking for newspapers, but we do have some newspaper collections. Does The National Archives have newspapers?
DAILY NATION NEWSPAPER FRIDAY ARCHIVE
Use the Find an archive tool to find the contact details of other libraries and local archives that hold newspaper collections. British Library Newspapers – the main British copyright collection.

Some libraries and archives have newspaper collections. Where can I find newspaper collections that aren’t online? Contact a library such as the British Library or The National Archives’ Library to ask whether they have an institutional subscription. You can access some of the sites in research libraries. Some of the sites are free, but many are subscription-based (£) and offer subscriptions only to institutions, not to individual people.

In 1905 Jeevanjee sold the paper to Maia Anderson and Rudolph Franz Mayer, who changed the name to the East African Standard.

The newspaper was established as the African Standard in 1902 as a weekly by Alibhai Mulla Jeevanjee, an immigrant businessman from British India.
