Troop movements, booze, tobacco, sword belts and saddles for sale, shipping news and an editorial that set out the path for the New Zealand Herald inked the four pages of the paper's first edition nearly 149 years ago.
In a combined project, the Herald, Auckland Central City Library and the National Library today launch the first 21 years of newspapers on paperspast.natlib.govt.nz. Dating from Friday, November 13, 1863 to 1884 and comprising 50,000 pages, it is the first of a planned release of papers through to 1945.
Since the 1950s the library has used microfilm to record papers. They are still so popular with the public the institution runs a booking system.
The change means that keyword searches replace the time-consuming practice of students and researchers having to scan through editions to find what they're looking for.
The inaugural paper cost three pence and set out that no cost nor care would be spared in covering the "immediate anxiety" - the "native rebellion".