Headline Date Newspaper Region City Language Document
Matches
Paragraph
Matches
Word Count
NEWS OF THE WEEK. Wednesday. 1895-04-06 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 1 1 16
EIGHT PAGES. 1895-05-01 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 1 226
WILDE'S BAIL FIXED AT $25,000, HALF TO BE FUR- NISHED BY HIMSELF. 1895-05-04 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 12 1 50
OSCAR WILDE BRANDED The Marquis of Queensberry's Terrible Accusations Justified. SCATHING VERDICT RENDERED. THE JURY FLATLY SAYS THE EX- POSURE IS FOR THE PUBLIC GOOD. His Own Lawyer Abandoned the Case to Prevent Queensberry from Making Fur- ther Disclosures and Admitted that All The Charges were True - Wilde Runs Away From the Court and May be Ar- rested and Prosecuted. 1895-04-05 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 2 16 871
A BLACK EYE IN HIGH LIFE. ADMINISTERED BY QUEENSBERRY TO HIS ELDER SON. It Wasn't Lord Alfred Who Was Whipped By His Papa But Lord Douglass of Hawick - Father and Son in a Police Court To-day - The Washing of Dirty Linen. 1895-05-22 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 4 3 360
NEWS OF THE WEEK. Friday. 1895-04-27 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 0 7
EIGHT PAGES. 1895-04-08 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 1 191
NEWS OF THE WEEK Monday. 1895-05-11 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 0 5
BAIL ACCEPTED. Oscar Wilde to Be Released From Prison To-morrow. JUSTICE POLLOCK, FINDING THE SURETIES RESPONSIBLE, SIGNS THE ORDER - HE WILL BE AL- LOWED TO GO ABROAD, AND MAY NOT BE RETRIED. 1895-05-06 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 1 125
OSCAR WILDE'S DISGRACE. 1895-04-05 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 0 0 427
OSCAR WILDE GUILTY. Convicted by a Jury on His Second Trial. HIS SENTENCE IS TWO YEARS. HE AND TAYLOR GET THE EX- TREME PENALTY. The Judge's Charge in Favor of Conviction - The Foreman of the Jury Wanted to Know Why Lord Alfred Douglas Hadn't Been Arrested 1895-05-25 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 6 5 524
WILDE'S TRIAL. A DISTINGUISHED LITERARY MAN'S SYMPATHY. 1895-04-29 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 1 1 81
UNFORTUNATE. REGRET IN WASHINGTON AT WILDE'S DOWNFALL 1895-04-09 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 0 169
OSCAR WILDE. AND ALFRED TAYLOR MAY BE TRIED SEPERATELY NEXT TIME. 1895-05-15 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 6 1 27
TWELVE PAGES. 1895-05-07 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 0 98
NO BAIL FOR WILDE. He Is Remanded in Custody For Trial. HIS FRIEND TAYLOR ARRESTED. THE PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION OF THE TWO WAS DAMAGING. 1895-04-06 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 0 2 160
WILDE'S BAIL FIXED. He Will Be Released Under 5,000 Pounds Bonds. 1895-05-04 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 14 1 44
AT ALBANY. OSCAR WILDE'S FALL AND THE "HAY- SEEDS" 1895-04-10 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 0 120
ON TRIAL. Oscar Wilde's Libel Suit Against Lord Queensberry. THE POET'S "PROSE SONNET." Defendant Pleads That the Alleged Libel Is True. AN EXCITING SCENE IN COURT. THE MARQUIS ATTEMPTS TO STRIKE THE APOSTLE OF ES- THETICISM - WILDE ON THE STAND - A SEARCHING CROSS- EXAMINATION - SOME START- LING ADMISSIONS - THE COURT- ROOM PACKED WITH PEOPLE. 1895-04-03 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 11 20 1369
NEWS IN BRIEF. 1895-04-09 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 0 24
EIGHT PAGES. A Lesson in the Morbid. 1895-05-02 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 0 741
OSCAR WILDE'S ACCOUNTS PUBLICLY EXAMINED TO-DAY IN BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDINGS. 1895-11-12 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 13 2 128
OSCAR WILDE AGAIN. He Has Another Preliminary Examination. IT IS SAID HE HAS BEEN ILL. BUT BAIL IS STILL REFUSED IN HIS CASE. There is a Large Demand For Wilde's Books on the Part of the British Public 1895-04-11 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 4 4 221
Times Union - Monday, April 8, 1895 1895-04-08 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 0 0 57
WILDE FURNISHES BAIL. It is Probable That He Will Not Be Trie[d] Again. 1895-05-06 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 10 2 211
OSCAR WILDE ILL. Confinement in Prison Has Made Him Sick. HIS BOOKS NOT WITHDRAWN FROM PUBLIC USE IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM LIBRARY - FURTHER EXAMINATION IN BOW STREET POLICE COURT TO-DAY - WILDE REMANDED AGAIN WITHOUT BAIL. 1895-04-11 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 4 5 256
WILDE'S DEFENSE. He Denies on Oath All the Charges Against Him. OSCAR APPLAUDED IN COURT. FOR HIS ELOQUENT EXPOSITION OF SPIRITUAL LOVE - THE CHARGE OF CONSPIRACY WITH- DRAWN - SIR EDWARD CLARKE ACCEPTS THE RESPONSIBILITY OF THE SUDDEN END OF THE FORMER TRIAL - TAYLOR'S STRONG DENIAL. 1895-04-30 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 9 9 400
OSCAR WILDE'S FINANCES. A STATEMENT SHOWING HIM TO BE INSOLVENT. 1895-08-22 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 15 1 96
THE WILDE CASE. Counsel Succeeds in Getting a Sep- arate Trial for Oscar. SIR EDWARD CLARKE ALSO ASKED THAT WILDE BE TRIED FIRST, BUT THE JUDGE DECLINED TO GRANT THE REQUEST, AND OR- DERED THE CASE AGAINST TAY- LOR TO PROCEED. 1895-05-20 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 7 6 206
HALL'S BUDGET. New York a City of Charities, of Noises and of Spasms, AND IT MAY CLAIM EITHER 1895-11-02 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 0 326
WILDE FULLY COMMITTED. His Third Preliminary Examination Took Place To-day. 1895-04-19 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 9 2 182
BAD NEWS FOR OSCAR WILDE'S CREDITORS. 1895-08-22 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 15 1 96
OSCAR WILDE'S BONDSMEN. Lord Douglas is One and a Clergyman is The Other. 1895-05-07 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 7 3 131
WILDE'S BOOKS. THEY ARE UNLIKELY TO BE RE- MOVED FROM THE BROOKLYN LI- BRARY. 1895-04-11 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 0 367
NEWS IN BRIEF. 1895-04-30 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 0 27
QUEENSBERRY STILL AFTER OSCAR WILDE. 1895-07-25 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 10 1 61
EIGHT PAGES. A Drawing That Drew. 1895-05-22 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 1 339
WILDE’S SECOND TRIAL. The Accuse Playwright a Witness in His Own Defense. 1895-05-24 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 3 3 147
TO RELEASE OSCAR WILDE. DISTINGUISHED LITTERATEURS TO SIGN A PETITION. 1895-11-22 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 11 1 48
TRUE BILL AGAINST WILDE. He and Alfred Taylor Indicted by the Grand Jury. 1895-04-23 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 11 3 143
QUEENSBERRY WANTS TO COLLECT. 1895-07-25 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 10 1 61
NO SYMPATHY FOR WILDE. 1895-11-26 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 9 1 62
NEWS OF THE WEEK. Thursday. 1895-04-13 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 1 1 13
WILDE'S TRIAL. He Makes Damaging Admissions on Cross Examination. THE PROSECUTION IS CLOSED. LETTERS FROM THE MARQUIS OF QUEENSBERRY READ REVILING LORD ROSEBERY, MR. GLAD- STONE AND QUEEN VICTORIA - ONE LONDON NEWSPAPER DE- CLINES TO REPORT THE CASE. 1895-04-04 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 1 6 284
OSCAR WILDE MUST SERVE OUT HIS TERM. 1895-06-17 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 13 1 36
PICKING OAKUM. Oscar Wilde’s Head Is Weak, So He Has Not Yet Tried the Treadmill. 1895-06-02 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 8 1 108
EIGHT PAGES. 1895-05-23 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 0 102
WILDE CONVICTED. His Sentence Is Two Years at Hard Labor. TAYLOR GETS THE SAME It Is Expected that Other Warrants Will Be Issued. THE JUDGE"S CHARGE TO THE JURY. The Foreman of the Jury Asked His Honor if a Warrant Had Been Issued for the Arrest of Lord ALfred Douglas, and Was Told No. 1895-05-25 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 5 10 424
THEY REFUSE TO SIGN. PETITION FOR WILDE'S RELEASE TO BE ABANDONED. 1895-11-26 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 9 1 65
WILDE'S TRIAL BEGUN. Some of the Testimony is Extremely Disgusting. 1895-04-26 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 11 2 126
Application for Oscar Wilde's Release Denied. 1895-06-17 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 13 1 36
SENT TO TRIAL. Oscar Wilde's Police Court Exam- ination Ended. DAMAGING TESTIMONY GIVEN AGAINST BOTH WILDE AND TAY- LOR - TALE OF A BURLESQUE WEDDING - THE PRISONERS FULLY COMMITTED FOR TRIAL - BAIL AGAIN REFUSED - WILDE LOOKS FATIGUED AND ILL. 1895-04-19 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 9 6 182
MARQUIS WINS. The Jury Says His Charges Against Wilde Were True. WARRANT FOR OSCAR'S ARREST ISSUED THIS AFTERNOON - SIR ED- WARD CLARKE PRACTICALLY THREW UP HIS CASE - QUEENS- BERRY LOUDLY CHEERED - WILDE TO PAY ALL COSTS - A COMPLETE VICTORY FOR THE MARQUIS. 1895-04-05 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 10 462
WILDE’S LIBEL SUIT. He and the Marquis Were On the Stand To-Day. A SCENE AT OLD BAILEY Queensberry Attempted to Assault the Aesthetic Complainant. THAT LETTER READ IN COURT. Oscar Told How He Came to Write It To Lord Douglass––He Denied Queens- Berry’s Charges, and Described a Scene Between Himself and the Marquis––Some Admissions on Cross- Examination. 1895-04-03 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 0 12 714
OSCAR WILDE IS PICKING OAKUM. PRISON DOCTORS WILL NOT ALLOW HIM TO BE PUT IN THE TREAD- MILL - REAPPEARANCE OF HIS PLAYS IN LONDON 1895-06-29 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 14 1 92
WILDE TURNS TO RELIGION. He Asks a Friend to Send Him St. Augustine’s Works. 1895-06-29 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 14 2 96
WILDE SICK. Allowed to Sit While Testifying in Court To-day. HE REPEATEDLY DENIES THE CHARGES MADE AGAINST HIM - THE JUDGE ADHERES TO HIS DECISION EXCLUDING SHELLY'S TESTIMONY - QUEENSBERRY BE- LIEVES WILDE WILL BE AC- QUITED. 1895-05-24 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 4 7 234
$25,000 BAIL FOR WILDE. The Court Says the Playwright Must Qualify for Half that Amount. 1895-05-04 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 14 1 45
OSCAR WILDE'S DEBTS. HIS FRIENDS UNDERTAKE TO PAY THEM IN FULL. 1895-09-24 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 12 1 98
OSCAR WILDE'S TRIAL. The Defense Objects in Vain to Damaging Testimony. 1895-04-29 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 4 1 143
NEWS OF THE WEEK. Friday. 1895-04-20 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 0 11
EIGHT PAGES. 1895-04-05 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 0 206
APPLAUSE FOR WILDE. The Accused Playwright Testifies In His Own Behalf. CHARGE OF. CONSPIRACY FAILS. A Portion of the Indictment Withdrawn By the Prosecution–-Wilde’s Eloquent Explanation of Spiritual Love Excited The Admiration of the Spectators–- Both Defendants Assert Their Inno cence Under Oath–-The Court Refused To Permit a Verdict of Not Guilty on The Withdrawn Charges. 1895-04-30 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 9 5 401
OSCAR WILDE INSANE. HE IS OBLIGED TO BE CONFINED IN A PADDED ROOM. 1895-06-04 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 2 1 27
WILDE’S MIND AFFECTED. The Playwright Is Now in a Padded Cell. 1895-06-04 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 8 2 45
FOUND GUILTY. Oscar Wilde Convicted at the Old Bailey To-day. TWO YEARS AT HARD LABOR THE SENTENCE IMPOSED BY THE COURT ON BOTH WILDE AND TAYLOR - THE JUDGE'S CHARGE STRONGLY AGAINST THE PRISON- ER - END OF A SENSATIONAL TRIAL. 1895-05-25 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 3 8 278
WILDE GIVES BAIL. The Playwright Will Be Released from Jail To-Morrow. 1895-05-06 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 10 3 204
TRUE BILL FOUND AGAINST OSCAR WILDE - WILL HE PLEAD GUILTY? 1895-04-23 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 14 5 149
BAIL REFUSED. Oscar Wilde and His Friend Tay- lor Arraigned and Remanded. BOTH CHARGED WITH HEINOUS CRIMES - TESTIMONY GIVEN BY CHARLES PARKER WHICH, IF TRUE, PROVES THE CHARGE AGAINST WILDE. 1895-04-06 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 3 88
IT MADE OSCAR ANGRY. He Denied the Charge that He Kissed Young Grainger. PROSECUTION’S CASE CLOSED. Letters of the Marquis of Queensberry Reviling Lord Rosebery, Gladstone and the Queen as Well as Oscar Wilde Were put in Evidence–-The Defendant’s Counsel Accused of Insolence. 1895-04-04 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 6 10 687
NEWS IN BRIEF 1895-06-06 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 0 22
Why He Bailed Wilde. 1895-06-09 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 5 1 90
A PLEA FOR OSCAR. Mr. Hamilton Glad Wilde Jury Disagreed and Believes Him Innocent. 1895-05-06 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 0 2 422
WILDE'S TRIAL BEGUN. PARKER AND THE OTHERS RE- PEAT THEIR PREVIOUS EVI- DENCE. 1895-04-26 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 1 46
AT THE BOW STREET BAR Oscar Wilde’s and Taylor’s Preliminary Examination. BOTH REMANDED WITHOUT BAIL A Great Rush for Wilde’s Books–- They Have Not Been Withdrawn From the British Museum –- "Dorian Grey" Has Been Withdrawn by the Publishing House of Ward & Lock–- A Publisher’s Clerk, Shelley, Discharged Because of His Intimacy with Wilde. 1895-04-11 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 4 10 498
The Wilde Case. 1895-04-06 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 1 292
WILDE ARRESTED A Warrant Issued This Afternoon. PROSECUTION FAILS. The Jury Vindicated Queensberry and Declared His Charges True. PAPERS SENT TO PROSECUTOR. Sir Edward Clarke Disgusted with Wilde and Accepted a Verdict of Not Guilty Without the Defense Making any argument or Offering Any Testimony. 1895-04-05 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 1 10 602
THE JURY DISAGREED. Oscar Wilde Was Remanded to Jail for a New Trial. ACQUITTED OF SOME CHARGES. After Deliberation of Three and a Half Hours, the Jury Failed to FInd a Ver- Deict on Several of the Charges, And Were Discharged–-The Government Prosecutor Says He Will Try Wilde and Taylor Again-– Bail Was Refused. 1895-05-01 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 7 6 616
WILDE RELEASED. Lord Douglas and the Rev. Mr. Headlam His Sureties. 1895-05-07 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 7 3 132
WILDE ON TRIAL. YOUNG WOOD ADMITS HE IS A BLACKMAILER. 1895-04-27 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 4 1 80
OSCAR WILDE SCANDAL. An Ango-American Journalist Suing a British Consul. 1895-04-14 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 6 2 141
HIS BAIL WAS REFUSED. Wilde Must Stay in Jail During His Trial. HE AND TAYLOR ARRAIGNED. Charged in the Bow Street Police Court To-Day, with the Abominable Practices––Charles Parker, Aged 19, Gave Damaging Testimony Against the Aesthete and Dramatist––London Newspaper Criticism of the Case. 1895-04-06 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 0 9 301
The Brooklyn Citizen - Sunday, May 12, 1895 1895-05-12 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 1 1 303
OSCAR WILDE IN COURT. His Debts Amount to about £17,000 With No Assets 1895-11-12 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 13 2 123
ARISTOCRATS GIVE BONDS Marquis of Queensberry and His Son in Court. 1895-05-22 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 0 0 111
WILDE MUST STAND TRIAL. He and Taylor FInally Committed With- Out Bail To-Day. 1895-04-19 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 10 5 184
IN WILDE’S DEFENSE. He Has Friends Who Don’t Believe the Charges Against Him. 1895-04-07 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 0 6 416
To Try Wilde and Taylor Separately. 1895-05-15 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 6 1 28
ZOLA WON’T SIGN. The French Author Declines to Ask for Oscar Wilde’s Pardon. 1895-11-26 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 9 1 64
WILDE TAKEN ILL IN COURT. His Second Trial Commenced in London This Morning. 1895-05-22 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 6 2 92
OSCAR WILDE WAS ARRESTED Immediately After Abandoning His Suit Against Queensberry. HIS CARD TO THE NEWSPAPERS. Sensational Termination of a Scandalous Case-–Papers Submitted to the Public Prosecutor as Soon as the Collapse Was Announced–-The Disgraced Writer and Dramatist Taken to Scotland Yard This Afternoon by Two Detectives. 1895-04-05 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 0 8 730
Oscar Wilde Indicted. 1895-04-22 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 9 1 28
Oscar Wilde’s Books Boycotted. 1895-04-09 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 3 1 40
Wilde Hopeful of Acquittal. 1895-05-19 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 6 1 62
OSCAR WILDE’S DEBTS. They Will be Paid in Full, His Lawyer Informs the Court. 1895-09-24 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 12 2 98
OSCAR WILDE FOUND GUILTY. Sentenced to Two Years’ Imprisonment at Hard Labor. 1895-05-25 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 0 5 229
WILDE’S WORKS TABOOED. The British Museum the Latest to Withdraw His Books. 1895-04-10 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 0 1 101
THE JUDGE REFUSES BAIL. Oscar Wilde Remanded to Jail Until Next Thursday. 1895-04-06 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 0 2 274
OSCAR WILDE’S INDICTMENT. His Bric-a-Brac, Pottery and Prints Will Be Sold at Auction. 1895-04-23 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 16 4 119
OSCAR WILDE’S INCOME. He Made $10,000 a Year and Spent Much More. 1895-08-22 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 15 2 97
WILDE'S SECOND TRIAL. It Will Not Take Place Till After Taylor's Which Was Begun To-day. 1895-05-20 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 7 4 206
Short Cablegrams. 1895-09-29 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 5 1 23
WILDE MAKES A STATEMENT. He Gives Out an Interview Protesting His Innocence. 1895-05-26 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 0 13 727
WILDE LOOKED HAGGARD. His Hearing in the London Police Court Continued. 1895-04-11 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 1 2 285
BELIEVE WILDE GUILTY. Lord Douglas Had No Authority to Speak for His Relatives. 1895-04-07 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 0 2 144
NO BE TRIED FRIDAY. The Court Refused a Postponement to Oscar Wilde. 1895-04-24 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 9 2 90
A Receiver for Oscar Wilde’s Property. 1895-07-25 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 10 1 62
PROSECUTION RESTS. The Evidence Against Oscar Wilde Has All Been Given. 1895-05-23 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 6 4 114
Wilde to be Bailed. 1895-05-03 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 12 1 26
NORDAU CALLS WILDE INSANE. An Interview With the Author of "Degeneration." ADVISES MENTAL EXAMINATION. The Distinguished Medico-Literary Expert, Whose Latest Book Has Made a Sensation on Two Conti- nents, Refuses to Attack or to Con- demn the Fallen Esthetic Idol––Stig- Mata of Mental Disease Described. 1895-04-14 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 0 0 1041
Frohman Withdraws Wilde’s Play 1895-04-07 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 1 1 28
DISGUSTING ADMISSION. Brought Out on Oscar Wilde’s Trial at the Old Bailey To-day. 1895-04-26 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 8 2 165
Oscar Breaks Stones Now. 1895-07-28 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 4 1 52
Oscar Wilde Out on Bail. 1895-05-04 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 2 1 23
The Brooklyn Daily Eagle - Sunday, April 21, 1895 1895-04-21 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 0 0 54
The Brooklyn Daily Eagle - Friday, August 23, 1895 1895-08-23 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 0 0 15
HE DON’T REMEMBER. Young Atkins Don’t Recall His Black- Mailing Exploits. 1895-04-27 The Brooklyn Citizen United States Brooklyn English 5 2 105
Wilde May Go Out on Bail. 1895-05-05 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 7 1 38
Oscar Wilde Indicted. 1895-04-22 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 9 1 33
The Brooklyn Daily Eagle - Saturday, August 24, 1895 1895-08-24 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 19 1 94
WILDE RELEASED ON BAIL. The Rev. Stewart Headlam One of His Sureties. 1895-05-07 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 8 3 151
The Brooklyn Daily Eagle - Thursday, April 25, 1895 1895-04-25 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 0 0 11
OSCAR WILD BANKRUPT. 1895-07-25 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 21 1 30
OSCAR WILDE A BANKRUPT. 1895-09-24 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 11 1 69
Wilde Pleads Not Guilty. 1895-04-26 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 0 1 22
Wilde’s Application Refused. 1895-06-17 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 15 1 27
Wilde’s Trial May End To-Morrow. 1895-04-29 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 3 1 42
OSCAR WILDE INSANE. So It Is Reported in London, From His Prison. 1895-06-04 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 12 1 39
WILDE THE CHIEF WITNESS In the First Day of Queensberry’s Trial for Libel. LETTERS AND A NOVEL READ. The Defendant’s Counsel Quotes From Dorian Grey, One of Wilde’s Own Writings–-A Close Friendship Between the Author and the Marquis’ Second Son Shown by the Testimony. 1895-04-03 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 13 25 1565
THE WILDE JURY DISAGREES. After Four Hours’ Deliberation No Verdict Was Reached. BAIL REFUSED THE PRISONER. The Judge Made His Charge This Morning, in Which He Called Attention to the Bad Reputation of Witnesses Against th eDefence-–New Sensation in an Already Most Notorious Case. 1895-05-01 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 0 2 603
QUEENSBERRY LIBEL SUIT. The Prosecution Concluded and the Defense Begun in London. 1895-04-04 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle United States Brooklyn English 0 4 316
Times Union - Saturday, November 9, 1895 1895-11-09 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 1 1 20
WILDE GOING INSANE. The Playwright's Mental Condi- tion Seriously Affected. CAREFULLY WATCHED IN PRISON. THE MEDICAL STAFF HAVE THE FELON IN CHARGE. 1895-06-04 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 7 2 44
OSCAR WILDE WILL PAY UP. 1895-09-24 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 12 1 98
"A SONNET IN PROSE." A Very Remarkable Letter By Oscar Wilde Read in Court. THE GREAT LIBEL SUIT BEGUN. AND THE MARQUIS OF QUEENSBERRY AGAIN PLEADS JUSTIFICATION. Sir Edward Clarke Outlines the Very Grave Charges Made By the Mar- quis, and Says They Will Be Dis- proved - The Case Is Likely to Create The Widest of Sensations. 1895-04-03 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 12 17 1300
WILDE NOT CONVICTED Jury Disagree as to His and Tay- lor's Guilt. RECOMMITTED WITHOUT BAIL. OSCAR AND HIS FELLOW PRISONER WILL BE TRIED AGAIN. The Charge to the Jury was Impartial. - The Character of Some of the Prose- cution's Witnesses Referred to - Wilde's Literature Could Have no Bearing on the Case. 1895-05-01 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 6 7 561
NEWS OF THE WEEK. Wednesday. 1895-05-25 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 1 15
OSCAR WILDE IS ELOQUENT AND THE AUDIENCE IN THE COURT- ROOM APPLAUD. The Dramatist Testifies in His Own Be- half and Explains Some Misunder- stood Expressions - The Charges of Conspiracy Withdrawn - Alfred Tay- lor's General Denial of Guilt. 1895-04-30 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 9 5 362
OSCAR WILDE'S CASE. Wilde Wants to Be Tried Ahead of Taylor, but Isn't Accommodated. 1895-05-20 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 7 1 202
DISAGREED. The Oscar Wilde Jury Fail to Bring in a Verdict. PRISONERS SENT BACK TO JAIL TO AWAIT A NEW TRIAL, BAIL BE- ING AGAIN REFUSED - THE JUDGE'S CHARGE SEEMED TO FAVOR THE ACCUSED - THE JURY DISCHARGED AFTER BEING OUT THREE AND A HALF HOURS. 1895-05-01 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 6 5 476
NEWS OF THE WEEK Wednesday. 1895-05-04 The Standard Union United States Brooklyn English 0 0 11
WILDE -- A GOOD THING. So His Testimony To-day Would Seem to Indicate. GAVE AWAY LOTS OF MONEY JUST BECAUSE THE RECIPIENTS HAPPENED TO BE POOR. Much of the Testimony Adduced in Cross- examination is Unfit for Publication - Some Remarkable Letters From the Marquis of Queensberry - The Develop- ment of a Vile Scandal - Wilde Loses His Temper. 1895-04-04 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 0 4 320
AGAIN IN THE DOCK. Oscar Wilde's Second Trial Com- menced To-day. HE WAS PALE AND HAGGARD AND AT ONE POINT IN THE PRO- CEEDINGS HE COLLAPSED. 1895-05-22 Times Union United States Brooklyn English 2 4 312