Dwight's Journal of Music - Online Copies

Online Copies

Public domain scans of bound volumes from libraries are available online. Links are to copies at the Internet Archive (or in some cases Google Books). An index covering two volumes was issued with the final number for each even-numbered volume (or one volume for the biweekly volumes), and libraries typically bound all the issues for two volumes together with the index often, but not always, at the front of the relevant volume(s). (Some of the online copies are missing pages, or pages are out of sequence.)

  • 1852–1853 : Vols. I & II: copy1
  • 1853–1854 : Vols. III & IV: copy1
  • 1854–1855 : Vols. V & VI: copy1 copy2
  • 1855–1856 : Vols. VII & VIII: copy1 copy2
  • 1856–1857 : Vols. IX & X: copy1 copy2
  • 1857–1858 : Vols. XI & XII: copy1
  • 1858–1859 : Vols. XIII & XIV: copy1
  • 1859–1860 : Vols. XV & XVI: copy1 copy2 (both at Google Books)
  • 1860–1861 : Vols. XVII & XVIII: copy1
  • 1861–1862 : Vols. XIX & XX: copy1
  • 1863–1864 : Vols. XXI & XXII: copy1
  • 1864–1865 : Vols. XXIII & XXIV: copy1
  • 1865–1867 : Vols. XXV (biweekly, 27 nos.) & XXVI (biweekly, 26 nos.): copy1
  • 1867–1869 : Vols. XXVII (biweekly) & XXVIII (biweekly): copy1 (at Google Books)
  • 1869–1871 : Vols. XXIX (biweekly) & XXX (biweekly): copy1
  • 1871–1873 : Vols. XXXI (biweekly) & XXXII (biweekly): copy1
  • 1873–1875 : Vols. XXXIII (biweekly) & XXXIV (biweekly): copy1
  • 1875–1877 : Vols. XXXV (biweekly) & XXXVI (biweekly): copy1
  • 1877–1878 : Vols. XXXVII (biweekly) & XXXVIII (biweekly, 19 nos., ending on Dec 21): copy1 copy2 copy3
  • 1879–1880 : Vols. XXXIX (biweekly, Jan–Dec 1879) & XL (biweekly, Jan–Dec 1880): copy1
  • 1881 : Vol. XLI (biweekly, 16 nos., ends on Sept 3, 1881, the last issue): copy1 copy2 (at Google Books)

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Famous quotes containing the word copies:

    When we reflect on our past sentiments and affections, our thought is a faithful mirror, and copies its objects truly; but the colours which it employs are faint and dull, in comparison of those in which our original perceptions were clothed.
    David Hume (1711–1776)