Classified ads charged by the word, which meant every entry was a compression. VGC. ONO. GSOH. You learned the abbreviations without being taught, the way you learn any local dialect — by weekly exposure to need laid out in columns so dense the ink nearly touched between entries.
The page was never something you set out to read. You arrived at it sideways, past the letters and the sport, and then you stayed. Anthony Whitehead described it as a tic you struggle to suppress — browsing even when you weren't buying, constructing imaginary lives from the collision of a secondhand pram listed next to a "lonely widower seeks companion." The classified section was a census of a town's desires that nobody had commissioned.
Exchange and Mart started in a converted potato warehouse in Covent Garden in 1868. By its peak it sold 350,000 copies a week. By December 2007 that was 21,754. It went online-only in 2009. AutoTrader, launched as a print magazine in 1977, hit 368,000 circulation by January 2000 and collapsed to 27,000 by March 2013. The websites that replaced them are faster, searchable, free to post on, and utterly without texture.
The ink came off on your fingers. You'd notice it hours later, at your desk or in the bath, and wouldn't be able to say exactly when it transferred.
What texture looked like: a "Situations Vacant" column that told you which factories were hiring and which had stopped. A "Deaths" column — hatches, matches, and despatches, the sub-editors' phrase — that was the closest thing a town had to a public record of its own passing. Paid per word by grieving families who chose every noun carefully because each one cost money. That constraint produced a compressed dignity. "Peacefully, at home, surrounded by family." Five words that did more work than most obituaries.
The personals were something else entirely. H.G. Cocks traced their history in Classified: The Secret History of the Personal Column, from the ciphered notices in The Times that Victorian editors called the agony column to the coded ads that LGBTQ+ readers placed in alternative papers. Abbreviations and careful phrasing created a shared language invisible to anyone not looking for it. A lifeline threaded through the small print.
In 2007, UK regional newspaper revenue sat at £2.4 billion. By 2022 it was £590 million. The classified money didn't vanish — it migrated to Rightmove, Indeed, Gumtree, platforms that match supply to demand more efficiently and do nothing else. A study in the Review of Economic Studies tracked what happened in US cities after Craigslist arrived: newsrooms shrank, political coverage thinned, and partisan polarisation increased. The classified page had been subsidising democracy, and nobody noticed until the subsidy was gone.
Information had mass once. It occupied physical space in newsprint columns, and reading it meant handling the paper, folding it on a bus, circling an entry with a biro, tearing the page out and pinning it to a corkboard above the phone. The phone was in the hallway. You rang the number and talked to a stranger and drove to their house to look at a wardrobe. The entire transaction happened inside your own postcode.
Nobody is nostalgic for paying 40p a word. But the classified page was the last section of a newspaper where ordinary people wrote the copy. Reporters, editors, columnists handled the rest. The small ads were the public writing themselves into the record, one compressed line at a time, and because you could read them all in a sitting you carried a rough, partial, beautifully skewed portrait of your community in your head without ever meaning to.
Sources:
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The Irresistible Lure of Classified Ads — The Spectator
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Colossal Decline of UK Regional Media Since 2007 — Press Gazette
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The Impact of Online Competition on Local Newspapers — Review of Economic Studies
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Exchange and Mart — Wikipedia
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How Encrypted Victorian Newspaper Personal Ads Shaped Fiction — The Conversation