The copyright clock keeps ticking
For most folks in the United States, this is the second day of January 2026.
For The Legal Genealogist, it’s the second day of 1930.
No, that’s not a typo. I really do mean 1930.
The year that books like Dashiell Hammett’s The Maltese Falcon and Carolyn Keene’s first Nancy Drew books starting with The Secret of the Old Clock and the original German language edition of Sigmund Freud’s Das Unbehagen in der Kultur (Civilization and Its Discontents) were all published for the first time.1

The year that “Georgia on My Mind” and “Dream a Little Dream of Me” were first available as sheet music.2
The year that the Marx Brothers film Animal Crackers and the Academy Award-winning All Quiet on the Western Front first hit the silver screen.3
Because, as of the second the clock ticked over to 2026, all kinds of materials legally published in the United States at any time during the year 1930 — thousands and thousands of books, sheet music, films, photos and more — entered the public domain.
A whole year’s worth of materials, wonderfully free for all of us to use in our research, our blogs, our presentations, our publications without having to try to find the copyright owner and secure permission. Remember, that’s what public domain means: when copyright expires and a work goes into the public domain, we’re allowed to use it freely, any way we want, for any purpose (with some limits4), without needing permission from or payment to the creator of the work.5
This really is A Very Big Deal — and it really shouldn’t have been one.
Because of the way the copyright law works, providing protection only for a set number of years, a number of copyrights should have expired every year and we should have been getting a whole year’s worth of materials released into the public domain every year. But that copyright clock stopped ticking in 1998 — nothing published after 1922 was being released from copyright. For years and years, we were forced to say that things went into the public domain only if “legally published in the United States before 1923.”
There’s a whole long backstory as to why it stopped ticking, centering on the fact that the Disney people wanted to keep copyright protection on Steamboat Willie — the film where Mickey Mouse made his debut — to keep it out of the public domain. So it lobbied to get the copyright statute changed to add 20 years of protection to all then-copyrighted works. The amended law provided that the copyright clock would stop, dead, on anything then-copyrighted and wouldn’t start to run again until 12:00.01 a.m. 1 January 2019.6
At that point, the statute said, after those additional 20 years, for most things, the clock would start moving again and, as it ticked over into 2019, we were supposed to get an entire year’s worth of published works — everything legally published in the United States during 1923 — transferred into the public domain.7
Of course, since copyright law is a matter of statute, and any statute can always be amended, at any time up until midnight on 31 December 2018 — “the end of the calendar year in which (copyrights) would otherwise expire” — Congress could take it back. So, as 2018 drew to a close, all of us who watch copyright issues held our collective breath.
And — somehow, astonishingly — Congress didn’t manage to foul it up. On 1 January 2019, thousands and thousands of items passed from copyright-protected status into the public domain. And we could all then say that the public domain included “everything legally published in the United States before 1924” (instead of the “before 1923” we’d been saying for 20 years).8
And then we started worrying. Because, of course, copyright law is a matter of statute, and any statute can always be amended…9 In any given year — ulp — Congress could still foul it up.
Amazingly enough, it didn’t do it. The clock kept right on ticking and, as of 1 January 2020, we began saying that copyright had expired for works published before 1925. Then in 2021, it was works published before 1926. In 2022, it was works published before 1927. In 2023, it was works published before 1928. In 2024, it was works published before 1929. And in 2025, it was works published before 1930.
And — may miracles never cease — Congress didn’t manage to foul it up last year either. In copyright terms, 1930 has arrived. As of 1 January 2026, we can now say that copyright has expired for works published before 1931. And on 1 January 2027, we can hope to include works published before 1932. And so on.10
For now, at least, that copyright clock is still ticking…
Welcome to 1930 — and the wealth of now-out-of-copyright materials produced that year.
Cite/link to this post: Judy G. Russell, “Welcome to 1930!,” The Legal Genealogist (https://www.legalgenealogist.com/blog : posted 2 Jan 2026).
SOURCES
- See “Public Domain Day 2026,” Center for the Study of the Public Domain, Duke Law School (https://web.law.duke.edu/cspd/ : accessed 2 Jan 2026). ↩
- Ibid. ↩
- Ibid. ↩
- Just as one example, I really wouldn’t use a photo of a living person without that person’s permission, even a photo that’s out of copyright, on a pornography website. Just sayin’… ↩
- See generally Judy G. Russell, “Where is the public domain?,” The Legal Genealogist, posted 21 Dec 2015 (https://www.legalgenealogist.com/blog : accessed 2 Jan 2026). ↩
- See generally Glenn Fleishman, “For the First Time in More Than 20 Years, Copyrighted Works Will Enter the Public Domain,” Smithsonian Magazine, January 2019 online issue (https://www.smithsonianmag.com/ : accessed 2 Jan 2026). ↩
- See generally 17 U.S.C. §305 (“All terms of copyright provided by sections 302 through 304 run to the end of the calendar year in which they would otherwise expire”). ↩
- See Judy G. Russell, “Welcome to 1923!,” The Legal Genealogist, posted 2 Jan 2019 (https://www.legalgenealogist.com/blog : accessed 2 Jan 2026). ↩
- I did say that, right? It really can happen… ↩
- Unless of course Congress changes its mind. I did mention that, right? So keep your fingers crossed… and your eyes on Congress. ↩

Getting this email put a smile on my face, seeing “Welcome to 1930!” in my inbox 🙂 Happy 1930 to you, and I can’t wait to go dig around Internet Archive some more! I love that Maltese Falcon image, great cover.