Primary sources are original sources that first report on research or an idea. In other words, they are documents or records that contain firsthand reports or original data on a topic. Examples of primary sources include:
The prototype website of the Open Collections Program Women Working project. This site will provide access to digitized books (over 2000), manuscripts (10,000 pages) and images (1,000) from the collections of Harvard University Libraries and Museums on the topic of women in the U.S. economy from 1870-1930.
Makes millions of materials from libraries, archives, museums, and other cultural institutions across the country available to all in a one-stop discovery experience. Explore the resource by topic or primary source sets.
This database contains a wide range of primary sources related to gender, 1450-1910, arranged into 5 themes: conduct and politeness; domesticity and the family; consumption and leisure; education and sensibility; and the body. Permitted Uses for this Database
Primary documents revealing the lives of settlers and indigenous peoples and the anglophone colonization of North America, Africa and Australasia. From 1650-1920 Permitted Uses for this Database
Find the collection by clicking on Resources (top right corner). Varied collection of government documents, images, primary sources and more about Indigenous People in North America. From the seventeenth through the twenty-first century. Permitted Uses for this Database
Full text books or collections by seminal figures in the humanities and social sciences, including: Aquinas, Aristotle, Austen, Behn, Betham, Bronte, Calvin, Darwin, Dewey, Dickens, etc., in both original languages and English translation; including their published and unpublished works, articles and essays, and correspondence. Permitted Uses for this Database
Nearly 200 million pages of searchable primary source materials, including maps, photos, newspapers, manuscripts, pamphlets, portraits, sermons, poems. It is freely available to residents living in British Columbia. Contains 17th & 18th Century Burney Collection Newspapers. Permitted Uses for this Database
Coverage of trans-Atlantic slavery and abolition topics; content includes original manuscripts, other rare printed materials and contextual essays. The focus is on the African Coast, the Middle Passage, slavery and agriculture, the abolition movement, the Underground Railway and slavery today. Coverage: 1490 to 2007. Permitted Uses for this Database
The Times (of London). Includes every page of the newspaper, including articles, editorials, advertisements, birth and death announcements, photos and illustrations. Permitted Uses for this Database
The Library of Congress' Digital Collections are a "gateway to rich primary source materials relating to the history and culture of the United States. The site offers more than 7 million digital items from more than 100 historical collections."
Established in 1999 at the University of California, Santa Barbara. The following presidential documents have been organized into a searchable database:
-Messages and Papers of the Presidents: Washington - Taft (1789-1913)
-Public Papers of the Presidents, Hoover - Bush (1929 - 1993)
-Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents, Clinton - G.W. Bush (1993-2008)
Developed and permanently maintained at the Library of Congress, this site provides access to information about historic newspapers and select digitized newspaper pages, and is produced by the National Digital Newspaper Program (NDNP).
This database provides access to digital collections of primary sources (photos, letters, diaries, artifacts, etc.) that document the history of women in the United States.
The Academic Affairs Library at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill sponsors DAS, a collection of sources on Southern history, literature and culture from the colonial period through the first decades of the 20th century.
Rich collection of primary documents that are fundamental antecedents to the U.S. Constitution of 1789 and illustrate contemporary thought that gave rise to the Constitution.