Loyola · Notre Dame Library
serving Notre Dame of Maryland University and Loyola University Maryland
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Primary sources are original accounts or records of historical events. These sources are from the time period involved, and they have not been filtered through interpretation. Primary sources include:
- Diaries, journals, speeches, interviews, letters
- Memoirs and autobiographies
- Government records, such as birth, death and marriage certificates, census records, licenses, patents, trial transcripts, etc.
- Records of organizations, i.e., minutes, reports or correspondence
- Original Documents (e.g. family Bible records)
- Photographs, documentaries, sound recordings of actual events
- Survey Research such as market surveys and public opinion polls
Note: Newspaper, magazine and journal articles and books written at the time about a particular event are often considered primary sources. These accounts were usually written by journalists or other observers at the time of the event. Materials that are written later and/or provide historical analysis are considered secondary sources.
Finding Articles
To find articles on a specific topic, author or book, use
the DATABASES. You can access the LNDL databases from anywhere through the
LNDL homepage at http://www.loyola.edu. You must have a current library
barcode to access databases from off campus. Your barcode is on your ID. (It’s the
number that begins with 22425. . . .)
Newspaper Accounts/Periodicals
American Periodical Series (1740-1900)
New York Times Historic
(1851-1998)
The Civil War: A Newspaper Perspective
(1860-1865)
The Pennsylvania Gazette
(1728-1800)
Times (London)
(1785 - 1985)
Books Available at the Library
Use the library catalog (SHARC) on the library's web site at http://www.loyola.edu/library.
Terms to try in looking for primary sources (use a subject
and/or keyword search):
| Personal narratives Diaries Journal Memoirs |
Autobiography Sources History sources History documents. |
Some sources that include United States Documents
are:
Annals of America
E173 .A793 v. 1-21
Public Papers of the Presidents J80 .A283
Historic Documents of
Reference E839.5H57
1972-73;1975-2002
Maryland:
Archives of Maryland
F176.A67 v. 1-70
Other Useful Databases
Early
English Books Online (1475-1700) Digital library of
books printed in English from 1475-1700.
Eighteenth
Century Collections Online Works published in Great
Britain and its dependencies from 1701-1800.
Digital
National Security Archive (DSNA) Declassified government
documents from the National Security Archive on U.S. foreign and
military policy since 1945
In
the First Person In-depth index of more than 3,350
collections of personal narratives in English from around the world
Reader's Guide Retrospective Citations to popular American journal and magazine articles from 1890-1982.
Web Sites
The Internet has become a great source of primary materials. Select a search engine or directory such as Google (www.google.com)
or Yahoo (www.yahoo.com) and
type in your topic and primary sources or one of the other
terms listed above.
Another great search directory is: Librarian's Index to the Internet (www.lii.org).
Selected Web Sites for Primary Materials/Digital Collections
- American Memory: Historical Collections for the National Digital Library (http://memory.loc.gov)
- The Making of America: Primary sources in American social history from the antebellum period through reconstruction. Separate collections at Cornell (http://cdl.library.cornell.edu/moa/) and the University of Michigan (http://www.hti.umich.edu/m/moagrp/).
- Documenting the American South (http://docsouth.unc.edu)
- Civil War Women (http://scriptorium.lib.duke.edu/women/cwdocs.html)
- World War II Primary Source Document Collection (http://www.ibiblio.org/pha)
- Repositories of Primary Sources:
A listing of over 5000 websites with manuscripts, archives,
photographs and other primary source materials.
(http://www.uidaho.edu/special-collections/Other.Repositories.html)
Note: You do need to be careful to check the reliability of Internet sources. For more information, refer to the library's guide at http://www.loyola.edu/library/ref/evalwebs.html.
References
"Library Research Using Primary Sources." University
of California, Berkeley: Copyright 1998-2002. Accessed October
1, 2003. <http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/PrimarySources.html>
"Primary, Secondary and Tertiary
Sources." University Libraries, University of Maryland, College
Park, Maryland. Updated October 1, 2003. Accessed October 1, 2003.
<http://www.lib.umd.edu/UES/primary-sources.html>
For help on a specific topic or research question, please call the Reference
Desk (410-617-6802)

