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HIST 17A Hoyt

United States History and United States Constitution

Databases

Find Primary, Secondary, and Tertiary Sources through the Library

  • Tertiary sources, such as encyclopedias, point to primary and secondary sources as suggested readings and sometimes contain text or image reproductions of primary sources.

Open Web

Also Search for Primary Sources on the Web

  • In addition to databases, many archives, libraries, and museums have digitized documents, images, and other sources that could be considered primary. 

  • Find these collections using a search engine like Google.
    • Enter your topic into the search box and add a word like library, archive, LibGuides (a popular research guide platform many libraries use), or even primary sources, etc. to see if an institution out there has a collection on your topic, historical period, or historical figure.
    • To limit your results to sites that end with .gov, at the end of the words you enter in the search box, type site:.gov
    • To limit your results to sites that end with .edu, at the end of the words you enter in the search box, type site:.edu

Sample Collections

These are some examples of online primary source collections.