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Research 101 (older version)

What are primary sources?

Primary sources are original documents created or experienced at the time of the event being researched. They are first-hand observations, contemporary accounts of events, and viewpoints of the time.

This page focuses on primary sources for the arts & humanities and social sciences. (In the sciences, primary sources include journal articles that detail the results of original research.) 

EXAMPLES:

  • Newspaper accounts
  • Letters, diaries, scrapbooks
  • Government documents (congressional transcripts, laws, government agency-produced statisticsetc.)
  • Personal accounts, autobiographies, memoirs
  • Images and museum artifacts
  • Speeches
  • Oral histories and interviews
  • Data from scientific experiments

Other types of information may also be considered to be primary sources if they are analyzed for their historical or cultural significance. If you're not sure what counts as a primary source for your assignment, ask your professor.

Below are different strategies for finding historical primary sources.

Primary sources in OneSearch

Although there is no "primary source" filter in OneSearch, you can filter your results in ways that will make you more likely to find primary sources, such as:

STRATEGY A: Use the "resource type" filters on the right-hand side of the screen. Remember to click on "show more" to see all your options!)

resource type click on show more

Depending on your topic and results list, you may be able to filter for:

  • images
  • maps
  • newspaper articles
  • government documents
  • research data sets

STRATEGY B: In the search box, adding words such as "oral history" or "diary" or "testimony" may be able to help you find such sources.

Some subjects will have more of these kinds of sources than others. Here are some examples of documents found with this technique:

Queer brown voices

Edge becomes the center

Oral history from refugee camp

 

Primary sources in library databases

Hostos Library provides access to databases that specialize in primary source materials.

All Primary Source Databases

Newspaper Databases

Public domain primary sources in Google Books

Some documents fall into the public domain and are not covered by copyright. Under current copyright laws, public domain includes the following:

  • Government documents
  • Works whose authors have agreed to let them be public domain documents
  • All works published in the U.S. before 1923
  • Works 70 years after the death of the author.

There are more complicated rules about anything published between 1923 and 1989 - if you want these details, click here.
What this means for your research is that there are many relevant primary sources available in the public domain. Google Books has digitized and made available many such books.

(1) Enter your search terms.

(2) Some books on Google Books only offer a limited preview. If you like, in the Advanced Book Search, you can limit your results to Full view only books.

(3) Pick a date before 1923 - you can pick a date close to your historical event to try to get contemporaneous sources.

(4) Hit search!

Google Books advanced search