Secondary sources are sources created by someone who did not experience the event. They are an important part of your research as they provide analysis and discussion of the event after the impact is already known. You are creating a secondary source right now!
Find basic information and some in depth resources. Includes primary sources, images, video, and more.
Covers all subjects including science, history, economics, etc.
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Primary sources were written during or close to the time of your event. They can be interviews, newspapers, images, letters, speeches and more.
Contains millions of letters, speeches, images and videos from around the United States.
Most useful for World War II, British history and presidential papers.
Archive of old newspapers from the New York Times, Washington Post and More
Videos, pictures and documents from around Minnesota
Covers all subjects including science, history, economics, etc.
A special Google Search that only looks at academic articles
Focuses just on history. This is a college level resource, but has a useful AI summary tool that means you can read a shorter version of the things you find.