TSMUS 410: Researching the American Revolutionary Era 1763-1815

A guide to finding resources at the University of Washington, Tacoma Library
http://www.tacoma.washington.edu/library/

Learning about a particular year in history

Chronologies, or timelines, allow you to peruse the major events of a given year. Below is a selection of timelines available in the reference section at the UWT Library:

Getting background information

Reference sources, such as specialized encyclopedias or dictionaries, can provide helpful background information and context on any topic, and may lead you to other sources and related articles on a topic. Below are just a few examples of reference sources at the UWT Library that may be helpful for this project:

Finding Secondary Sources

Secondary sources analyze a scholarly question and often use primary sources as evidence. Secondary sources include histories about a topic or books and articles that explain or review research-based works.

These databases will help you identify secondary articles in scholarly journals or books on a particular topic.

Finding Primary Sources

Primary sources include documents or artifacts created by a witness to or participant in an event. They can be firsthand testimony or evidence created during the time period that you are studying. Primary Sources may include diaries, letters, photographs, newspaper articles, government documents, poems, novels, plays, and music. The collection and analysis of primary sources is central to historical research.

Newspapers

Available through library web site at:
http://www.lib.washington.edu/subject/history/news.html

Full-image Resources

  • Early American Newspapers, Series II
    Collection of more than 50 late-18th and 19th century newspapers. Coverage is not complete.
  • Pennsylvania Gazette
    Transcriptions of a major colonial newspaper, 1728-1800
  • Times (London) Digital Archive
    Digitized version of London paper from 1785-1985

 

Available in Tacoma's microfilm collection

All titles below are filed together in microfilm cabinets from microfilm number TAC-442 through TAC-458.

•  Alexandria (VA) Advertiser/DC Advertiser, 1797-1802
•  American Mercury ( Hartford ), 1791-1820
•  Boston Gazette, 1719-1798
•  City Gazette ( Charleston , SC ), 1787-1803
•  Connecticut Courant ( Hartford ), 1764-1820
•  Daily Advertiser ( New York , NY ), 1785-1806
•  Gazette of the United States ( Philadelphia ), 1789-1836
•  Independent Gazetteer ( Philadelphia ), 1782-1796
•  Maryland Gazette ( Annapolis ), 1745-1839
•  New England Chronicle ( Boston ), 1776-1820
•  New York Gazette (NY) and Weekly Mercury, 1768-1783
•  Newport (RI) Mercury, 1758-1820
•  Otsego Herald ( Cooperstown , NY ), 1801-1821

 

More Primary Sources

UW Libraries Catalog
http://catalog.lib.washington.edu/search%7E/
To locate books written during a specific time period, published collections of correspondence, memoirs, etc, start with the UW Libraries Catalog. See the handout Using the UW Libraries Catalog to Find Primary Sources in US History for suggestions for searching the catalog to locate primary sources. Below are a few examples (all available for checkout from the Tacoma Stacks):

American Periodicals Series Online (1740-1900) http://proquest.umi.com/login?COPT=SU5UPTAmVkVSPTImREJTPTE0NEQ@ Includes full-page images of 18th and 19th century American magazines.

Early American Imprints (1639-1800) http://infoweb.newsbank.com/?db=EVAN
Database of full-page images of more than 30,000 works published in America between 1639 and 1800; documents a broad spectrum of life in 17th- and 18th-century America, including literature, music, religion, foreign affairs, diplomacy, and much more.

Internet Sites for Primary Resources

American Memory Project
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/
Developed by the Library of Congress, American Memory provides free and open access through the Internet to written and spoken words, sound recordings, still and moving images, prints, maps, and sheet music that document the American experience.

American History to 1865 http://www.lib.washington.edu/subject/History/tm/american1.html