Primary sources are materials produced by participants or observers at the time of an event or during a particular span of years. They are "original" in that the recording of the event or experience originates with the participants or direct observers. Some examples of primary sources are:
The University Archives is the repository for official and unofficial records that document OSU's history. Our collections include historical records of enduring value generated by faculty, academic departments, administrative offices, students, and campus organizations.
The OSU Libraries' Oregon Multicultural Archives acquires, preserves, and makes available collections that document the lives and activities of African American, Asian American, Latino and Native American communities of Oregon.
Unique at OSU: OSU Libraries Digital Collections
Collections of digitized documents, photographs, maps and data that have been described and organized by OSU Libraries to make them more widely accessible for researchers, students, and the general public.
This digital service of the OSU Libraries provides a permanent means for faculty members to store their research and teaching output, for students to do the same with their research, to make the information widely available and for the institution to maintain its historical record.
The NWDA provides enhanced access to archival and manuscript collections in Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Alaska, and Washington through a union database of Encoded Archival Description (EAD) finding aids.
Please visit the OSU Archives Location & Hours Site for more information.
This is a service provided by RLG, a non-profit organization of libraries, archives, museums, and other cultural institutions. It is a centralized index to archival collections located throughout the world and is a valuable resource for locating records in other archives.
WorldCat is a global network of libraries that unite their collections in one master catalog. It is a union catalog of over 49 million records representing books, journals, dissertations, audio-visual materials, and manuscripts in repositories worldwide.
There are lots of primary source materials in libraries around the country; this catalog holds a growing number of more than 6,000 links to online finding aids. Included in their genealogy search are books, ship passenger lists, historical society records, archival photos, articles on research techniques, family histories, and digital image collections.
National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections (NUCMC)
The National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections is a print and online catalog of manuscript collections held in US repositories. The Library of Congress provides a Web interface for searching archival and manuscript cataloging in OCLC WorldCat.
National Inventory of Documentary Sources in the United States (NIDS)
By bringing together thousands of finding aids from libraries and archives across the United States and reproducing them on microfiche with a unified index, NIDS gives users unparalleled access to federal, state, academic and other documentary sources. In allowing researchers to examine actual finding aids, NIDS goes further than either NUCMC or RLIN which offer collection-level descriptions, but do not contain detailed listings of the contents of collections.
This is a current directory of over 5,500 repositories and more than 161,000 collections of primary source material across the United States. NUCMUC & NIDS were folded into this database.
Using ArchivesUSA, researchers are able to read descriptions of a repository's holdings to determine whether a collection contains material useful to their work as well as find the information they need to contact the repository directly. Repository records provide detailed information including phone and fax numbers, hours of service, materials solicited, email and home page URLs when available. Each collection record links to its corresponding repository record, simplifying the research process.
Repositories of Primary Sources
This is a listing of over 5000 websites describing holdings of manuscripts, archives, rare books, historical photographs, and other primary sources for the research scholar. Includes international archives.
The UNESCO Archives Portal gives access to websites of archival institutions around the world. It is also a gateway to resources related to records and archives management and to international co-operation in this area.
Fighters on the farm front: the war effort at home
Please choose from these images & posters:
You might find more information about these items in these collections:
Civilian Conservation Corp: Images from the Gerald W. Williams Collection
Please choose from these images:
You might find more information about these items in these collections:
Agricultural Labor History: Migrant Farm Labor
Please choose from these images:
You might find more information about these items in these collections:
Race Relations
Please choose from these images:
You might find more information about these items in these collections:
Japanese Internment
Please choose from these images:
You might find more information about these items in these collections:
The document analysis worksheets on this site were designed and developed by the Education Staff of the National Archives and Records Administration. You may find these worksheets useful as you work with various kinds of documents and archival materials.
For more information and specific examples, please visit our How to Cite Materials from OSU Archives page.
Using the microform machines can be a fun, challenging, and unique experience! And probably unlike anything else you will do in your research adventure.
We have 6 machines, all found on the 3rd floor of The Valley Library. 3 of the machines offer a scanning option, and one is coin operated.
Library staff will be happy to help you, but for who would rather go it alone, we have created a tutorial in Flickr.
There are also instructions posted next to each machine and on the Archives' Microform Guidance page .
Use these catalogs to find books at OSU & elsewhere.
OSU Library Catalog: search for books located at Valley library and OSU's other libraries.
Use the LexisNexis Congressional Index to identify congressional publications (hearings, serial set, house/senate reports and documents, etc) from 1789-present. Once identified, then find the full text in print, microfiche, or online depending on availability.
OSU Libraries' guide to Government Information, gives an overview of government publications and how to get them. See this guide for information about Congressional Publications at OSU. Includes links to Congressional Hearings.
Lexis Nexis international and national newspapers. Be sure to change the date limit to All Available Dates.
NewspaperSource more international and national newspapers
PressDisplay even more international and national newspapers, only last 60 days, best with Internet Explorer
There are a number of tutorials on the web, some examples are:
Citation Style Resources: