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HIST 150: Unlearning US History (Fall 2025)

Databases

We have over 500 databases of primary source materials.  Collections of historic children's board games, manuals on talking to ghosts, broadsides, advertisements, travel literature, letters, image collections -- it is really useful to know what, exactly, we have. Even if you don't use it in your work, you may want to use materials for lectures, or just for the "huh, neat!" value.

Unsure where to start? Try the catalog

The main library catalog searches about 60% of our databases, including most of our primary source databases.  If you're not sure which databases to consult first, use the catalog and either narrow to publication period of interest or use genre headings (Ex "personal narratives" or diaries or broadsides) to find primary sources about your topic. Be sure to limit to books, ebooks, manuscripts, and archival documents.

Using the publication date limiters

Using Subject Headings

Librarians assign Genre headings to all materials in the catalog. Search any of these as subject to find materials of that type. Do NOT limit publication date because it will exclude republished facsimiles or compiled sources.  Genre headings include

  • Personal narratives 
  • Correspondence
  • Biography
  • Interviews
  • Letters
  • Speeches
  • Pamphlets
  • Sermons
  • Diaries
  • Wills
  • Logbooks
  • Sources
  • Caricatures and cartoons

EXAMPLE: subject search for "Civil war" AND "united states" AND "personal narratives" AND women returns about 70 letters, diaries, and compiled collections of writings by women during the civil war, "Civil war" AND "united states" AND Sermons brings up hundreds of sermons;