Among its 170+ million resources, the Library of Congress houses thousands of primary sources. Many of these have been digitized, making them accessible to users everywhere. This guide is organized around various topics covered within Library of Congress collections. The Library of Congress hosts over 500 collections of primary sources, so each section of the guide focuses on one collection that relates to the presented subject, with several ideas for how to use that collection in library programs. In an effort to make primary sources as accessible as possible, each section contains suggested programs and activities that are applicable to various audiences and for use in various types of libraries (public, academic, school, and special.)
The programs presented are ideas that have been developed so that librarians can either use them as offered or tailor them according to the needs of the intended audience. Each page lists several related collections that can be used for similar programs or as a launch pad for new programming ideas. You can can visit the Library of Congress' Digital Collections web page to browse all of the available collections.
The last tab of this guide, Share Your Ideas!, is a place for users to share their ideas and discuss how primary sources can be used in programming in new and engaging ways.
The Library of Congress' digitized collection of primary sources is voluminous. The LOC has over 15 million digitized items. So, how can you find what you are looking for?
You can start by conducting a keyword search on the Library of Congress homepage. You can then filter the results. (In most cases, there will be a lot!)
You can apply limiters. For example, you can limit your search by:
*When searching, it is important to think about your search terms and to try alternative words and phrases. For example, "gas stations" used to be called "filling stations," so you would want to search both terms to make sure you get more complete results.
The LOC also has primary source sets that can be great for library displays for special events and holidays. The primary source sets include a curated collection of primary sources about the topic and a teacher's guide with "Suggestions for Teachers" and "Additional Resources." So, if you know that you are hosting an event or teaching about Veterans, Baseball, or Halloween, for example, you can use primary sources from these curated collections. There are primary source sets that focus on individual states, too.
If you still can't find what you are looking for, the LOC website has an "Ask a Librarian" feature.
Throughout this guide, you will see references and activities that use Chronicling America. Chronicling America is a joint project between the National Digital Newspaper Program, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Library of Congress. The ongoing project digitizes and makes available online hundreds of newspapers from around the United States and territories. Coverage spans newspapers from 1770-1963. In most cases, the entire newspaper has been digitized so that it includes photographs and advertisements from different time periods as well as the newspaper articles. The collection contains digitized newspapers from almost all 50 states and territories, so users might find local papers from their state or home town.
Each of the subject tabs in this guide contains suggestions for how to incorporate Chronicling America into your library programming and classes.
Uses for Chronicling America include:
Connecticut Western News, March 4, 1920
The Chapel Hill Weekly, (Chapel Hill, NC), March 27, 1963
In using primary sources, it is important to remember that these materials are first-hand accounts from a particular time in history, so they, generally, tell one side of a story and can be biased.
It is important to think about:
Can you find additional primary sources to show what and who is missing?
For more information on representation in primary sources, read the article "Using Photographs to Create Culturally Relevant Classrooms" from the National Council for the Social Studies.
Burgard, K.L.B., O'Quinn, C., et al. (2021). Using photographs to create culturally relevant classrooms: People of San Antonio, Texas, in the 1930s. Social Studies and the Young Learner. Retrieved June 19, 2023 from https://www.socialstudies.org/social-studies-and-young-learner/33/3/using-photographs-create-culturally-relevant-classrooms.
Primary sources tell stories. To get the most from these stories, it is important to do a close reading of them. (Even a photograph can be "read" and analyzed.) Primary sources can be identified and analyzed by observing, reflecting, and questioning. As you are looking at a primary source or sharing it with patrons, ask:
The Library of Congress Primary Source Analysis Tool provides a guide that can be used with primary sources to analyze them, helping to frame the user's perception of historic materials and, as such, historic events and figures. The LOC tool can be used with patrons as a starting point for discussions and programming around primary sources.
The LOC has analysis tools and guides for analyzing different types of primary sources. (There is one for maps, one for charts and graphs, one for oral histories, etc.) Visit the LOC's Analysis Tools website for information on working with different types of primary sources.
Through its Teaching with Primary Sources (TPS) Program, the Library of Congress offers classroom materials and professional development to help teachers and librarians effectively use primary sources from the Library's vast digital collections in their teaching and programming. Since 2006, the Library of Congress has awarded Teaching with Primary Sources grants through its TPS Partner Program, to build a nationwide network of organizations that deliver educational programming and create teaching materials and tools based on the Library’s digitized primary sources and other online resources. Each year, members of this network, called the TPS Consortium, support tens of thousands of learners to build knowledge, engagement, and critical thinking skills with items from the Library’s collections.
The American Library Association received funding from the TPS Partner Program to develop this resource guide to offer primary source resources to library workers and inspire them to use LOC digital collections for educational/programming needs.
image: The Library of Congress, c. 1900 by William Henry Jackson
Primary sources are the "raw materials" of history. They are original documents, objects, and images created at the time being studied. They are history. Another way to define primary sources is by contrasting them with secondary sources which are accounts or interpretations created at a later date by someone who did not have first-hand experience. Primary sources are not just text-based documents or journal entries, but, as you will see as you explore this guide, primary sources are also photographs, videos and sound recordings, maps, newspapers, oral histories, sheet music, and 3D artifacts. The Library of Congress makes primary sources accessible to patrons of all ages.
Primary sources can be used to put a historical event or person in context, bringing history to life. They are, of course, also used by researchers and historians to write books and to make films.
Primary sources help to build critical thinking skills, visual and cultural literacy, and information literacy skills. They are part of many state standards for learners as young as kindergarten, but, most important, they are engaging!
There is a primary source for everything!
Soline Holmes is a librarian and the Information Services Department chair at Academy of the Sacred Heart in New Orleans, Louisiana. She is the Secretary (and a former Member-at-Large) for ALA's Graphic Novels and Comics Roundtable. She is also a member of ALSC's Children and Libraries Editorial Advisory Committee, serves on the Louisiana Young Readers' Choice Award committees for K-2nd grade and 3rd-5th grade, and was Chair of the New Orleans Information Literacy Collective. She has given presentations on graphic novels; primary sources; nature and libraries; Mother Goose and STEM; and Global Education at local and national conferences. Soline co-authored an article about graphic novels as informational texts for Children and Libraries and is co-authoring a chapter for ALA's forthcoming book, Mental Health and Children's Literature: Evaluating, Curating, and Sharing Books with Children. She is the proud recipient of a 2019 Judith F. Krug Banned Books Week grant for her school library and was honored to participate in ALSC's 2022 Bill Morris seminar. She is a member of the second cohort for Online Ready: Designing Culturally Competent and Impactful K-12 Online Learning sponsored by the Institute of Museum and Library Services. Soline is a Teaching with Primary Sources Network Mentor for the Library of Congress and has given presentations on using primary sources in library programming and classrooms and on using primary sources to bring picture books and historical fiction novels to life. She attended the Library of Congress' 2019 Teaching with Primary Sources Summer Onsite Workshop.
Sarah H. Northam is the Director of Research & Instruction at Velma K. Waters Library on the campus of Texas A&M University-Commerce. With over 22 years’ experience in higher education and 15 years’ experience in libraries, she is a passionate advocate for learning and information access. Sarah assists faculty and students with research, information literacy, copyright and the use and implementation of OER on campus. She has presented on Open Educational Resources (OER), Digital History and Primary Sources, Information Literacy, and Assessment.
Sarah holds an MSLS from the University of North Texas, a M.Ed. in Educational Technology and an MS in History from Texas A&M University – Commerce. She is a 2022-2023 SPARC OER Lead Fellow, 2021 graduate of the Open Education Network’s OER Librarianship certificate program and completed CopyrightX administered by Harvard Law School and the Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society in 2022.
Rebecca is an Assistant Teaching Professor and Reference and Instruction Librarian at Bowling Green State University in Bowling Green, Ohio. She is also the subject liaison for the History Department where she teaches classes on research methods and historiography. She received her master’s in Library Science from Indiana University – Bloomington and is currently working on her PhD in History of Education at the University of Toledo where her dissertation focuses on the informal education of women during the American Revolution and Early National period through the creation of feminist communities and knowledge sharing. She has published in Learning to Teach and the Palgrave Handbook of Educational Thinkers (2022). She has also presented on intersectional feminist theory as direct action in library policy, and teaching with primary sources through a feminist lens.
Statement on Potentially Harmful Content
Some of the materials presented in this guide may reflect outdated, biased, offensive, and possibly violent views and opinions. In addition, some of the materials may relate to violent or graphic events and are preserved by the Library of Congress and presented here for their historical significance.
Fair Use
Digitized primary sources in the Library's collection each include a "Rights and Access" or "Rights Advisory" statement within the catalog information. These can help users determine whether the item is in the public domain or whether there are copyright restrictions. For more information about the Library of Congress' policy on Copyrights and Primary Sources visit the website.