Bronx Community College
of the
City University of New
York
Department of History
What are Historical Sources?
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The materials on the History 10 web site have been designed to help you learn history by exploring some of the thousands of online historical sources that can be found on the Web. Most are primary sources--that is, they are first-hand sources drawn from people who lived in the past. Most of the time, the primary sources used by historians are written: letters, diaries, newspapers, government reports, or books written at the time the historian is studying. Most of the documents you will find in the History 10 website, and many of the assignments in Documenting the Modern World, are primary sources. This means they are taken from as close as we can come to the history itself--to the experience of people who lived through the period we are studying. Of course, we can never duplicate the precise experience of someone who lived fifty or a hundred years ago, in a very different time and place. But when used carefully, primary sources allow us to come closer to the history we are learning, and to ask better questions about the events and actions and ideas that transpired in the past. Before we are able to ask those questions, though, we need a method for evaluating the sources themselves.
How Reliable is the Source? There are a few ways we can judge the reliability and value of a primary source. Here are some questions to ask as you read a source document. Your instructor may ask you to answer these for class or in writing. These questions can be also be used when reading assignments in Documenting the Modern World.
Remember: Every source should be read critically and skeptically. Know the author's identity and point of view whenever possible.
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