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Tip: Press ctrl and F (or apple and F on a Mac) to perform a keyword search of this page. To keyword search all Best of History Web Sites pages use the search engine located on the home page.

TIP: "How to Find the Best History Resources on the Internet"from the Center for Teaching History with Technology points out that while keyword searching via a search engine is the most popular Internet search strategy it may actually be more effective for you to search with a subject directory. Understanding the difference between search engines and subject directories can make you a better retriever of information. Consult this resource to learn how to find history directories, history research and plagiarism resources, current events information, and more. If you plan to stick with Google then learn Five Quick Tips to Better Searching with Google.

The Internet History Sourcebooks
The Internet History Sourcebooks are wonderful collections of public domain and copy-permitted historical texts for educational use by Paul Halsall. The Sourcebooks include an Ancient History Sourcebook, a Medieval Sourcebook, and a Modern History Sourcebook, as well as assorted other Sourcebooks on topics such as Women's history, Islamic history, and East Asian history.

Library of Congress
An outstanding and invaluable site for American history and general studies. Contains primary and secondary documents, exhibits, map collections, prints and photographs, sound recordings, and motion pictures. The LOC's American Memory Historical Collections, a must-see, contain the bulk of digitalized materials, but the Exhibitions Gallery is enticing and informative as well.

National Archives and Records Administration
The NARA offers federal archives, exhibits, classroom resources, census records, Hot Topics, and more. The Online Exhibit Hall has features on the New Deal, WWII, and photographs from 1864 to 1921.


Center for History and New Media: History Matters
A production of the American Social History Project/Center of Media and Learning, City of University New York, and the Center for History and New Media, George Mason University, History Matters is a wonderful online resource for history teachers and students. Among the many digital resources are lesson plans, syllabi, links, and exhibits. The Center for History and New Media's resources include a list of "best" web sites, links to syllabi and lesson plans, essays on history and new media, a link to their excellent History Matters web site for U.S. History, and more. Resources are designed to benefit professional historians, high school teachers, and students of history.

BBC: History
BBC's History section offers a multitude of sites, activities, games and other resources. Major categories include Ancient History, Archaeology, Church and State, Science and Discovery, Society and Conflict, War and Culture, and Family History. There are also sections entitled Multimedia Room, Historic Figures, Timelines, Programmes, Reading Room, Talk History, For Kids, and History Trails. The BBC Multimedia zone offers games, animations, virtual tours, and galleries. Many games deal with various aspects of British history.

The History News Network
The HistoryNewsNetwork was created in June 2001 and features articles by historians on both the left and the right who provide historical perspective on current events. HNN exists to provide historians and other experts a national forum in which to educate Americans about important and timely issues, and it is the only web site on the Internet wholly devoted to this task. HNN is a nonprofit publication run by George Mason University, is updated daily, and averages roughly 1.5 million hits a month.

Digital History
This impressive site from Steven Mintz at the University of Houston includes an up-to-date U.S. history textbook; annotated primary sources on slavery, and United States, Mexican American, and Native American history; and succinct essays on the history of ethnicity and immigration, film, private life, and science and technology. Visual histories of Lincoln's America and America's Reconstruction contain text by Eric Foner and Olivia Mahoney. The Doing History feature lets users reconstruct the past through the voices of children, gravestones, advertising, and other primary sources. Reference resources include classroom handouts, chronologies, encyclopedia articles, glossaries, and an audio-visual archive including speeches, book talks and e-lectures by historians, and historical maps, music, newspaper articles, and images. The site's Ask the HyperHistorian feature allows users to pose questions to professional historians.

CNN Education with Student News
CNN Education. provides teachers with instructional materials for integrating current events across the curriculum. A student section keeps students in grades 6-12 aware of the latest news of interest to them. Lesson plans, background material, profiles, links to useful Internet sites, and forums for interaction with other teachers are all included.

The Internet Public Library
The Internet Library is the first public library of and for the Internet community and features online collections and exhibits as well as more traditional library holdings.

PBS Online
A great source for information on a myriad of historical events and personalities. PBS's assorted and diverse web exhibits supplement their television series and generally include a summary of each episode, interviews (often with sound bites), a timeline, primary sources, a glossary, photos, maps, and links to relevant sites. PBS productions include American Experience, Frontline, and People's Century. Go to the PBS Teacher Source for lessons and activities arranged by topic.

CNN.com Archives
The CNN Archives feature special in-depth reports on key current American (and World) events, issues, and personalities. Most special reports supply historical overviews, articles, photographs, timelines or chronologies, video clips, maps, interviews, sources, and more.

Our Documents
Offers 100 milestone documents, compiled by the National Archives and Records Administration, and drawn primarily from its nationwide holdings, that chronicle United States history from 1776 to 1965. Features a teacher's toolbox and competitions for students and teachers.

H-Net, Humanities & Social Sciences Online
H-Net is an international interdisciplinary collection of scholars who contribute their findings and activities to this research-oriented site. Their free e-mail subscription provides you with the latest information on pertinent collections, exhibits, and grant opportunities; it also allows you to partake in scholarly discussions.

The History Journals Guide
The Guide is a web directory for history journals, trying to discover and promote the most effective roles and contributions of librarians to the Internet and vice versa

Project Gutenberg
A major source of historical electronic texts that can be searched by author or title.

Library and Archival Exhibitions on the Web
The Smithsonian offers this useful gateway to libraries and exhibits on the Web

The Avalon Project (Yale): Documents in Law, History and Diplomacy
A great research site from Yale University rich with primary source documents relating to world history. Searchable database is organized into three periods: pre-18th century, 19th century, and 20th century.

World Civilizations: An Internet Classroom and Anthology
World Civilizations is an interactive reading environment that combines materials of two World Cultures courses taught at Washington State University using web-based materials since Fall of 1994. Although designed for university freshman students, World Civilizations' texts, glossary, and learning modules are intended to be usable for high school level students and advanced undergraduates. In order to increase usability for advanced undergraduates, bibliographies of works consulted are being assembled for textbook entries, glossary entries, and learning modules.

Historical Research in Europe
University of Wisconsin Digital Content Group has developed this Web site to assist researchers seeking to use European libraries and archives. The database can be searched by keyword or subject headings.

World Wide National Archives
Has links to national archives around the world as well as extensive genealogical resources

Voice of the Shuttle: History Page
Part of an extensive guide to humanities resources that provides numerous links to feature sites, teaching resources, electronic journals, course syllabi, and more. Aimed at university educators.

History Channel
A companion to the television channel, this commercial site contains a myriad of features and highlights for educators and students alike. Key offerings include: study guides and activities, ideas from teachers, special exhibits, speech archives, discussions, and "This Day in History." Also, try the UK site and student site.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art Timeline of Art History
This interactive timeline is a chronological, geographical, and thematic exploration of the history of art from around the world, as illustrated by the Metropolitan Museum of Art's collection. Each timeline page includes representative art from the Museum's collection, a chart of time periods, a map of the region, an overview, and a list of key events. The timelines-accompanied by world, regional, and sub-regional maps-provide a linear outline of art history and allow visitors to compare and contrast art from around the globe at any time in history.

Art History Resources on the Web
Professor Chris Witcombe of the Art department at Sweet Briar College has perhaps the best organized gateway to art history sites on the Web. His directory is chock-full of useful and regularly updated links and is divided into twenty one categories including Prehistoric Art, Art in Early Europe, Renaissance Art in Italy, and Prints & Photography.

Art History Research Center
The Art History Research Center from Concordia University, Canada, is a tool for art historical research. It provides access to newsgroups, mailing lists, library catalogs, article indexes, online collections, art history & arts web servers, and links. There is also a short essay entitled "The Internet as a Research Medium for Art Historians."

The British Museum
The British Museum was founded in 1753 to promote universal understanding through the arts, natural history, and science in a public museum. Its various online offerings are impressive. It features interactive multimedia resources, historical reconstructions and 3D animations and atttracts millions of visitors each year. COMPASS is an on-line database featuring around 5,000 objects from the British Museum's collections. There are online tours on a variety of subjects, including introductions to the current exhibitions. Childrens' COMPASS offers a special childrens' search, activities and quizes for use in the classroom, noticeboards for children's work, 'Ask the Expert' and articles written especially for 7-11 year olds.The World Cultures website highlights the achievements of some remarkable world civilizations and explores cross-cultural themes of human development.

EuroDocs: History of the United Kingdom - Primary Documents
These links connect to Western European (mainly primary) historical documents and shed light on key historical happenings. The sources on the United Kingdom cover various chronological periods, such as 1689 to 1815 and 1816 to 1918.

British Empire
A professor at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada has created this internet gateway. You'll find courses on various aspects of the British empire, including history and cultural studies. There are links to other sites: other gateways, libraries, writings and images of empire, and more. You can also find out about journals and discussion lists connected with British empire or Commonwealth studies. Some broken links.

Authentic History: Primary Resources from American Pop Culture
Contains an impressive array of pictures, documents, audio, and video from the antebellum period to the 9/11 terrorist attack.

Center for Reformation and Renaissance Studies
Hosted by the University of Toronto, the CRRC is a research centre with a library devoted to the study of the period from approximately 1350 to 1700. Its web site contains links to sites useful for researchers working in the Renaissance and the Reformation, as well as other periods. It offers FICINO, an international electronic seminar and bulletin board for the circulation and exchange of information about the Renaissance and Reformation. There are also exhibitions from its Rare Book collections, such as Music in Medieval and Early Modern Europe and Textual Conversations - interactions between Renaissance authors, printers, readers, and texts. There are even two fully-searchable databases containing information from approximately 170 prompt-books for productions of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet.

Conversations With History
In this UC Berkeley site distinguished men and women from all over the world talk about their lives and their work. They reminisce about their participation in great events, and they share their perspectives on the past and reflect on what the future may hold. Guests include diplomats, statesmen, and soldiers; economists and political analysts; scientists and historians; writers and foreign correspondents; and activists and artists

WebRoots.org Genealogy Foundation
WebRoots.org Genealogy and History Library offers free access to United States genealogy and history-related books, diaries, journals, memoirs, letters, manuscripts, and more.

Electronic Journals for History
A collection of online history journals that offer free access.

History Now
History Now is a new quarterly online journal for history teachers and students that features articles by noted historians as well as lesson plans, links to related websites, bibliographies, and many other resources. In each issue, the editors bring together historians, master teachers, and archivists to comment on a single historical theme.
The first issue discusses the contested election of 1800, television's effect on the 1960 Kennedy-Nixon debates, the history of voting rights, and the electoral process from the perspective of Muslim exchange students.

Scout Report: Archives
The Scout Report Archives is a searchable and browseable database to over seven years' worth of the Scout Report and subject-specific Scout Reports. It currently contains 22,831 critical annotations of carefully selected Internet sites and mailing lists.

Perseus Project (Tufts U.)
A worthwhile resource for Greek and Classical resources that offers a search function. Site contains an extensive library of art objects.

The Online Medieval and Classical Library
Part of the Berkeley Digital Library, OMACL is a collection of some of the most important literary works of Classical and Medieval civilization. You may search all of the texts in this collection or browse by Title, Author, Genre and Language.

Labyrinth: Medieval Resources
This Georgetown University site features free, organized access to electronic resources in medieval studies. Among its offerings are bibliographies, a searchable index, links to special topics, and full-text versions of medieval works. The Labyrinth's menus and links provide connections to databases, services, texts, and images on other servers.

Early Modern Resources
In 2000 a Ph.D student began Early Modern Resources, a gateway site for the early modern period (c.1500-1800). It contains a wide range of links, organized into Research, Sources, Regions, and Themes. Subject themes include Cultures, Law and Order, and New Worlds. Also includes links to General Resources, E-tests, E-journals, and more.

JSTOR: The Scholarly Journals Archive
Excellent access to the most popular academic journals in history, but your institution must purchase access to the site.

L.S.U. Libraries: History Databases
This Louisiana State University site offers primary historical sources, electronic journals and images, electronic texts, and more.

Historical Text Archives
Has articles, books, documents, photographs, links and a Google search engine

BUBL
BUBL offers free access to over 12,000 selected Internet resources. Links are extensive and all sites are reviewed.

United States Historical Census Data Browser
Provides data from census records and other government sources for 1790-1960. Users can view extensive population- and economic-oriented statistical information at state and county levels, arranged according to a variety of categories. Also includes an essay on the history of the census.

The NY Times Project
Under construction, but the New York Times has begun to digitize its archives; currently online is the NY Times Civil War edition. You can register to be e-mailed notices of updates to the website.

Reviews in History
An electronic publication which reviews and reappraises significant work in all fields of historical interest, covering the principal areas of the subject as taught in institutions of higher education. Free subscription.

Internet Archive: Wayback Machine
The Wayback Machine provides free access to researchers, historians, scholars, and the general public to more than 10 billion pages stored in the Internet Archive's web archive. Collections include Web, Moving Images, Texts, Audio, and Software.

Biography of America
Companion to the Annenburg/CPB series, the Biography of America site presents American history as a living narrative. For each program you'll find an interactive feature related to the subject or the time period of the program. In addition, you'll find a listing of key events of the period, a map relevant to the period, the transcript of the video program, and a "Webography" - a set of annotated web links.

TIME Newsfiles
Newsfiles are single-topic collections of content on issues, events and people that are most often searched for on TIME.com. They contain cover stories and images, photo essays, columns and essays published by TIME and TIME.com, and links to web resources. Newsfiles offer plenty of informative articles on topics such as The Middle East, World War II, Watergate, Osama bin Laden, Vietnam War, Civil Rights Movement, Abortion, AIDS, and Christianity. Some articles and features are restricted to Time subscribers or Time Archive pass holders.

Maps - Oddens (Utrecht U.)
Oddens' bookmarks was started in 1995 by Roelof Oddens, the curator of the Map Library of the Faculty of GeoSciences and is today perhaps the most extensive online map collection in the world. (The number of links in the database has grown from 6500 in 1999 to over 22000 by April 2004.) You can find almost any map you are searching for via this enormous site. The site is searchable by country, region, and category. Key sections include Maps and Atlases, Map Collections, Government Cartography, and Touristic Sites.

Map History / History of Cartography
Map History, managed by the former Map Librarian of the British Library, is hosted by the Institute of Historical Research, University of London, and forms part of the WWW-Virtual Library. Spread over about 100 pages, it provides a well organized global overview of the history of cartography as well as over 1500 links. The site provides reference information, web articles, and lists activities, opportunities, and resources for surfers and scholars. There are also leads to the collecting of early maps. Furthermore, there is a section aimed specifically at parents and teachers.

The Research Guide
The Research Guide is a free, no frills education site designed for students, teachers, and the general public.

Spartacus: History
Run by a small educational publishing company, this website provides free online materials for major history curriculum subjects. Visitors can sign up for a free monthly e-mail newsletter covering web reviews and using technology in the history classroom.

AOL@School
Search an extensive collection of external links by subject and grade level.

Fact Monster
This is an Online Almanac, Atlas, Dictionary, and Encyclopedia for kids. Also includes Homework Center, Games, and Quizzes.

Population Statistics
Population Statistics provides a historical, demographical and statistical overview of the population of all the countries in the world, their administrative division,s and their important cities

Oral Histories
This website, run by the Oral History Society, provides some good practical advice on how to start an oral history project.

Historytoday.com
Popular history magazines with online articles



Research guides:

Noodle Tools
NoodleTools is a free suite of useful interactive tools designed to aid in online research. NoodleTools provides strategies and resources to make online research more effective

A Visit to Copyright Bay
A fun tutorial that lets you navigate "Fair Use Harbor", visit "Murky Waters", and crash on "Infringement Reef". Includes information about AV Materials, Multimedia, and more.

Internet Paper Mills
A librarian has collected links to 250 digital paper mills and also plagiarism detection services.

Anti-Plagiarism Strategies for Research Papers
A brief but useful article

EasyBib.com
EasyBib provides a free service to teachers and students who want to create proper bibliographic citations.

Jo Cool or Jo Fool: An Online Game about Savvy Surfing
Includes a checklist for helping you decide if "Jo" is making a good surfing choice. Has a 20 question quiz at the end, and a 50 page pdf to help teachers use the site.

BookFinder.com: Search for Out of Print and Used Books
Searches Amazon and used-book sources

Teaching History with Technology
Tom Daccord
July 13-15, in Boston
(sold out 2007, 2008)

Teaching English and Language Arts with Technology
Carla Beard
July 6-8, Boston
(sold out in 2007)

Teaching the "Flat Classroom"
Vicki Davis
June 25-26, Boston

Google Tools for Schools
Carol LaRow
August 3-5, Boston

Creative Teaching with Interactive Whiteboards
Darren Kuropatwa
July 16-17

Free and Open Source Applications for Educators
Alex Inman
June 9-10

21st Century Leadership Symposium
Dennis Richards, Tom Daccord, Justin Reich
August 6-7

Enhanced Podcasting for Educators
Douglas Kiang
July 1-2

Digital Storytelling & Portfolios
Alycia Scott-Hiser
June 23-24

and more...

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