May 2015 269 C&RL News

The American Civil War began in 1861, lasted until 1865, and was ruinous by 
any standard. Within months of President 
Lincoln’s inauguration, seven southern states 
began the secession from the Union and 
declared the Confederate States of America. 
This split in the fabric of the country began 
a bitter war, concluding in the death of more 
than 750,000 soldiers. When the South finally 
surrendered, the Confederacy collapsed, 
and slavery was abolished. To understand 
the conflict, take a look back at the primary 
documents that highlight decisions of gener-
als, the everyday drudgery of soldiers, and 
the photographic images of battle. 

Hundreds of websites offer insight into 
the American Civil War. This guide is not 
comprehensive, but it highlights a diverse col-
lection of free websites of primary sources for 
the study of the war. These websites include 
digitized newspaper archives for both the 
Union and Confederate sides of the struggle, 
collections of letters and diaries, digitized 
photographs, maps, and official records and 
dispatches from the battlefields.

Newspapers
• Brooklyn Daily Eagle (1841–1955). 

An important daily newspaper, the Eagle 
was unusual for its time since it covered na-
tional as well as regional news. The archive 
is searchable, can be browsed by date, and 
includes zooming capabilities to see the tiny 
text up close. The archive is maintained 

by the Brooklyn Public Library. Access: 
http://bklyn.newspapers.com/title_1890/the 
_brooklyn_daily_eagle/.

• Chronicling America. This site offers 
access to multiple newspapers from both the 
Confederate and Union states. Over 1,400 
newspapers are in the archive, but not all of 
them are from the Civil War years. Examples 
of newspaper titles include: Memphis Appeal 
(1857–1886), Chattanooga Rebel (1862–1865), 
New York Sun (1859–1916), and New York 
Daily Tribune (1842–1866). Search across 
the newspapers for a range of contemporary 
stories from both sides of the war. From the 
Library of Congress. Access: http://chroni-
clingamerica.loc.gov/#tab=tab_newspapers.

• Harper’s Weekly. The archive of this 
popular weekly 
newspaper high-
lights only the Civil 
War years. The 
site is searchable 
and is arranged 
chr onologically 
w i t h  t h u m b -
nails of the front 
pages. All pages 
from the 1861-
1 8 6 5  C i v i l  Wa r 

Susan Birkenseer

The American Civil War
A collection of free online primary sources

Susan Birkenseer is reference and instruction librarian 
at Saint Mary’s College of California, email: sbirkens@
stmarys-ca.edu
© 2015 Susan Birkenseer

internet resources



C&RL News May 2015 270

period have been scanned including the 
engravings and illustrations. From the 
Lee Foundation. Access: http://www.
sonofthesouth.net/leefoundation/the 
-civil-war.htm.

• Richmond Daily Dispatch (1860–
1865). This paper was published from the 
Confederate capital and has a digitized and 
searchable online archive of 1,384 issues. The 
site is funded by the Institute of Museum and 
Library Services. Access: http://dlxs.richmond.
edu/d/ddr/index.html.

• Secession-Era Editorials. This site 
from the Furman University history depart-
ment in South Carolina contains transcribed 
editorials from contemporary newspapers, 
all from the 1850s. The specific issues dis-
cussed are the Nebraska Bill debates, the 
caning attack on Senator Charles Sumner by 
Representative Preston Brooks, John Brown’s 
Raid on Harper’s Ferry, and the Dred Scott 
decision. These events all highlight the varied 
and inflexible opinions of their time from 
both sides of the conflict. Access: http:// 
history.furman.edu/editorials/see.py.

Maps and photographs
• Civil War Glass Negatives and Related 

Prints. Approximately 7,000 portraits and 
battleground images are available. The col-
lection is from the glass negatives of Mathew 
Brady and Alexander Gardner, as well as from 
photographic collections that were purchased 
by the Library of Congress in 1943. Browse by 
broad subjects or search by keyword. Access: 
http://www.loc.gov/pictures/collection/cwp/.

• Civil War Maps. Nearly 3,000 maps are 
included in this online composite of three 
collections from the Library of Congress, the 
Virginia Historical Society, and the Library 
of Virginia. Search by keyword and nar-
row with the facets to the left of the results 
page. Access: http://www.loc.gov/collection 
/ c i v i l - w a r -
maps/about-
this-collec-
tion/.

•  P i c -
t u r e s  o f 

the Civil War. The new era of photog-
raphy brought the battles home during 
the American Civil War. The National Ar-
chives has organized the Mathew Brady 
and Alexander Gardner photographs into 
broad categories for easy browsing. Access: 
http://www.archives.gov/research/military 
/civil-war/photos/index.html.

Diaries and letters
• Abraham Lincoln Papers at the Li-

brary of Congress. Approximately 20,000 
documents, which include correspondence 
with enclosures of newspaper clippings, 
drafts of speeches, notes, pamphlets, and 
other printed material by Lincoln, are avail-
able. Most of the material dates from the 
presidential years. Lincoln had a lively cor-
respondence with many people in his day, so 
this is a rich resource. Each piece is scanned, 
with accompanying transcription. Searchable 
by keyword or just browse the collection. Ac-
cess: http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/alhtml 
/malhome.html.

• American Civil War Collection at 
the Electronic Text Center. This site has 
transcribed letters from the University of Vir-
ginia special collections with links to other 
collections (some links are only accessible 
by University of Virginia students). Access: 
http://etext.virginia.edu/civilwar/.

• The Civil War Archive: Letters 
Home from the Civil War. A collection 
of letters from both Union and Confederate 
soldiers, organized by name and regiment. 
Access: http://www.civilwararchive.com 
/LETTERS/letters.htm.

• The Civil War Collection at Michigan 
State University. A huge online collection of 
scanned letters, newspaper articles, images, 
photographs, diaries, and much more, filled 
with the stories of Michigan soldiers. Access: 
http://civilwar.archives.msu.edu/.



May 2015 271 C&RL News

• The Civil War Collection at Penn 
State. Penn State has a rich digitized special 
collection. These include diaries, newspapers, 
and other ephemera. No transcriptions are 
available for the diaries, but the scanned 
pages are clean and easy to peruse. Access: 
http://www.libraries.psu.edu/psul/digital 
/civilwar.html.

• Civil War Diaries and Letters. Browse 
a list of scanned diaries and letters from the 
University of Iowa Libraries, some of which 
currently have transcriptions, but not all. You 
can also browse by year to get the materials 
for a particular time. Access: 
http://digital.lib.uiowa.edu/
cwd/.

• Civil War Diaries and 
Letters Collections. A col-
lection of diaries and letters 
from Auburn University, cov-
ering both sides of the war; 
each item is scanned and 
transcribed. Access: http://di-
glib.auburn.edu/collections 
/civilwardiaries/.

•  C i v i l  Wa r  o n  t h e 
Western Border: The Mis-
souri-Kansas Conflict, 
1855–1865. A collection 
of letters, photographs, and 
diary entries that document 
a lesser-known conflict of 
the time. The resources are scanned and 
transcribed. When possible, the letters also 
show connections to other related people 
and events. This site is a result of collabora-
tion with Kansas City-area libraries, historical 
societies, and museums. Access: http://www.
civilwaronthewesternborder.org/.

• The Civil War: Women and the Home-
front. Duke University has put together this 
study guide relating to women’s role during 
the war. Use the tab labeled “Primary Sources 
Online,” which includes digitized diaries and 
letters, as well as outside links to other institu-
tions’ collections. The online papers include 
a collection from Rose O’Neal Greenhow, a 
famed Confederate spy. Other letters include 
those written by African American slaves, 

describing their living conditions in the 
South. Access: http://guides.library.duke.edu 
/content.php?pid=41224&sid=303304.

• First Person Narratives of the Ameri-
can South. Everyday people’s voices speak 
through their diaries, autobiographies, ex-
slave accounts, and memoirs on this site, 
which is organized alphabetically or by 
subject. Access: http://docsouth.unc.edu/fpn 
/index.html.

• Manuscripts of the American Civil 
War. This special collection from the Univer-
sity of Notre Dame’s Rare Books and Special 

Collections contains seven 
soldier’s diaries, which have 
been carefully scanned and 
transcribed. The soldiers 
represented are from both 
sides of the war. The diaries 
highlight their day-to-day 
experiences—from the mun-
dane to the terrifying. Ac-
cess: http://www.rarebooks.
nd.edu/digital/civil_war 
/diaries_journals/.

• Saint Mary’s Col-
lege of California Special 
Collections. Saint Mary’s 
College has a small, select 
special collection contain-
ing letters from a private 
in the Fifth Vermont regi-

ment, and a diary from a captain of the 
Sixteenth Michigan regiment. The collec-
tions are digitized and transcribed, and the 
site is well illustrated. Access: http://www.
stmarys-ca.edu/library/about-the-library 
/special-collections.

• South Carolina and the Civil War. 
The site brings together primary sources by 
eyewitnesses from the holdings of the Uni-
versity of South Carolina. Included on the site 
are diaries, sheet music, maps, letters, and 
photographs. The collections are scanned 
and viewable, but with little transcription 
or description. Access: http://library.sc.edu 
/digital/collections/civilwar.html.

• Valley of the Shadow. Thousands of 
documents are accessible that compare life 



C&RL News May 2015 272

in two towns during the war: one in Virginia 
and one in Pennsylvania. These documents 
include letters, diaries, maps, newspaper 
accounts, and other sources. Access: http://
valley.lib.virginia.edu/.

• Virginia Military Institute Archives. 
The Virginia Military Institute has a proud 
history of training its students to serve in 
the military service of the United States. The 
archives provide access to the full-text of 
more than 75 letters, diaries, manuscripts, and 
other ephemera of soldiers from both armies. 
Access: http://www.vmi.edu/Archives/Civil 
_War/Civil_War_Resources_Home/.

• Wisconsin Goes to War: Our Civil 
War Experience. The University of Wis-
consin is in the process of digitizing letters, 
diaries, poetry, and other writings from Wis-
consin’s soldiers; approximately 630 pages to 
date, with an expected completion number 
to be more than 2,600 pages. Access: http://
uwdc.library.wisc.edu/collections/WI/WIWar.

Dispatches and battles
• Antietam on the Web. This site 

looks at the crucial Battle of Sharpsburg 
(Antietam), highlighting generals and other 
officers, battle maps, and important back-
ground information. This site also includes 
the transcriptions of reports from the of-
ficers from both sides of the war, as well 
as excerpts from diaries and letters of some 
of the soldiers who survived. Access: http://
antietam.aotw.org/index.php.

• Making of America: Official Records 
of the Union and Confederate Navies. The 
Making of America site is an excellent source 
of primary documents, and this one features 
the orders, reports, and correspondence 
from the Union and Confederate navies. The 
scanned pages of the 30-volume set from the 
Government Printing Office are annotated 
and arranged chronologically. The collection 
is searchable. This is an essential resource 
for any study of naval operations in the war. 
Access: http://ebooks.library.cornell.edu/m 
/moawar/ofre.html.

• Ulysses S. Grant Presidential Library. 
This site from Mississippi State University 

contains the first 31 volumes of The Papers of 
Ulysses S. Grant published by Southern Illinois 
University Press, and includes his military 
papers from the Civil War. Also included are 
photographs and prints from the life of Grant, 
including photographs from the war. The 
volumes are searchable as well as browsable. 
Access: http://digital.library.msstate.edu/cdm 
/usgrantcollection.

• The War of the Rebellion: A Compila-
tion of Official Records of the Union and 
Confederate Armies. This 70-volume work 
from the Making of America site at Cornell 
University contains the formal reports for both 
the Union and Confederate armies, including 
correspondence and orders. The scanned 
volumes are arranged chronologically and 
identified with a brief annotation. The vol-
umes are searchable. This is an essential 
resource for anyone doing serious research 
on battles, regiments, and the progress of 
the war. Access: http://digital.library.cornell.
edu/m/moawar/waro.html.

Slavery and abolitionism
• Born in Slavery: Slave Narratives 

from the Federal Writers’ Project, 1936–
1938. Includes more than 2,300 first-person 
accounts, and more than 500 photographs. 
The narratives were collected in the 1930s 
by the Federal Writer’s Project and the Works 
Progress Administration, and put into a sev-
enteen volume set. Access: http://memory.loc.
gov/ammem/snhtml/snhome.html.

• Frederick Douglass Papers. A former 
slave and devout abolitionist, Douglass’s 
papers were digitized by the Library of Con-
gress. They are searchable, and also can be 
browsed by date, and then narrowed by type, 
such as speeches or correspondence. Access: 
http://www.loc.gov/collection/frederick 
-douglass-papers/about-this-collection/.

• North American Slave Narratives. 
The University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill 
has a special collection dedicated to slave 
narratives. Not every manuscript is a primary 
document, but many are. Included on the site 
are narratives of fugitive and former slaves 
in published form from before 1920. For 



May 2015 273 C&RL News

scholars interested in further study, a bibliog-
raphy of slave and former-slave narratives by 
William L. Andrews is also included. Access: 
http://docsouth.unc.edu/neh/index.html.

• Slavery and Abolition in the U.S.: 
Select Publications of the 1800s. Reflect-
ing both sides of the slavery question, these 
publications from the 1800s include speeches, 
tracts, pamphlets, books, legal proceedings, 
religious sermons, and personal accounts. 
This collection from a cooperative project 
by Millersville University and Dickinson 
College includes more than 24,000 individ-
ual pages. Access: http://deila.dickinson.edu 
/slaveryandabolition/index.html.

• Slaves and the Courts 1740-1860. 
From the Library of Congress’s American 
Memory Project this site consists of trials and 
cases, arguments, proceedings, and other 
historical works of importance that relate to 
the prosecution and defense of slavery as an 

institution. The collection contains more than 
100 pamphlets and books published between 
1772 and 1889. Access: http://memory.loc.
gov/ammem/sthtml/.

Confederacy
• The Museum of the Confederacy. Var-

ious primary sources are accessible, including 
a collection of photographs, documents, and 
artifacts relating to Lee and Jackson, the “Roll 
of Honor and Battle Accounts” from Confed-
erate soldiers, and a searchable database of 
their collections. Access: http://www.moc.
org/collections-archives?mode=general.

• The Papers of Jefferson Davis. A se-
lection of documents from the published pa-
pers of the same name that includes speeches, 
reports, and correspondence. The documents 
are organized by volume with brief annota-
tions. Access: http://jeffersondavis.rice.edu 
/documentslist.aspx. 

not seem receptive. They were appropriately 
skeptical about social media conversations and 
their role in research, accurately noting that 
anonymity often makes it hard to evaluate the 
legitimacy of comments on articles and blogs. 
However, I wanted them to better understand 
that authority does not need to be hierarchical, 
that experts do engage with material outside 
of peer-reviewed publishing channels. 

Students were required to think about 
the kinds of sources they would use, and 
what they would expect to find there, before 
actually searching for material to answer 
their research questions. This was new from 
previous semesters. I was impressed that 
they identified a wide array of sources—from 
government documents to political blogs. 
However, they didn’t always accurately 
identify what they could expect to find there. 
One student thought she would find statis-
tics in an academic journal, for instance. As 
other librarians have noted, this disconnect 
between students’ expectations and real-

ity accounts for much of the frustration in 
student research. This is an area to address 
with later classes. 

While these informal observations are not 
assessment data, they have helped me plan 
for the next time I teach this course. I do be-
lieve that the framework has made an impact 
on this small group of LIB 201 students. I 
saw them grappling conceptually with ideas 
of authority and scholarly conversation, 
as well as with discrete skills like using a 
subject thesaurus. The conceptually based 
framework is more aligned with our profes-
sion’s current thinking than the standards. 
It is harder to translate broad concepts into 
course objectives, assignments, and activi-
ties. Yet, this should not stop instructors from 
undertaking the task. In my experience, the 
process required deeper reflection, a greater 
internalization of the concepts found in the 
frames, lots of reading, and much trial and 
error—basically the kind of work that we 
expect of our students. 

“Redeveloping a course...,” (cont. from page 250)