This is a massive collection of sites related to art from all historical periods. If I was a more diligent group member I'd go through and sift them. But I'm not.
I know, it's only Google Books but it's so good for student research I thought I'd chuck it in. If you tell your students to use the 'Ctrl+F' function to search for keywords it can make their research much faster.
This is a series of thorough study guides that cover a wide variety of historical times and places with accompanying images and primary sources. They're designed to assist high school students with their research. Should be good.
A set of digital collections focussing on American culture (including African-American and Yiddish music from C19th & C20th), literature, Abraham Lincoln, World War I & military history.
Nearly nine hundred images taken from 1894 to 1896 by the World's Transportation Commission during that last great experimentation with globalisation. And look how that ended...
This site provides basic information on individuals and artefacts, with some high-quality images and the locations of the artefacts. The information is simplistic and probably only useful with junior classes or for preliminary reading.
I keep plugging this bloke, but I've found these resources great for use in the classroom. He takes a 'flow' approach to history which the students respond well to. I've found it useful to edit and adapt the content in his resources, but they're MUCH better than your average simplistic textbook with 'exercises' at the end of the chapter. People don't learn in chapters.
A site with primary sources that also guides students in source analysis/evaluation. It's run by George Mason University (they do a lot of the heavy lifting when it comes to open-access digital history. Good on 'em!).
An excellent collection of public domain ebooks run out of the University of Adelaide, focussing on literature, philosophy, science and the queen of all subjects, History. She deserves a capital.
"The HTA publishes high quality articles, books, essays, documents, historical photos, and links, screened for content, for a broad range of historical subjects. It was founded in 1990 in Mississippi and is one of the oldest history sites on the Internet. This site is dynamic with regular additions to its contents and its link collection." That's what they say.
The HTA publishes high quality articles, books, essays, documents, historical photos, and links, screened for content, for a broad range of historical subjects. It was founded in 1990 in Mississippi and is one of the oldest history sites on the Internet. This site is dynamic with regular additions to its contents and its link collection.
Enormous collection of older books now out of copyright on a wide array of topics. Some specialist topics here suitable for senior secondary/tertiary research and organise well under topics.
An enormous collection of links covering a wide array of regions and all time periods. It has primary texts, maps, diagrams, statistics, all types of historical sources. Well-organised and searchable.