off campus access

Transatlantic Slave Trade

Background Sources | Books | Articles | Primary Sources | Websites


This webpage provides resources to help you find more information on the themes and topics of the course.

Most of the databases on this page are restricted to UW students, staff and faculty. These are marked with a lock UW Restricted. To connect to these databases from home you will need to first click on the Off-Campus Access link in the upper-right hand corner and login.

Have questions or need research help? Please contact Theresa Mudrock, the history librarian, via email at mudrock@u.washington.edu.

Background Resources

Encyclopedias and dictionaries provide background information and can be used to identify key people, events and dates which can then be used as search terms for finding additional information. More importantly, because encyclopedias often cover the major issues surrounding the subject, they can help you narrow your research from a broad “who, what, where, when” topic to a “how or why” question. In addition many encyclopedia articles include short bibliographies that will lead you to the major works on the topic.

  • UW Restricted Dictionary of American History
  • Encyclopedia of African-American culture and history
            Suzzallo Reference, OUGL Reference E185 .E54 2006
  • Encyclopedia of African American history 1619-1895
            Suzzallo Reference E185 .E545 2006
  • Encyclopedia of emancipation and abolition in the Transatlantic world
            Suzzallo Reference HT985 .E53 2007
  • UW Restricted Encyclopedia of Western colonialism since 1450
  • Macmillan encyclopedia of world slavery
            Suzzallo Reference HT861 .M24 1998
  • UW Restricted Oxford African American Studies Center
  • Slavery in the United States: a social, political, and historical encyclopedia
            Suzzallo Reference E441 .S635 2007

Books

Use the following databases to locate books in the UW Libraries and in other libraries around the region, nation and world. Books unavailable at the UW can be requested through Summit (if available at one of the member libraries) or through Interlibrary Loan.

  • UW Libraries Catalog
    A listing of the books, journal subscriptions and other material available at the University of Washington Libraries.
  • Summit
    Joint catalog of more than 25 academic libraries in Oregon and Washington. Books can be requested and shipped to the UW for pick-up.
  • UW Restricted OCLC WorldCat
    Joint catalog of thousands of major libraries in the U.S. and abroad.
  • Beta Catalog/WorldCat Local
    Beta version of the catalog that simultaneously searches the UW Libraries Catalog, Summit and OCLC WorldCat plus an article database. Best used for topical searches; facilitates requesting books from other libraries.

Articles & Book Reviews

Use databases to find articles and book reviews on a topic. Use those which best fit your research topic. For a complete list of databases see Research Databases on the Library homepage.

To find a copy of the article, use the Check for UW Holdings button available on most databases to locate a copy in the library. If there is no button, search the UW Libraries Catalog for the title of the journal to locate a copy. Be sure to have the complete citation (author, title, journal name, volume, pages and year) of your article.

Articles from journals which the UW does not own can be requested via Interlibrary loan.

  • UW Restricted America History & Life
    This is the best database to find articles dealing with all aspects of American and Canadian history. Also includes citations to selected books, dissertations and reviews.
  • UW Restricted Black Studies Center
    This database includes an index to articles (with some fulltext), topical essays and the Chicago Defender newspaper (primary source)
  • UW Restricted Historical Abstracts
    This is the best database to identify articles in world history (excluding US and Canada).
  • UW Restricted JSTOR
    JSTOR is a collection of more than 40 full-text history-related journals. For another collection of searchable electronic journals related to history see Project Muse.When searching for reviews be sure choose the reviews limit on the bottom of the search screen.

Finding Primary Sources in the Library

Using Secondary Sources to Find Primary Sources

Secondary sources, scholarly journal articles and books, are a great source for identifying potential primary sources. Find a few articles, books or dissertations related to your topic and then mine the footnotes and bibliography. You will have the best luck finding published primary sources such as books, government reports, newspapers and magazines within the UW Libraries. Use the UW Libraries Catalog to determine if we have the primary source.

Finding Primary Sources -- Books

The UW Libraries has a strong collection of books that can be considered primary sources for history. These include books written during the period for your topic (i.e., during the 1800s), books written by participants, published collections of correspondence and other personal writings, memoirs and reprints of collections of primary source material. Use the UW Libraries Catalog to search for these materials.

  • Limit your search by publication date.
  • Search for books written by key participants and organizations such as William Wilberforce
  • Use special subject terms that designate primary sources:
    sources, personal narratives, diaries, correspondence, interviews, early works to 1800
  • Example:
    • slave trade and (sources or narratives or diaries or correspondence)
    • slavery and africa and sources
    • slave trade and early works to 1800

Digitized Book Databases: 15th - 18th centuries

  • UW Restricted Early English Books Online (EEBO)
    EEBO is a full-image database of more than 80,000 works published between 1475 and 1700 in England and its colonies.
  • UW Restricted Eighteenth Century Collections Online (ECCO)
    ECCO is a full-image database of more than 150,000 books published primarily in Great Britain during the 18th century.
  • UW Restricted Evans Digital Edition
    Evans is a full-image database of more than 30,000 works published in America between 1639 and 1800.

Finding Primary Sources -- Articles

The UW Libraries has a fairly strong collection of magazines and journals from the 18th and 19th. Many of them are in print (either in Suzzallo Periodicals or in a storage area), others are on microfilm.

The libraries also has a basic collection of U.S. newspapers on microfilm for the 18th and 19th centuries. Newspapers (and other material in microfilm) are housed in the Microform and Newspaper Collections (Mcnews) on the ground floor of Suzzallo.

Magazines and Journals
  • UW Restricted American Periodicals Series Online
    Use APS Online to find full-text articles from American magazines written in the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries.
  • UW Restricted C19
    Index to 19th century British and American magazine articles plus other material.
  • The African slave trade and its suppression, a classified and annotated bibliography of books, pamphlets and periodical articles
            Suzzallo Reference, Odegaard Stacks Z7164.S6 H63

Newspapers
These are a selection of colonial, southern and abolitionist and antebellum newspapers we have available on microfilm in the Microforms and Newspapers Collection on the ground floor of Suzzallo or online. Many of the runs are incomplete but the general date range of coverage is given. There are no indexes these papers so you will need to browse through issues to find articles of interest.

Those of you with King County Public Library (KCLS) cards will want to try their Nineteenth Century Newspapers, a digital collection of 100s of newspapers. All those residing in King County are eligible for KCLS library cards.

Government Reports

The UW Libraries has a strong collection of U.S. government documents including federal agency publications, congressional hearings and reports and other material. For more information about locating government documents check with the librarians in the Government Publications section located on the ground floor of Suzzallo.

Websites

Many collections of primary sources are now available from the web. These are a selection of sites with sources relating to the history of slavery and early American history. Many are from the collections of American Memory. For links to additional websites see History on the Web.


Images from the collections of the Library of Congress.

27 March 2008
Theresa Mudrock - mudrock@u.washington.edu

History Subject Page :: Research 101 :: UW Libraries