Primary and Secondary Sources Primary Sources In 1804, Meriwether Lewis and William Clark left St....

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Transcript of Primary and Secondary Sources Primary Sources In 1804, Meriwether Lewis and William Clark left St....

Primary and Secondary SourcesPrimary and Secondary Sources

Primary SourcesPrimary Sources

In 1804, Meriwether Lewis and William Clark left St. Louis to explore United States land west of the Mississippi River. They kept journals and made maps during their journey. They returned to St. Louis on September 23, 1806. That day, Lewis wrote a letter to President Jefferson describing the journey.

Primary SourcesPrimary Sources

The letter from Lewis to Jefferson is a primary source. A primary source is a source of information that comes from someone who was there. Letters, photographs, newspapers, journals, and interviews are all primary sources.

Secondary SourcesSecondary Sources

Now, read this excerpt from an encyclopedia article about the Lewis and Clark expedition.

“The group crossed half the continent of North America, traveling through a largely unknown wilderness on foot, on horseback and by boat.”

World Book Encyclopedia, 2007, Vol. 12, p.222

Secondary SourcesSecondary Sources

The encyclopedia article is a secondary source. A secondary source is a source of information that comes from someone who was not there. Textbooks, encyclopedias, biographies, and some videos are secondary sources.

Uses of Both SourcesUses of Both Sources

Primary sources are useful because they are bits of history. They reveal how people from the time lived and what they thought about the world.

Secondary sources put events in context. That means they tell how an event fits into history. They can include related facts about other events that happened at the same time or at other times.

primary sourceprimary source

• A source of information that comes from someone who was there.

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secondary sourcesecondary source

• A source of information that comes from someone who was not there.

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