Category: Social History

Social History ResourcesSocial History Resources



History and social history are important ingredients in building the world and stories of your ancestors. Below is a list of resources to help you with that research. If you have found a website that could benefit others please email me at lynnpalermo@eastlink.ca so we can add it to the list. Likewise, if you have found a link on this list that is broken or no longer is available please let us know.

General

The Social Historian

WishbookWeb.com – Archives of Sears Wishbooks

Historic Catalogues of Sears Roebuck 1896-1993  (Ancestry.ca)

 

Digital Libraries

HathiTrust Digital Library

Google Books

Smithsonian Digital Library

Digital Public Library of America

American Centuries

American Journeys

Documenting the American South

The New York Library Digital Collections

Harvard University Library

 

Timelines

Timelines of History

HyperHistory Online

The Food Timeline

Timelines: Sources from History

 

Disasters

Gendisasters – Disasters that touched our ancestor’s lives

 

Economics 

Measuring Worth

 

Love and Marriage

Love and Marriage in the 19th Century

 

Poorhouses

Waterloo County House of Industry and Refuge

 

Fashion

Fashion-Era

Early English Costume: Medieval Women’s Fashions

Had to Be There – fashion covering nearly 1000 years by NY Times

16th Century Fashion

Women’s Fashions of the 17th Century

 

Travel and Immigration 

Historical Background on Traveling in the 19th Century  

Voyages – Immigrants on the Ocean (focus on Norwegian emigrants)

Emigration to USA and Canada

Journeys to Australia

Gjenvick-Gjønvik Archives: Social and Cultural History – The Future of Our Past

Canadian Immigration – Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21

 

Canada

Canadian Social History Series

Canadian Museum of History: Online Resources for Canadian Heritage

A Nation’s Chronicle: The Canada Gazette

History of New France

Rural Diary Archive

War Diaries of the First World War

Canada’s Nursing Sisters – Diaries

Ink – Free Early Newspapers 

Military Oral History – University of Victoria

Pioneer Life in Upper Canada

 

United States of America

Making of America 

American Memory Collection

Historical Census Browser

Discovering American Women’s History Online

American Social History Project

Bethlehem Digital History Project

Chronicling America

 

Britain 

British History Online

A Vision of Britain through Time 

HistPop: Online Historical Population Reports

The Health of London: Medical Officer Health Reports 1848-1972

Connected Histories: 1500-1900

History to Herstory: Yorkshire Women’s Lives, 1100 to present

The Statistical Accounts of Scotland 1791-1845

Timelines Sources from History

VCH Explore, Explore England’s Past

House of Commons Parliamentary Papers

Witches in Early Modern England

Routledge’s Manual of Etiquette  – Victorian Etiquette

 

Medieval Times

Life in a Medieval Castle

Manorial Language

Tales of the Middle Ages

 

France

Economic and Social Conditions in France during the Eighteenth Century

 

 

Enriching Your Story with HistoryEnriching Your Story with History



In the Getting Ready to Write and Authentic Ancestors workbooks, I mentioned historical timelines and their importance in organizing your research and writing your ancestor’s stories.  Not only is it important to map your ancestor’s life on a timeline, but also to map world, regional and local history. It’s necessary to consider what was happening in the world around your ancestors and it’s relationship to their life.

I want to spend a few minutes today discussing how we can use historical events to enrich your stories.

Historical events can provide both a background and a setting for your story. However, while these events can add a lot of colour and depth to your story, it’s important to not just insert a historical event in your ancestor’s narrative only because it happened during their life.  It’s important to look at how those events may have impacted your ancestor’s life, actions, and reactions.  While some events will be easy to include due to your ancestor’s direct relationship to an event, do not discount an event because it did not happen directly to them. It may be happening in the background and influencing their life.

These historical events can happen before, after or during the story. It may be something from the past that sets in motion a current event in your story. Historical events can add richness to your story and can place your ancestor’s life and story within the context of the world. It can also help to establish the tone of your story for your reader.  By linking your ancestor’s story to something happening or that has happened, this event may impact them or people around them. It’s important to consider how the event may change their feelings, attitudes, culture, or society.

These historical events may strengthen your story ideas and feed your ancestor’s stories. Perhaps your ancestor’s story will be a political or social statement about abortion, adoption, slavery, corruption in politics or the environment to name but a few. You can look to historical events to help you build your story ideas and theme.

An excellent resource for looking at events in a variety of categories is The Timetables of History by Bernard Grun.  This book is organized into seven categories, history and politics, literature and theatre, religion, philosophy and learning, visual arts, music, science, technology and growth, and daily life. It spans from 5000BC up to 1991 and is organized on a year by year basis.

I’ve also provided you with a small chart below for you to download and use if looking at the historical events of your ancestor’s life and analyzing them for the impact on their lives. Completing this chart might help you to shape your story with regards to plot, theme, and your story question.

Don’t limit yourself to just the large world events. Regional and local historical events must also be considered. We often think wars and national tragedies when discussing historical events. However, a local storm that causes devastation to area crops or local politics may play a significant role in your ancestor’s life and decisions.

Historical events provide context and richness to your story, and  it places our ancestor in the world making them more real and believable to your reader.

Here’s the timeline with a couple of examples filled in.

Timeline Table

Timeline Table – blank