NCC Library 188 Richards Ave. Norwalk, CT 06854 Tel: (203) 857-7200 Fax: (203) 857-7380

Find Books, Videos and more
Find Articles (On campus)
Find Articles (Off Campus)
Internet Resources
History

reQuest:All CT Libraries
About the Library
Faculty Information
Library Services
 
Web Resources
-General Reference Sources
-African American Studies
-Citing Sources
-Anthropology
-Architecture
-Art and Graphics
-Business
-Career Information
-Chemistry
-College links
-Computer Science/Information Technology
-Connecticut Information (including Bus and Train Transportation links).
-Copyright
-Culinary Arts/Hospitality Management Education
-Education
-English & Literature
-ESL (English as a Second Language)
-Film
-Federal Government Sources
-Historical Socieites, Lower Fairfield County
-History
-International and and Multicultural Studies
-Law
-Libraries and Online Catalogs
-Lifetime Learners Institute at NCC
-Music
-NCC CARES
-Nursing and Allied Health
-Nutrition
-Philosophy and Religion
-Physical Therapy
-Plagiarism
-Psychology
-Science
-Sociology
-Sports and Physical Education
-WebCTVista
-Women's Studies

 

    American History

  • African American History
  • The American Memory Project - The Library of Congress digital collection of primary and secondary sources in American History.
  • Center for History and New Media - George Mason University - It offers digital collections that range from the very contemporary "911 Digital Archive" to personal, governmental, and corporate histories of the power failures in New York City in 1965 and 1977 (and presumably, 2003 in the near future), to the diffusion of the Declaration Of Independence in translation throughout the world.
  • Constitution FinderConstitution Finder provides a listing of constitutions, charters, amendments, and related documents for 211 governmental entities worldwide. The document list is overseen by John Paul Jones (Richmond School of Law, Univ. of Richmond.)
  • The History Makers The HistoryMakers represents the single largest archival project of its kind in the world, outdistancing the existing video oral history collections of New York’s Schomburg Library and the Birmingham Civil Rights Museum. The HistoryMakers is unique among these other collections of African American heritage, because of its massive scope. Like other oral history collections, The HistoryMakers collection hearkens back to the earliest and most authentic efforts to capture the voice of a people, while introducing state-of-the-art technology and increased accessibility. The HistoryMakers wants to provide living proof that African American history did not begin or end with the civil rights movement, that the HistoryMakers number in the thousands and that their names are not just Harriet Tubman, W.E.B. DuBois, Martin Luther King, Jr. and Ella Fitzgerald.
  • The Making of America - A collection of primary sources from the 19th Century.
  • Nazi War Crimes and Japanese Imperial Government Records Interagency Working Group's Report to the United States Congress.
  • Steering Committee on Slavery and Justice - This site includes: the University’s response to the committee report; the committee’s final report;background information about the committee;a calendar of events, including video clips of speakers;facilities to offer feedback; scholarly resources, including a documentary reconstruction of the voyage of a Rhode Island slave ship, a repository of historical documents, and curricular materials for teachers.
  • Women in America 1820-1842 - Travel narratives on women in America -- corresponds to de Tocqueville's Democracy in America.





   
World Libraries reQuest:CT Libraries InfoAnytime Google Scholar
Connecticut Traffic Cam AccuWeather News WebCtVista