Lincoln/Net is the product of the Abraham Lincoln Historical Digitization
Project. Based at Northern Illinois University, the Lincoln Project
works with a number of Illinois institutions, including the University
of Chicago, the Newberry Library, the Chicago Historical Society, Illinois
State University, the Illinois State Archives, Lewis University, and
Knox College. Collaborating institutions have contributed historical
materials, including books, manuscripts, images, maps and other resources,
to the Lincoln Project. You may examine them in several ways.
Lincoln/Net users may search all materials in the archives using this
site's search engine. Project staff have also gathered these materials
together into groups containing similar materials. Site users may restrict
their research to specific media types, browsing or searching through
textual materials, images and maps, sound recordings, video materials,
and interactive resources.
Project staff have also reviewed these materials' contents and assembled
groups of resources pertaining to eight major themes in American history:
frontier settlement; Native American relations; economic development;
women's experience and gender roles; African-Americans' experience and
American racial attitudes; law and society; religion and culture; and
political development. Materials shedding significant light upon any
of these themes will be available through a series of lists available
via the Lincoln/Net search page.
These resources will also be accessible through Lincoln/Net's set
of interpretive materials. While a number of successful online historical
archives have presented World Wide Web users with rich collections of
searchable primary source materials, many users wonder "what should
I search for?" Lincoln/Net addresses this question by presenting analytical
discussions of its eight major historical themes, as well as an online
Lincoln biography linking the life of our sixteenth president to major
events and developments in the antebellum era.
Lincoln/Net's interpretive materials help the site's users to formulate
historical questions that they may then test with the archive's primary
source data. In order to facilitate this research, Lincoln/Net users
may search all related thematic materials directly from the page containing
interpretive matter. Thus a Lincoln/Net user reading the site's discussion
of antebellum politics can turn directly to a search of political source
materials.
The Lincoln Project staff hope that these innovations will help Lincoln/Net
users to enjoy the historical materials collected in the archive. We
also hope that Lincoln/Net's discussions of major themes in the American
historical literature can help bring some of these fascinating debates
to the general audience historians have largely abandoned in recent
decades.