A primary source comes from the time the person/subject was from (e.g newspapers from World War II, materials used by ancient tribes etc.) while a secondary source comes from after the person/subject was from
No, it's a primary source historical document.
it is a primary source
(A) primary source; (B) secondary source
(A) primary source; (B) secondary source
people have different interpretations of primary sources
Secondary Source.
Primary - as it is a document produced at the time. It is not some later report.
The Mayflower Compact is a primary source document because it was created by the passengers aboard the Mayflower in 1620. It directly reflects their intentions and agreements when establishing their government in the New World.
Primary source: A historical document written by an eyewitness; secondary source: a historical document interpreting the accounts of eyewitnesses
No, it's a primary source historical document.
well, primary source is when you find something, by not using any evidence the man was reading a newspaper. secondary is when you find information from the primary source. the man found a newspaper add for a gardener. . . sorry it hard to explain xxx or...
secondary means you were there and saw the info primary mean you have heard it from somewhere else
secondary source
A historical document written by an eyewitness would be a primary source, providing firsthand information and perspective on an event. On the other hand, a document interpreting eyewitness accounts and other accounts of an event would be a secondary source, offering analysis and interpretation of the primary sources.
Interviews are primary sources 'cause the interviewers are getting the information from the source.
Yes. It is document detailing a person's actual journey or involvement, therefore it is exclusively a primary source. It is not an analysis of different primary sources, which would make it a secondary source and it is not an overview of a general topic, which would make it a tertiary source.
When researching American independence or almost any founding-period subject, the Declaration of Independence is indeed a primary source. The difference between primary sources and secondary sources hinges on this simple distinction: a primary source is (or was) "there", while a secondary source is (or was) not "there" but instead talks "about" it.