- Archiving Early America
- Features 18th Century documents such as newspapers, maps, and letters plus modern articles and films about the original thirteen colonies and early republic. - Federalist Papers, The (9)
- Old Fort Niagara
- Explore the fort and historic buildings dating from the 1700s. - Articles of Confederation@
- First American West: The Ohio River Valley, 1750-1820
- Features letters, maps, artifacts, images, and other materials relating to the land, peoples, exploration, and transformation of the trans-Appalachian West from the mid-18th to early 19th century. - Alien and Sedition Act of 1798 (3)
- Shay's Rebellion (2)
- Rebels With a Vision
- Presents a collection of historical documents on the founders of the United States. - XYZ Affair (2)
- Religion and the Founding of the American Republic
- Library of Congress exhibition. - E Pluribus Unum: America in the 1770s, 1850s, and 1920s
- Collection of essays, primary texts, artifacts, and other resources that examine the attempt to make "one from many" in three critical decades of American life. - Federalist Archive
- Collection of historical documents and political opinion. - Early America Review, The
- Journal of fact and opinion on the people, issues, and events of 18th Century America. - Virginia Colonial Records
- Provides access to information about historical documents relating to the colonial period in the Commonwealth of Virginia; project of the Library of Virginia. - Timeline of the 18th Century
- Covers events in American history from 1700, when the British colonies had a total population of 275,000, to the death of George Washington in 1799. - Great Republic by the Master Historians, Volume II
- Covers the Cherokee wars to the Embargo Act of 1807. - Great Republic by the Master Historians, Volume I
- Covers the period from before Columbus to the death of General Wolfe. - Papers of the War Department, 1784-1800
- Online collection of the papers of the U.S. War Department showing its activities in Indian affairs, veteran affairs, naval affairs (until 1798), as well as militia and army matters. From George Mason University.
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