Primary Sources are materials that contain direct evidence, first-hand testimony, or an eyewitness account of a topic or event under investigation. They can be published or unpublished items in any format (the original or a surrogate format such as a photocopy, a digital copy, a printed edition, or a microfilm edition), from handwritten letters, to objects, to the built environment.
Secondary Sources are works that analyze and interpret other sources. They use primary sources to solve research problems.
Primary vs. Secondary - The way you engage with a source determines whether it is a primary or secondary source for your project. Book reviews, for example, are typically considered secondary sources. If the subject of your research is book reviews themselves, however, they would be primary sources for your project.
(Sources: The Craft of Research by Wayne C. Booth, Gregory G. Colomb, Joseph M. Williams. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, c2008; Introduction to Archival Terminology, NARA.)
Unpublished archival materials are just one type of primary source. In The Information-Literate Historian, Jenny Presnell describes nine categories of primary sources:
(Source: The Information Literate Historian, 93-95.)
As you conduct your research you may find that some sources will help answer your research question and others will inspire more questions.
Manuscripts and archives are just one piece of the research puzzle, one kind of "document" to consider when gathering evidence. As you consider your research question, ask yourself:
Image: New York Times