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Cases in US History: The United States and the Challenge of Secession

This guide focus on primary resources curated to support the Cases in US History final paper, Fall Term 2024. For questions or help with access, please email Ms. Sinai asinai@lawrenceville.org

Citing in Chicago/Turabian Style

History courses at Lawrenceville require students to use Chicago/Turabian Citation Style.
In Chicago/Turabian Style, you will need to create two citations for each source:
  • A full bibliographic citation (goes at the end of your paper on the Bibliography page; your sources should be listed in alphabetical order by author)
  • A footnote (added at the end of the page where the source is referenced)
Only cite the information that is available to you. If you cannot identify a piece of the template [e.g. an author or date], leave it out rather than making it up.

 

How to Cite a Harvard Business School (HBS) Case:

BIBLIOGRAPHY FORMAT:
Campasano, Mark, and David Moss. “Battle over a Bank: Defining the Limits of Federal Power Under a New Constitution” HBS N9-716-052. Boston: Harvard Business School Publishing, 2016.

FOOTNOTE FORMAT:  
David Moss and Marc Campasano, “Battle over a Bank: Defining the Limits of Federal Power Under a New Constitution,” HBS N9-716-052 (Boston: Harvard Business School Publishing, 2016), p. 16.
For Help with Chicago/Turabian Style: 
For additional help with citation, use the libchat feature in this research guide or stop into the library to work with a librarian. 
When Should I Cite?
  • When using a direct quote
  • Paraphrasing an idea from a text
  • Summarizing a text 
  • Using facts, information, and data, anything that is not common knowledge
  • When in doubt, cite! 
  • Cite while you write -- do not leave your citations until the last minute.