A research journal can help you stay organized as you delve into sources for your project. Keep a running list of the relevant people, organizations, events, places, dates, and themes you discover in your reading. And keep track of the repository, website, keywords and database searches you do to streamline your efforts as your project moves forward. A record of your research will help keep you focused. Learn more about building keyword on the tab in this guide.
Background research paves the way for productive archival research. Use it to get an overview of your topic, to zero in on the details you need to find primary sources, and to help put archival materials in context.
Source: Mina Rees Library Archival Research
Dissertations are gold mines. They contain original research and can lead you to difficult-to-find primary sources that their authors have tracked down.
You might want to start with MIT dissertations and theses through Dspace in case related research on your topic was done by MIT alumni. An additional resource to search is the Proquest's Dissertation and Theses Global database. Don't forget to mine the footnotes and bibliographies for related and valuable primary and secondary source leads.
Seek out newspapers contemporary to your research topic and read them to get a sense of the time and place you are studying.
Check out the Historical Newspapers Guide for tips on finding newspapers and MIT Libraries subscriptions.