For example, I'm using info from:
"http://www.tenement.org/encyclopedia/lab...
and
"http://www.tenement.org/encyclopedia/hou...
In the bibliography, do I need to cite them separately?
Answers:
In both APA and MLA style guides, the proper way to cite a on-line source is to include the entire URL in the bibliography. So if you are using different articles even from the same website, you will need to list them separately. Citation style will vary depending on whether the article has an author or date given, so check the style guide (APA or MLA) appropriate to the style of your paper for specific guidelines.
UPDATE:
You mentioned that you are using Chicago style, which I am less familiar with. As far as I know in a more formal situation you would cite a website with the following format:
Author, year. "Title of web page." Title of website or owner of website. URL (date accessed).
Using this formula the articles you listed might be cited something like this:
Lower East Side Tenement Museum, 2005. “Labor Movement,” Lower East Side Tenement Museum. http://www.tenement.org/encyclopedia/lab... (accessed April 5, 2007).
Lower East Side Tenement Museum, 2005. “Housing,” Lower East Side Tenement Museum. http://www.tenement.org/encyclopedia/hou... (accessed April 5, 2007).
Since the name of the author is not listed, I would put the name of the group that published it (which in this case is the same as the name of the website, so it appears twice in the citation). To personalize it you would put the date in that you accessed the website. This is a pretty formal way to list a citation, so if I were you I might check with your teacher or whoever you are writing it for before the deadline to determine exactly what their requirements are. Hope that helps, good luck!
Here is a website that may help:
http://www.liu.edu/cwis/cwp/library/work...
also:
http://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/tool...
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