Brainstorm a list of topics that are relevant to the scope of your assignment or course. Pick the one that interests you the most and do some preliminary research to narrow the focus of your topic.
Talk to the reference librarians at your college and ask them to show you the resources available to you.
Skim through the research material you have located to get an idea of what you want to argue in your paper.
Determine the title of your paper and write this in bold centered at the top of the page.
Write a paragraph that introduces your topic. Provide the background information necessary to understand the argument that you intend to make in your paper.
Identify your thesis. This is the key point of your history paper proposal, so make it easy for your professor to find. Be sure that your thesis has a point that can be adequately argued in the space alloted for the final paper word count and isn't considered an established fact.
List at least three points that you intend to use to prove your thesis. These can be in bullet-point form at the proposal stage.
Provide a bibliography of relevant books and journal articles you have found. List them in an appropriate citation format. MLA and Chicago are both appropriate style guides to use for citations in a history paper.