Harvard University Library

Harvard University Library
Country United States
Established 1638[1]
Location Cambridge, Massachusetts
Branches 90
Collection
Size 16.6M (2009)[2]
Other information
Budget US$225M (2010)[3]
Director Helen Shenton
Staff 122 FTEs[4]
Website hul.harvard.edu

The Harvard University Library system comprises about 90 libraries, with more than 16 million volumes. It is the oldest library system in the United States, the largest academic and the largest private library system in the world.[5][6] Based on the number of volumes in the collection, it is the fourth largest library collection in the US, after the Library of Congress, Boston Public Library, and New York Public Library.[7]

While the largest and best-known library building at Harvard is the Widener Library in Harvard Yard, Cambridge, Massachusetts, this iconic building belongs to the Harvard College Library, the name of the library administrative unit within the Faculty of Arts and Sciences.

The Harvard University Library, on the other hand, is the formal name for an administrative entity within the central administration of the University that has responsibility for central library services and policy.[8] As of December 20, 2010 (2010 -12-20), Helen Shenton is the current executive director.[9] The Harvard University Library has a number of subordinate offices. Some of these are listed below.

Contents

History

Harvard's library system grew from a bequest in 1638 by John Harvard of 400 books.

Over the next century the library grew to become the largest in America, but in 1764 a major fire destroyed almost all of Harvard's books and scientific instruments. Books and donations were offered by friends of the college to replace its collections. An eccentric Englishman, Thomas Hollis V of Lincoln's Inn, London, (great-nephew of one of the University's early benefactors), began shipping thousands of specially chosen volumes to the University Library. Hollis continued to send books regularly until his death in 1774 and he also bequeathed £500 for a fund to continue buying books. This became Harvard's first endowed book fund, and is still actively increasing the collections every year. HOLLIS, the bacronym for Harvard Library's online catalog, "Harvard On-Line Library Information System", is named after him.

Some of the books have been digitized within the Google Books Library Project.[10] which was begun as a project developed with leadership and oversight by former Director Sidney Verba.

Libraries in the Harvard University System

This list covers the Harvard College libraries, the Faculty of Arts and Science libraries, and the libraries of other Harvard faculties. In addition, Harvard University has a large number of special libraries, house libraries, and affiliated libraries.

Buildings of the Harvard College Library
Special and Departmental libraries in the Harvard College Library
  • Biochemical Sciences Tutorial Library
  • Biological Laboratories Library
  • Birkhoff Mathematical Library
  • Blue Hill Meteorological Observatory Library
  • Chemistry and Chemical Biology Library
  • Child Memorial Library
  • Grossman Library for University Extension
  • History Departmental Library
  • History of Science Library
  • John G. Wolbach Library
  • Linguistics Library
  • McKay Library of Engineering and Applied Sciences
  • Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations Library
  • Paleography Library
  • Peabody Museum Archives
  • Physics Research Library
  • Raines Library in African American Studies
  • Robbins Library of Philosophy
  • Robinson Celtic Seminar Library
  • Sanskrit Library
  • Smyth Classical Library
  • Social Relations / Sociology Library
  • Statistics Library
Libraries of other Harvard faculties

Librarians

17th c.
18th c.
  • Anthony Stoddard, 1701-1702[11]
  • Josiah Willard, 1702-1703[11]
  • John Whiting, 1703-1706[11]
  • John Gore, 1706-1707[11]
  • Nathaniel Gookin, 1707-1709[11]
  • Edward Holyoke, 1709-1712[11]
  • Thomas Robie, 1712-1713[11]
  • John Denison, 1713-1714[11]
  • John Rogers, 1714-1718[11]
  • William Welsteed, 1718-1720[11]
  • William Cooke, 1720-1721[11]
  • Joshua Gee, 1721-1722[11]
  • Mitchell Sewall, 1722-1723[11]
  • John Hancock, 1723-1726[11]
  • Stephen Sewall, 1726-1728[11]
  • Joseph Champney, 1728-1729[11]
  • Joseph Pynchon, 1729-1730[11]
  • Henry Gibbs, 1730-1734[11]
  • Samuel Coolidge, 1734-1735[11]
  • James Diman, 1735-1737[11]
  • Samuel Cooke, 1737[11]
  • Thomas Marsh, 1737-1741[11]
  • Belcher Hancock, 1741-1742[11]
  • Benjamin Prat, 1742-1743[11]
  • Matthew Cushing, 1743-1748[11]
  • Oliver Peabody, 1748-1750[11]
  • Stephen Badger, 1751-1753[11]
  • John Rand, 1753-1755[11]
  • Mather Byles, 1755-1757[11]
  • Elizur Holyoke, 1757-1758[11]
  • Edward Brooks, 1758-1760[11]
  • Samuel Deane, 1760-1762[11]
  • Stephen Sewall, 1762-1763[11]
  • Andrew Eliot, 1763-1767[11]
  • Jonathan Moore, 1767-1768[11]
19th c.

See also

References

  1. ^ Harvard University Library (Feb 14, 2011). "About the Harvard Library". Harvard University Library. Harvard University. http://hul.harvard.edu/about.html. Retrieved July 29, 2011. 
  2. ^ Harvard University Library (2010). "Harvard University Library Statistics" (pdf). Annual Report 2008-2009. Harvard University. p. 2. http://hul.harvard.edu/publications/ar0809/files/ar09.overallstats5.pdf. Retrieved July 29, 2011. 
  3. ^ Harvard University (2010). "Functional classification of operating expenses" (pdf). Harvard University Financial Report Fiscal Year 2010. Harvard University. p. 45. http://cdn.wds.harvard.edu/fad/2010_full_fin_report.pdf. Retrieved July 29, 2011. 
  4. ^ Office of Institutional Research (2010). "Harvard University Fact Book" (pdf). Harvard University. p. 21. http://www.provost.harvard.edu/institutional_research/Provost_-_Harvard_Fact_Book_2009-10_FINAL_new.pdf. Retrieved July 29, 2011. 
  5. ^ Pezzi, Bryan (2000). Massachusetts. Weigl Publishers. p. 15. ISBN 1930954352. 
  6. ^ Karl, Thomas (1998). Toward an Earth Science Enterprise Federation: Results from a Workshop. National Academies Press. p. 27. ISBN 0309061342. 
  7. ^ American Library Association, "ALA Library Fact Sheet 22 – The Nation's Largest Libraries: A Listing by Volumes Held". July 2010.
  8. ^ Harvard University Library
  9. ^ Harvard Gazette (Dec 20, 2010). "Library Board names executive director". Harvard Gazette. Harvard University. http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2010/12/library-board-names-executive-director/. Retrieved Jul 29, 2011. 
  10. ^ Harvard Google Project
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh Alfred Claghorn Potter, Charles Knowles Bolton (1897), The Librarians of Harvard College 1667-1877, Cambridge, Mass: Library of Harvard University, http://openlibrary.org/books/OL7223959M/The_librarians_of_Harvard_College_1667-1877 

Further reading

External links