Congress, Library of

Congress, Library of

Introduction
 the de facto national library of the United States and the largest library in the world. In 2007 it had some 138 million items, and its collection was growing at a rate of about 2 million items a year. The Library of Congress serves members, committees, and staff of the Congress (Congress of the United States), other government agencies, libraries throughout the country and the world, and the scholars, researchers, artists, and scientists who use its resources. It is the national centre for library service to the blind and physically handicapped, and it offers many concerts, lectures, and exhibitions for the general public. Those outside the Washington, D.C., area have access to the library's growing electronic resources through the Library of Congress Web site at http://www.loc.gov.

      The library was founded in 1800 with $5,000 appropriated by the Congress when the U.S. capital moved from Philadelphia, Penn., to Washington, D.C. (Washington) It was housed within the new Capitol (Capitol, United States) building, where it remained for nearly a century. However, on Aug. 24, 1814, during the War of 1812 (1812, War of), the library's original collection of 3,000 volumes was destroyed when the British burned the Capitol as well as the White House. To rebuild the library's collection, Congress, on Jan. 30, 1815, approved the purchase of former president Thomas Jefferson (Jefferson, Thomas)'s personal library of 6,487 books for $23,950. On Christmas Eve 1851, another fire destroyed two-thirds of the collection. Many of the volumes have since been replaced.

      Librarian of Congress Ainsworth Rand Spofford (1864–97) was the first to propose that the library be moved to a dedicated building. He also was instrumental in establishing the copyright law of 1870, which placed the Copyright Office in the Library of Congress and required anyone seeking a copyright to provide two copies of the work—books, pamphlets, maps, photographs, music, and prints—to the library. For a list of the librarians of Congress, see below (Congress, Library of).

 Largely as a result of Spofford's vision, the library's burgeoning collection outgrew its space in the Capitol. In the early 21st century the Library of Congress complex on Capitol Hill included three buildings containing 21 public reading rooms. The Thomas Jefferson Building (originally called the Congressional Library, or Main Building) houses the Main Reading Room. Designed in Italian Renaissance style, it was completed in 1897 and magnificently restored 100 years later. The John Adams Building, completed in 1939, received its current name in 1980 to honour the president who in 1800 signed the act of Congress establishing the library. The Adams Building was built in Art Deco style and faced with white Georgia marble. The James Madison Memorial Building, modern in style, was dedicated in 1980. (That same year the Main Building was designated the Thomas Jefferson Building.) The Madison Building more than doubled the library's available Capitol Hill space. The continued growth of the collection in a wide variety of formats during the 1980s and '90s necessitated the off-site relocation of some materials to storage facilities in Fort Meade, Md., and to the Packard Campus of the National Audio-Visual Conservation Center in Culpeper, Va.

      On an average work day, the library receives approximately 22,000 items and adds approximately 10,000 of these to its collections. The vast majority of works in the library's collections are received through the copyright deposit process mentioned above. Materials are also acquired through gifts, purchases, and donations from private sources and other government agencies (state, local, and federal), the library's Cataloging in Publication program (a prepublication arrangement with publishers), and exchanges with libraries in the United States and abroad. Those items that are not selected for the library's collections or exchange programs are offered free to other federal agencies, educational institutions, public libraries, or nonprofit, tax-exempt organizations.

 The library's collections include more than 32 million cataloged books and other print materials, some 61 million manuscripts, 5.3 million maps, 5.5 million pieces of sheet music, nearly 3 million audio materials, and 14 million visual materials (comprising more than 12.5 million photographs and 1 million moving images). Approximately half of the library's book and serial collections are in languages other than English. Some 470 languages are represented. Particularly noteworthy are the library's preeminent collections in Arabic, Spanish, and Portuguese; the largest collections in many Slavic and Asian languages outside those geographic areas; the world's largest law library; and the largest rare-book collection in North America (more than 700,000 volumes), including the most comprehensive collection of 15th-century books in the Western Hemisphere. The Manuscript Division holds the papers of 23 U.S. presidents, along with those of many other high-ranking government officials, of inventors such as Alexander Graham Bell (Bell, Alexander Graham) and the Wright brothers (Wright, Wilbur and Orville), of social reformers such as Susan B. Anthony (Anthony, Susan B.) and Frederick Douglass (Douglass, Frederick), and of cultural figures such as Walt Whitman (Whitman, Walt), Irving Berlin (Berlin, Irving), and Martha Graham (Graham, Martha).

      The Library of Congress provides direct research assistance to the U.S. Congress (Congress of the United States) through the Congressional Research Service (originally the Legislative Reference Service), which was founded in 1914. Established in 1832, the Law Library provides Congress with comprehensive research on foreign, comparative, international, and U.S. law, drawing upon its collection of some 2.6 million volumes.

      The Library of Congress is supported by direct appropriations from the Congress—as well as gifts and private donations—and has been governed since 1800 by the Joint Committee on the Library of Congress. Established in 1990, the James Madison Council—the library's first private-sector advisory group—has supported the acquisition of hundreds of collection items (such as the 1507 map by the German cartographer Martin Waldseemüller (Waldseemüller, Martin) that first used the word “America”) and initiatives such as the annual National Book Festival (launched in 2001). The council's first chairman, John W. Kluge, also endowed a major scholarly centre and a $1 million prize for lifetime achievement in the humanities.

      In addition to the Kluge Prize, the library sponsors many privately endowed honours and awards recognizing creativity and achievement in the humanities. These include the poet laureate position, the Living Legend medal, the Gershwin Prize for Popular Song, and the national Ambassador for Young People's Literature, through which the library honours those who have advanced and embodied the ideals of individual creativity with conviction, dedication, scholarship, and exuberance.

      In 1994 the Library of Congress launched the National Digital Library Program (NDLP), making freely available on the Internet high-quality electronic versions of American historical material from the library's special collections. By the end of the library's bicentennial year in 2000, more than five million items (manuscripts, films, sound recordings, and photographs) had been mounted on the library's American Memory Web site, which continued to expand rapidly. Also accessible on the Web site were the library's exhibitions, bibliographic databases (online public access catalog), a comprehensive legislative information system known as THOMAS, copyright information, and a Global Gateway Web site for the library's international collections and collaborative digital libraries built with international partners.

      Inspired by the success of the Global Gateway site, in 2005 Librarian of Congress James H. Billington proposed a project called the World Digital Library. Its goal was to make available to anyone with access to the Internet digitized texts and images of “unique and rare materials from libraries and other cultural institutions around the world.” It was designed to be searchable in seven languages—Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian, and Spanish (official languages of the United Nations), as well as Portuguese. In 2007 the Library of Congress and UNESCO signed an agreement to build a World Digital Library Web site. The library is also leading a collaborative effort mandated in 2000 by the Congress to preserve the country's digital assets.

James H. Billington
       Librarians of Congress Librarians of CongressThe table lists the librarians of Congress and their tenures.

Additional Reading

Library of Congress history
John Y. Cole, Jefferson's Legacy: A Brief History of the Library of Congress (1993), discusses the library's history (1800–1992), collections, and buildings and includes biographical information on all 13 librarians of Congress, from John J. Beckley (1802–07) to the current librarian of Congress, James H. Billington (1987– ). John Y. Cole and Jane Aikin (eds.), Encyclopedia of the Library of Congress: For Congress, the Nation & the World (2004).

Library of Congress collections
Margaret E. Wagner (ed.), American Treasures in the Library of Congress: Memory, Reason, Imagination (1997), gathers 76 of the library's representative American treasures chosen by staff specialists for the library's first permanent public exhibition.Vincent Virga et al., Eyes of the Nation: A Visual History of the United States (1997), is a narrative-in-pictures drawn from the millions of maps, prints, photographs, posters, manuscripts, motion pictures, and other treasures in the special collections of the Library of Congress; it includes seven chapters of historical commentary by the historian Alan Brinkley.

Library of Congress buildings
The history and architecture of Library of Congress buildings are discussed in John Y. Cole and Henry Hope Reed (eds.), The Library of Congress: The Art and Architecture of the Thomas Jefferson Building (1997); and John Y. Cole, On These Walls: Inscriptions and Quotations in the Buildings of the Library of Congress (1995).James H. Billington

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