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The Jefferson Building beneath a cloudless blue sky with yellow flowers across the foreground.
The Thomas Jefferson Building on April 15, 2015. Photo: Shawn Miller.

The Library Turns 225!

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—This is a guest post by April Slayton, a former director of communications at the Library.

How it started: When Congress established the Library of Congress in 1800, it provided $5,000 and purchased a collection of 152 works in 740 volumes and three maps for the use of its members. A joint committee selected the books and organized the volumes themselves when they arrived from London.

How it’s going: 225 years later, the Library has amassed what is widely considered the greatest collection of knowledge ever assembled. And, while Congress remains the Library’s first audience, the Library also reaches millions of people around the world, who now have access to its unparalleled resources.

Along the way, the Library endured two catastrophic fires in its early days that decimated its collections; assumed responsibility for all U.S. copyright administration; acquired vast collections that are the envy of the world; provided evermore sophisticated service to Congress; established itself as a leader in the field of librarianship; and grew its reach in the digital age.

Still, in the beginning, the Library was a modest institution. It wasn’t until 1802 that it had any staff of its own, and then only on a part-time basis. President Thomas Jefferson appointed John James Beckley, who also served as the clerk of the House of Representatives, as the first Librarian of Congress. He was assisted by Josias Wilson King, the engrossing clerk of the House in the effort to “label, arrange and take charge of the (Library’s) books.”

By 1812, that collection had grown to about 3,000 volumes, but all were lost in the fire set by the British at the U.S. Capitol in August 1814. It was after this tragedy that the Library’s acquired its new foundation — the library of Jefferson, by that time a former president. In 1815, Jefferson sold his 6,487-volume collection to the U.S. government for $23,950 to help the Library begin again. As the Library took ownership of Jefferson’s collection, it also assumed his vision that there was “no subject to which a Member of Congress might not have occasion to refer.”

A second fire in the U.S. Capitol on Christmas Eve in 1851 destroyed around 35,000 volumes in the Library, including about two-thirds of Jefferson’s library. As the Library reckoned with this tragedy, Congress authorized a fireproof iron room on the Capitol’s west front to house the Library.

Print shows crowded conditions at the Library of Congress shortly before it moved across the street from the U.S. Capitol into its new building. Men and women fill every chair at the tables and the books are in tall stacks on the floor.
A print showing a busy day in the Congressional Library in the Capitol Building. Illustration by drawing by W. Bengough in Harper’s Weekly, Feb. 27, 1897. Prints and Photographs Division. 

In the years that followed, the centralization of copyright administration at the Library in 1870 led to a flood of new content for the Library’s collections, which soon outstripped its available space in the Capitol. This influx of material, coupled with the haunting experience of two destructive fires, propelled efforts to establish a stand-alone building to house the Library.

And what a building it was. The monumental new “book palace” known today as the Thomas Jefferson Building opened to the public in 1897. It boasted 104 miles of shelves beyond the dazzling public spaces that captivated visitors from the moment it opened.

In 1897 on the occasion of its grand opening, the Washington Post reported, “In construction, in accommodations, in suitability to intended uses, and in artistic luxury of decoration, there is no building that will compare with it in this country and very few in any other country.”

Two long, old fashioned silver keys laid side by side.
The original keys to the Jefferson Building. Photo: Shawn Miller.

Additional buildings followed: the John Adams Building in 1939, the James Madison Building in 1980 and the  Packard Campus for Audio-Visual Conservation in 2007. Each of these spaces provided more capacity for the burgeoning collections and offered more accommodations for staff and library patrons.

Alongside the growth in its physical presence, the breadth of the Library’s work grew as well.

The Library acquired important works and collections through gifts from other countries and civic-minded donors. Philanthropic donations have enhanced the Library’s collections for much of its history, including Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge’s 1925 gift and endowment that funded the construction of the Coolidge Auditorium in the Jefferson Building and established the Library as a premier destination for the study, composition and enjoyment of music.

In 2007, David Packard’s record-breaking gift of the $155 million Packard Campus for Audio-Visual Conservation provided state-of-the-art facilities for the world’s largest and most comprehensive collection of moving images and sound recordings and boosted the Library’s status as a global leader in film and sound preservation and accessibility.

Today, the Kislak Family Foundation and the Library’s Madison Council, led by philanthropist and co-executive chairman of the Carlyle Group David M. Rubenstein, have provided leading gifts that are creating exciting new galleries, experiences and learning spaces for Library visitors.

In the 1960s, the Library established overseas offices to expand its authoritative international collections that began in the Library’s early days with gifts and purchases of works from foreign nations and documents acquired through international exchanges.

Today, a network of six overseas offices collects and catalogs materials around the world, continuing the growth of the Library’s extensive international collections.

The Library faced challenges even in its early days to organize its growing collections. From the development of the Library of Congress Classification System in the early 1900s to the creation of Machine-Readable Cataloging that enabled computerized searches of catalog information, the Library created the systems now used around the world to organize collections.

A long view down an ornate, arched hallway in the Library, with a few patrons wlking past.
A hallway in the Jefferson Building on a recent day. Photo: Shawn Miller.

Today, virtual visitors can access millions of items on the Library’s website in dozens of formats and hundreds of languages. Online collections offer the opportunity to explore maps and photographs; read letters, diaries and newspapers; hear personal accounts of events; listen to sound recordings and watch historic films on demand, anytime and anywhere.

This mind-boggling growth — from a catalog of 740 volumes and three maps available only to lawmakers to a collection of more 181 million items available to the world — could not have happened without the dedicated people who have worked for the Library over its 225-year history.

During that time, the Library has developed a cadre of specialists and experts. They have developed the Legislative Reference Service established of 1914 into the Congressional Research Service of today. They have acquired, catalogued, organized and preserved vast collections and provided research assistance to all who ask for help. They have administered the complex laws governing copyright and supported the protection of creative works. They have produced award-winning programs and events that inspire people and bring new works of music, art and literature into the world.

In fiscal year 2023 alone, Library employees responded to more than 680,000 reference requests from Congress, other federal agencies and members of the public. They circulated more than 249,000 items used by patrons, issued more than 63,000 reader cards and offered more than 700 public programs. They responded to more than 76,000 congressional requests, published nearly 1,200 CRS products and updated more than 1,800 existing CRS products.

In the next 225 years, the Library will certainly see prodigious growth in its already vast collections, but even as technology and other conditions change the world, the Library’s place as a global leader in knowledge preservation and access will endure, propelled by the talented public servants who dedicate their talents and efforts to this grand institution.

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Comments (2)

  1. Is this enormous collection duplicated electronically, so as never to be lost in a disaster. Is everything comprehensively indexed and is all this information readily retrievable anywhere? If so, where is this duplicate?
    How does this collection match or compare to Wikipedia?

    • Thanks for writing!

      The Library has digitized millions of items, all available on our website, and digitizes more every day. (As the Library receives roughly 12,000 new items every day, this is a never-endin process.)

      Wikipedia is something altogether different; it’s a crowd-sourced digtial encyclopedia. It doesn’t collect and preserve primary documents, etc.

      All best,
      Neely

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