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#libraryhistory — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #libraryhistory, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Central Library unveils a peek at the L.A. of 1925 – KCRW

    Todd Lerew led the team that recovered the century-year-old time capsule. Alexandra Applegate / KCRW

    KCRW Reports

    Central Library unveils a peek at the L.A. of 1925

    The Los Angeles Central Library’s time capsule contained a scrapbook, coins, old newspapers in multiple languages and an even older time capsule from 1881.

    Three people examine some of the contents pulled from a century-old time capsule buried in the LA Central Library in 1925. Photo by Alexandra Applegate / KCRW

    By Danielle Chiriguayo • Feb 2, 2026 • 4m Listen

    When a time capsule was buried near the LA Central Library’s cornerstone in 1925, staff didn’t leave instructions on how to open it. More than a century later, a recovery team wasn’t even entirely sure where to find it. 

    But find it they did. To honor the 100-year anniversary of the Central Library, the branch kicked off a year of celebrations by unearthing that century-old time capsule buried during the building’s dedication. 

    The hunt for the time capsule set off what Los Angeles City Librarian John Szabo describes as “an archeological dig.” The Central Library is listed in the U.S. National Register of Historic Places, as well as a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument, meaning the preservation of its art-deco design was paramount. 

    “Getting it through the men’s restroom turned out to be our only option,” explains Todd Lerew, director of special projects for the Library Foundation of LA and the lead on the time capsule’s recovery. 

    Szabo continues: “We had to take drywall. We had to take the studs out. We had to take one masonry wall out. Then, we had to very carefully go through the back wall of the cornerstone.” 

    It took a week for Lerew and his team to get around layers of plumbing and limestone blocks. When they finally retrieved the capsule, Szabo couldn’t wait to crack it open: “Being a complete history nerd, I literally put my head inside the time capsule and I breathed in the air, thinking that that was the air that my predecessor, Everett Robbins Perry, was breathing … from 1925.

    “It was a little musty, but I didn’t keel over or anything.”

    The time capsule, a sealed, custom-made copper box, provided a glimpse into life in LA more than a century ago. Inside were scrapbooks of photos, old coins, and a traffic street plan for 1924. 

    Todd Lerew led the team that recovered the century-year-old time capsule. Alexandra Applegate/KCRW

    And it also held something else: an additional time capsule. This one was from 1881. It was buried with the cornerstone of the State Normal School, a precursor to UCLA that was originally built where the Central Library is today. 

    The older capsule included books and pamphlets that provided additional glimpses of 19th century Los Angeles. It also included newspapers in English, German, and Spanish, and mementos from the funeral of U.S. President James Garfield, who was assassinated just months prior to the time capsule’s burial. 

    All of these recovered items are on display now at the LA Central Library. Szabo says they represent the diversity of the city that stretches back more than 150 years: “It certainly speaks to the evolution of the city, the growth of the city, but it also reminds us that the library has had this very similar, if not the same mission, which is to welcome everyone in the community.”

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Central Library unveils a peek at the L.A. of 1925 | KCRW

    #1925 #California #CentralLibrary #CityLibrarian #ContentsOfCapsule #Cornerstone #DanielleChiriguayo #February22026 #History #JohnSzabo #KCRW #LibraryHistory #LosAngeles #LosAngelesHistory #TimeCapsule #ToddLerew
  2. Central Library unveils a peek at the L.A. of 1925 – KCRW

    Todd Lerew led the team that recovered the century-year-old time capsule. Alexandra Applegate / KCRW

    KCRW Reports

    Central Library unveils a peek at the L.A. of 1925

    The Los Angeles Central Library’s time capsule contained a scrapbook, coins, old newspapers in multiple languages and an even older time capsule from 1881.

    Three people examine some of the contents pulled from a century-old time capsule buried in the LA Central Library in 1925. Photo by Alexandra Applegate / KCRW

    By Danielle Chiriguayo • Feb 2, 2026 • 4m Listen

    When a time capsule was buried near the LA Central Library’s cornerstone in 1925, staff didn’t leave instructions on how to open it. More than a century later, a recovery team wasn’t even entirely sure where to find it. 

    But find it they did. To honor the 100-year anniversary of the Central Library, the branch kicked off a year of celebrations by unearthing that century-old time capsule buried during the building’s dedication. 

    The hunt for the time capsule set off what Los Angeles City Librarian John Szabo describes as “an archeological dig.” The Central Library is listed in the U.S. National Register of Historic Places, as well as a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument, meaning the preservation of its art-deco design was paramount. 

    “Getting it through the men’s restroom turned out to be our only option,” explains Todd Lerew, director of special projects for the Library Foundation of LA and the lead on the time capsule’s recovery. 

    Szabo continues: “We had to take drywall. We had to take the studs out. We had to take one masonry wall out. Then, we had to very carefully go through the back wall of the cornerstone.” 

    It took a week for Lerew and his team to get around layers of plumbing and limestone blocks. When they finally retrieved the capsule, Szabo couldn’t wait to crack it open: “Being a complete history nerd, I literally put my head inside the time capsule and I breathed in the air, thinking that that was the air that my predecessor, Everett Robbins Perry, was breathing … from 1925.

    “It was a little musty, but I didn’t keel over or anything.”

    The time capsule, a sealed, custom-made copper box, provided a glimpse into life in LA more than a century ago. Inside were scrapbooks of photos, old coins, and a traffic street plan for 1924. 

    Todd Lerew led the team that recovered the century-year-old time capsule. Alexandra Applegate/KCRW

    And it also held something else: an additional time capsule. This one was from 1881. It was buried with the cornerstone of the State Normal School, a precursor to UCLA that was originally built where the Central Library is today. 

    The older capsule included books and pamphlets that provided additional glimpses of 19th century Los Angeles. It also included newspapers in English, German, and Spanish, and mementos from the funeral of U.S. President James Garfield, who was assassinated just months prior to the time capsule’s burial. 

    All of these recovered items are on display now at the LA Central Library. Szabo says they represent the diversity of the city that stretches back more than 150 years: “It certainly speaks to the evolution of the city, the growth of the city, but it also reminds us that the library has had this very similar, if not the same mission, which is to welcome everyone in the community.”

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Central Library unveils a peek at the L.A. of 1925 | KCRW

    Tags: 1925, California, Central Library, City Librarian, Contents of Capsule, Cornerstone, Danielle Chiriguayo, February 2 2026, History, John Szabo, KCRW, Library History, Los Angeles, Los Angeles History, Time Capsule, Todd Lerew
    #1925 #California #CentralLibrary #CityLibrarian #ContentsOfCapsule #Cornerstone #DanielleChiriguayo #February22026 #History #JohnSzabo #KCRW #LibraryHistory #LosAngeles #LosAngelesHistory #TimeCapsule #ToddLerew
  3. Central Library unveils a peek at the L.A. of 1925 – KCRW

    Todd Lerew led the team that recovered the century-year-old time capsule. Alexandra Applegate / KCRW

    KCRW Reports

    Central Library unveils a peek at the L.A. of 1925

    The Los Angeles Central Library’s time capsule contained a scrapbook, coins, old newspapers in multiple languages and an even older time capsule from 1881.

    Three people examine some of the contents pulled from a century-old time capsule buried in the LA Central Library in 1925. Photo by Alexandra Applegate / KCRW

    By Danielle Chiriguayo • Feb 2, 2026 • 4m Listen

    When a time capsule was buried near the LA Central Library’s cornerstone in 1925, staff didn’t leave instructions on how to open it. More than a century later, a recovery team wasn’t even entirely sure where to find it. 

    But find it they did. To honor the 100-year anniversary of the Central Library, the branch kicked off a year of celebrations by unearthing that century-old time capsule buried during the building’s dedication. 

    The hunt for the time capsule set off what Los Angeles City Librarian John Szabo describes as “an archeological dig.” The Central Library is listed in the U.S. National Register of Historic Places, as well as a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument, meaning the preservation of its art-deco design was paramount. 

    “Getting it through the men’s restroom turned out to be our only option,” explains Todd Lerew, director of special projects for the Library Foundation of LA and the lead on the time capsule’s recovery. 

    Szabo continues: “We had to take drywall. We had to take the studs out. We had to take one masonry wall out. Then, we had to very carefully go through the back wall of the cornerstone.” 

    It took a week for Lerew and his team to get around layers of plumbing and limestone blocks. When they finally retrieved the capsule, Szabo couldn’t wait to crack it open: “Being a complete history nerd, I literally put my head inside the time capsule and I breathed in the air, thinking that that was the air that my predecessor, Everett Robbins Perry, was breathing … from 1925.

    “It was a little musty, but I didn’t keel over or anything.”

    The time capsule, a sealed, custom-made copper box, provided a glimpse into life in LA more than a century ago. Inside were scrapbooks of photos, old coins, and a traffic street plan for 1924. 

    Todd Lerew led the team that recovered the century-year-old time capsule. Alexandra Applegate/KCRW

    And it also held something else: an additional time capsule. This one was from 1881. It was buried with the cornerstone of the State Normal School, a precursor to UCLA that was originally built where the Central Library is today. 

    The older capsule included books and pamphlets that provided additional glimpses of 19th century Los Angeles. It also included newspapers in English, German, and Spanish, and mementos from the funeral of U.S. President James Garfield, who was assassinated just months prior to the time capsule’s burial. 

    All of these recovered items are on display now at the LA Central Library. Szabo says they represent the diversity of the city that stretches back more than 150 years: “It certainly speaks to the evolution of the city, the growth of the city, but it also reminds us that the library has had this very similar, if not the same mission, which is to welcome everyone in the community.”

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Central Library unveils a peek at the L.A. of 1925 | KCRW

    Tags: 1925, California, Central Library, City Librarian, Contents of Capsule, Cornerstone, Danielle Chiriguayo, February 2 2026, History, John Szabo, KCRW, Library History, Los Angeles, Los Angeles History, Time Capsule, Todd Lerew
    #1925 #California #CentralLibrary #CityLibrarian #ContentsOfCapsule #Cornerstone #DanielleChiriguayo #February22026 #History #JohnSzabo #KCRW #LibraryHistory #LosAngeles #LosAngelesHistory #TimeCapsule #ToddLerew
  4. Central Library unveils a peek at the L.A. of 1925 – KCRW

    Todd Lerew led the team that recovered the century-year-old time capsule. Alexandra Applegate / KCRW

    KCRW Reports

    Central Library unveils a peek at the L.A. of 1925

    The Los Angeles Central Library’s time capsule contained a scrapbook, coins, old newspapers in multiple languages and an even older time capsule from 1881.

    Three people examine some of the contents pulled from a century-old time capsule buried in the LA Central Library in 1925. Photo by Alexandra Applegate / KCRW

    By Danielle Chiriguayo • Feb 2, 2026 • 4m Listen

    When a time capsule was buried near the LA Central Library’s cornerstone in 1925, staff didn’t leave instructions on how to open it. More than a century later, a recovery team wasn’t even entirely sure where to find it. 

    But find it they did. To honor the 100-year anniversary of the Central Library, the branch kicked off a year of celebrations by unearthing that century-old time capsule buried during the building’s dedication. 

    The hunt for the time capsule set off what Los Angeles City Librarian John Szabo describes as “an archeological dig.” The Central Library is listed in the U.S. National Register of Historic Places, as well as a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument, meaning the preservation of its art-deco design was paramount. 

    “Getting it through the men’s restroom turned out to be our only option,” explains Todd Lerew, director of special projects for the Library Foundation of LA and the lead on the time capsule’s recovery. 

    Szabo continues: “We had to take drywall. We had to take the studs out. We had to take one masonry wall out. Then, we had to very carefully go through the back wall of the cornerstone.” 

    It took a week for Lerew and his team to get around layers of plumbing and limestone blocks. When they finally retrieved the capsule, Szabo couldn’t wait to crack it open: “Being a complete history nerd, I literally put my head inside the time capsule and I breathed in the air, thinking that that was the air that my predecessor, Everett Robbins Perry, was breathing … from 1925.

    “It was a little musty, but I didn’t keel over or anything.”

    The time capsule, a sealed, custom-made copper box, provided a glimpse into life in LA more than a century ago. Inside were scrapbooks of photos, old coins, and a traffic street plan for 1924. 

    Todd Lerew led the team that recovered the century-year-old time capsule. Alexandra Applegate/KCRW

    And it also held something else: an additional time capsule. This one was from 1881. It was buried with the cornerstone of the State Normal School, a precursor to UCLA that was originally built where the Central Library is today. 

    The older capsule included books and pamphlets that provided additional glimpses of 19th century Los Angeles. It also included newspapers in English, German, and Spanish, and mementos from the funeral of U.S. President James Garfield, who was assassinated just months prior to the time capsule’s burial. 

    All of these recovered items are on display now at the LA Central Library. Szabo says they represent the diversity of the city that stretches back more than 150 years: “It certainly speaks to the evolution of the city, the growth of the city, but it also reminds us that the library has had this very similar, if not the same mission, which is to welcome everyone in the community.”

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Central Library unveils a peek at the L.A. of 1925 | KCRW

    Tags: 1925, California, Central Library, City Librarian, Contents of Capsule, Cornerstone, Danielle Chiriguayo, February 2 2026, History, John Szabo, KCRW, Library History, Los Angeles, Los Angeles History, Time Capsule, Todd Lerew
    #1925 #California #CentralLibrary #CityLibrarian #ContentsOfCapsule #Cornerstone #DanielleChiriguayo #February22026 #History #JohnSzabo #KCRW #LibraryHistory #LosAngeles #LosAngelesHistory #TimeCapsule #ToddLerew
  5. Central Library unveils a peek at the L.A. of 1925 – KCRW

    Todd Lerew led the team that recovered the century-year-old time capsule. Alexandra Applegate / KCRW

    KCRW Reports

    Central Library unveils a peek at the L.A. of 1925

    The Los Angeles Central Library’s time capsule contained a scrapbook, coins, old newspapers in multiple languages and an even older time capsule from 1881.

    Three people examine some of the contents pulled from a century-old time capsule buried in the LA Central Library in 1925. Photo by Alexandra Applegate / KCRW

    By Danielle Chiriguayo • Feb 2, 2026 • 4m Listen

    When a time capsule was buried near the LA Central Library’s cornerstone in 1925, staff didn’t leave instructions on how to open it. More than a century later, a recovery team wasn’t even entirely sure where to find it. 

    But find it they did. To honor the 100-year anniversary of the Central Library, the branch kicked off a year of celebrations by unearthing that century-old time capsule buried during the building’s dedication. 

    The hunt for the time capsule set off what Los Angeles City Librarian John Szabo describes as “an archeological dig.” The Central Library is listed in the U.S. National Register of Historic Places, as well as a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument, meaning the preservation of its art-deco design was paramount. 

    “Getting it through the men’s restroom turned out to be our only option,” explains Todd Lerew, director of special projects for the Library Foundation of LA and the lead on the time capsule’s recovery. 

    Szabo continues: “We had to take drywall. We had to take the studs out. We had to take one masonry wall out. Then, we had to very carefully go through the back wall of the cornerstone.” 

    It took a week for Lerew and his team to get around layers of plumbing and limestone blocks. When they finally retrieved the capsule, Szabo couldn’t wait to crack it open: “Being a complete history nerd, I literally put my head inside the time capsule and I breathed in the air, thinking that that was the air that my predecessor, Everett Robbins Perry, was breathing … from 1925.

    “It was a little musty, but I didn’t keel over or anything.”

    The time capsule, a sealed, custom-made copper box, provided a glimpse into life in LA more than a century ago. Inside were scrapbooks of photos, old coins, and a traffic street plan for 1924. 

    Todd Lerew led the team that recovered the century-year-old time capsule. Alexandra Applegate/KCRW

    And it also held something else: an additional time capsule. This one was from 1881. It was buried with the cornerstone of the State Normal School, a precursor to UCLA that was originally built where the Central Library is today. 

    The older capsule included books and pamphlets that provided additional glimpses of 19th century Los Angeles. It also included newspapers in English, German, and Spanish, and mementos from the funeral of U.S. President James Garfield, who was assassinated just months prior to the time capsule’s burial. 

    All of these recovered items are on display now at the LA Central Library. Szabo says they represent the diversity of the city that stretches back more than 150 years: “It certainly speaks to the evolution of the city, the growth of the city, but it also reminds us that the library has had this very similar, if not the same mission, which is to welcome everyone in the community.”

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Central Library unveils a peek at the L.A. of 1925 | KCRW

    #1925 #California #CentralLibrary #CityLibrarian #ContentsOfCapsule #Cornerstone #DanielleChiriguayo #February22026 #History #JohnSzabo #KCRW #LibraryHistory #LosAngeles #LosAngelesHistory #TimeCapsule #ToddLerew
  6. Central Library turns 100 – LAist

    The Central Library in downtown Los Angeles. (Courtesy Los Angeles Public Library).

    Explore LA

    Central Library turns 100

    We explore its scrappy origin story

    Cato Hernández scours through tons of archives to understand how our region became the way it is today.

    The Central Library in downtown Los Angeles hits a big milestone this year: It’s turning 100 years old.

    The century-old landmark has been through a lot of changes since opening, but how we got this iconic library in the first place is a saga in its own right.

    A scrappy start

    To understand what it took to get here, we’ll go back to 1872. Back then, the city of L.A. only had about 6,000 residents. Dirt roads were everywhere and agriculture was king.

    The region was still fresh off the transition to American rule, and local leaders were just starting to dream up what the city could look like, especially in the downtown area.

    There was no “LAPL” during this time — a group called the Los Angeles Library Association attended to local reading needs. John Szabo, current L.A. city librarian, says that early system was pretty bare bones.

    “ It was a very small one room library with a handful of books,” he told host Larry Mantle on LAist 89.3’s AirTalk.

    That was in the Downey Block building at Temple and Main streets, which is where the Federal Courthouse stands today. There were newspaper racks and shelves with about 750 books, while another space had checkers and chess — because what more do you need to fuel young minds?

    The city needed a lot more because of rapid growth, but money was an issue. To help meet the demand, the association became an official city department in 1878. That allowed local officials to fund their new “Los Angeles Public Library.”

    Over the years, LAPL would open satellite “reading rooms” and branch libraries. However, the main collection was expanding quickly. The books were essentially couch-surfing for years. They moved four times into different rented spaces, including into City Hall in 1889.

    This was a temporary home that lasted for a couple of decades. Then, the effort to build a central library picked up steam. One of those was with a plan to put it in Pershing Square, but the project went awry. So the collection moved again — this time into a department store building (while it was still running), between women’s clothes and furniture, where it stayed for six years.

    A new, innovative library

    When Everett Perry, an energetic city librarian, took the helm in 1911, he lobbied for years for a central library to be created.

    Finally, a decade later, voters passed a measure for a $2 million bond to pay for a new dedicated building. That would become the Central Library we have today. L.A. was a little late among large U.S. cities for getting a central library, but it finally opened in July 1926.

    See Also: https://secretlosangeles.com/la-public-library-time-capsule/

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Central Library turns 100

    #100YearsOld #California #CentralLibrary #CityLibrarian #EverettPerry #History #LAist #LibraryHistory #LosAngeles #Memories #Turns100YearsOld
  7. Central Library turns 100 – LAist

    The Central Library in downtown Los Angeles. (Courtesy Los Angeles Public Library).

    Explore LA

    Central Library turns 100

    We explore its scrappy origin story

    Cato Hernández scours through tons of archives to understand how our region became the way it is today.

    The Central Library in downtown Los Angeles hits a big milestone this year: It’s turning 100 years old.

    The century-old landmark has been through a lot of changes since opening, but how we got this iconic library in the first place is a saga in its own right.

    A scrappy start

    To understand what it took to get here, we’ll go back to 1872. Back then, the city of L.A. only had about 6,000 residents. Dirt roads were everywhere and agriculture was king.

    The region was still fresh off the transition to American rule, and local leaders were just starting to dream up what the city could look like, especially in the downtown area.

    There was no “LAPL” during this time — a group called the Los Angeles Library Association attended to local reading needs. John Szabo, current L.A. city librarian, says that early system was pretty bare bones.

    “ It was a very small one room library with a handful of books,” he told host Larry Mantle on LAist 89.3’s AirTalk.

    That was in the Downey Block building at Temple and Main streets, which is where the Federal Courthouse stands today. There were newspaper racks and shelves with about 750 books, while another space had checkers and chess — because what more do you need to fuel young minds?

    The city needed a lot more because of rapid growth, but money was an issue. To help meet the demand, the association became an official city department in 1878. That allowed local officials to fund their new “Los Angeles Public Library.”

    Over the years, LAPL would open satellite “reading rooms” and branch libraries. However, the main collection was expanding quickly. The books were essentially couch-surfing for years. They moved four times into different rented spaces, including into City Hall in 1889.

    This was a temporary home that lasted for a couple of decades. Then, the effort to build a central library picked up steam. One of those was with a plan to put it in Pershing Square, but the project went awry. So the collection moved again — this time into a department store building (while it was still running), between women’s clothes and furniture, where it stayed for six years.

    A new, innovative library

    When Everett Perry, an energetic city librarian, took the helm in 1911, he lobbied for years for a central library to be created.

    Finally, a decade later, voters passed a measure for a $2 million bond to pay for a new dedicated building. That would become the Central Library we have today. L.A. was a little late among large U.S. cities for getting a central library, but it finally opened in July 1926.

    See Also: https://secretlosangeles.com/la-public-library-time-capsule/

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Central Library turns 100

    #100YearsOld #California #CentralLibrary #CityLibrarian #EverettPerry #History #LAist #LibraryHistory #LosAngeles #Memories #Turns100YearsOld
  8. Central Library turns 100 – LAist

    The Central Library in downtown Los Angeles. (Courtesy Los Angeles Public Library).

    Explore LA

    Central Library turns 100

    We explore its scrappy origin story

    Cato Hernández scours through tons of archives to understand how our region became the way it is today.

    The Central Library in downtown Los Angeles hits a big milestone this year: It’s turning 100 years old.

    The century-old landmark has been through a lot of changes since opening, but how we got this iconic library in the first place is a saga in its own right.

    A scrappy start

    To understand what it took to get here, we’ll go back to 1872. Back then, the city of L.A. only had about 6,000 residents. Dirt roads were everywhere and agriculture was king.

    The region was still fresh off the transition to American rule, and local leaders were just starting to dream up what the city could look like, especially in the downtown area.

    There was no “LAPL” during this time — a group called the Los Angeles Library Association attended to local reading needs. John Szabo, current L.A. city librarian, says that early system was pretty bare bones.

    “ It was a very small one room library with a handful of books,” he told host Larry Mantle on LAist 89.3’s AirTalk.

    That was in the Downey Block building at Temple and Main streets, which is where the Federal Courthouse stands today. There were newspaper racks and shelves with about 750 books, while another space had checkers and chess — because what more do you need to fuel young minds?

    The city needed a lot more because of rapid growth, but money was an issue. To help meet the demand, the association became an official city department in 1878. That allowed local officials to fund their new “Los Angeles Public Library.”

    Over the years, LAPL would open satellite “reading rooms” and branch libraries. However, the main collection was expanding quickly. The books were essentially couch-surfing for years. They moved four times into different rented spaces, including into City Hall in 1889.

    This was a temporary home that lasted for a couple of decades. Then, the effort to build a central library picked up steam. One of those was with a plan to put it in Pershing Square, but the project went awry. So the collection moved again — this time into a department store building (while it was still running), between women’s clothes and furniture, where it stayed for six years.

    A new, innovative library

    When Everett Perry, an energetic city librarian, took the helm in 1911, he lobbied for years for a central library to be created.

    Finally, a decade later, voters passed a measure for a $2 million bond to pay for a new dedicated building. That would become the Central Library we have today. L.A. was a little late among large U.S. cities for getting a central library, but it finally opened in July 1926.

    See Also: https://secretlosangeles.com/la-public-library-time-capsule/

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Central Library turns 100

    #100YearsOld #California #CentralLibrary #CityLibrarian #EverettPerry #History #LAist #LibraryHistory #LosAngeles #Memories #Turns100YearsOld
  9. A #libraryhistory find of a lifetime! This cabinet was used by the #Pennsylvania State Library in the late 1890s-early 1920s to ship "traveling #libraries" of #books to #rural communities that did not have public libraries of their own. I told the owner "take my money." PRICELESS!

  10. The history of the library is one of creation, loss, reinvention, and endurance. Andrew Pettegree and Arthur der Weduwen share this story with Abby Smith Rumsey on the Future Knowledge #podcast THE LIBRARY: A FRAGILE HISTORY.

    🎧 Listen & subscribe here ⤵️
    futureknowledge.transistor.fm/

    #Libraries #LibraryHistory #BookHistory #Knowledge @internetarchive @AuthorsAlliance

  11. 📚 Libraries as “Academic Traffic Facilities”: Interlibrary Loan Imaginations after 1945

    After #WWII, German #libraries faced massive losses. This article explores how interlibrary loan became central to rebuilding the academic landscape — not just through logistics, but through a new vision of knowledge.

    journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1

    #LibraryHistory #InterlibraryLoan #ILL #ResourceSharing #KnowledgeInfrastructure #AcademicLibraries #PostwarHistory #UnionCatalogs #Germany #Collections #Holdings

  12. 📚 Libraries as “Academic Traffic Facilities”: Interlibrary Loan Imaginations after 1945

    After #WWII, German #libraries faced massive losses. This article explores how interlibrary loan became central to rebuilding the academic landscape — not just through logistics, but through a new vision of knowledge.

    journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1

    #LibraryHistory #InterlibraryLoan #ILL #ResourceSharing #KnowledgeInfrastructure #AcademicLibraries #PostwarHistory #UnionCatalogs #Germany #Collections #Holdings

  13. Visited the #Connecticut State #Library in #Hartford today. Fascinating for a #libraryhistory nerd. The fireproofing design features are so cool!

  14. #LibraryHistory le 7 février à Rome et en ligne, en français et italien 'Le biblioteche di ricerca a Roma (1920-1958). Collezioni, edifici, reti di ricerca e tutela' shorturl.at/63Sfr

  15. Question for #BookHistory and #Libraries folks, perhaps?

    Are there any guides for researching historical library holdings? I would like to explore how common certain books were in public and academic libraries in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Are there any reference works (or datasets?) that could help me with that?

    And if I am interested in specific libraries, are there any options there -- beyond seeing if the title is still held and if they have any date slips hanging around on the inside cover? 😂

    #LibraryHistory #Histodons

  16. Just briefly awake right now #neuro but finally making a start watching a panel or two (recording) from the #SHARP23 #bookHistory academic #conference. I have until the end of August to watch what I want to. So need to keep nibbling at it. First up panels about #Bookstagram and also the new Eighteenth-Century Libraries Online digital project. #DigitalHistory #DigitalHumanities #DH #libraries #libraryHistory

  17. #Introduction: I go by Atlas on the internet, and I research and write about #personalknowledgemanagement (or #PKM) from a historical perspective – particularly #notetaking.

    I have wider interests in #bookhistory #manuscripts #historyofknowledge #intellectualhistory #libraryhistory #digitalhumanities #medieval #earlymodern #renaissance

    I'm not a professional, just somebody who adds more to my Zotero library than I can ever hope to read.