Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library

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Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library
File:Beinecke-Rare-Book-Manuscript-Library-Yale-University-Hewitt-Quadrangle-New-Haven-Connecticut-Apr-2014-a.jpg
The Beinecke Library
Country United States
Type Rare Book & Manuscript Library
Established 1963 (1963)
Location New Haven, Connecticut
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Collection
Items collected Rare Books & Manuscript
Website Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Homepage

The Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library (/ˈbnɪki/) is the rare book library and literary archive of the Yale University Library in New Haven, Connecticut. It is one of the largest buildings in the world dedicated to rare books and manuscripts.[1] Established by a gift of the Beinecke family and given its own financial endowment, the library is financially independent from the university and is co-governed by the University Library and Yale Corporation.[2]

Situated on Yale University's Hewitt Quadrangle, the building was designed by Gordon Bunshaft of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill and completed in 1963.[3][4]From 2015-16 the library building was closed for 18 months for major renovations, which included replacing the building's HVAC system and expanding teaching and exhibition capabilities.[5]

File:Beinecke-Rare-Book-Manuscript-Library-Yale-University-Hewitt-Quadrangle-New-Haven-Connecticut-Apr-2014-d.jpg
The building's marble and granite facade is supported on granite clad piers. A sunken courtyard, featuring a sculpture designed by Isamu Noguchi, is in the foreground at left.

Architecture

A six-story above-ground glass-enclosed tower of book stacks is encased by a windowless façade, supported by four monolithic piers at the corners of the building. The exterior shell is structurally supported by a steel frame with pylons embedded 50 feet (15 m) to bedrock at each corner pier. The façade is constructed of translucent veined marble and granite. The marble is milled to a thickness of 1.25 inches (32 mm) and was quarried from Danby, Vermont. On a sunny day the marble transmits filtered daylight to the interior in a subtle golden amber glow, a product of its thin profile. These panels are framed by a hexagonal grid of Vermont Woodbury granite veneer, fastened to a structural steel frame. The outside dimensions have "Platonic" mathematical proportions of 1:2:3 (height: width: length). The building has been called a "jewel box",[6][7] and also a "laboratory for the humanities".[2] The Modernist structure contains furniture designed by Florence Knoll and Marcel Breuer.[8]

An elevated public exhibition mezzanine surrounds the glass stack tower, and displays among other things, one of the 48 extant copies of the Gutenberg Bible.[7] Two basement floors extend under much of Hewitt Quadrangle. The first sub-grade level, the "Court" level, centers on a sunken courtyard in front of the Beinecke, which features The Garden (Pyramid, Sun, and Cube). These are abstract allegorical sculptures by Isamu Noguchi that are said to represent time (the pyramid), sun (the disc), and chance (the cube).[9] This level also features a secure reading room for visiting researchers, administrative offices, and book storage areas. The level of the building two floors below ground has movable-aisle high-density shelving for books and archives.[10]

The Beinecke is one of the larger buildings in America devoted entirely to rare books and manuscripts.[1] The library has room in the central tower for 180,000 volumes and room for over 1 million volumes in the underground book stacks.[1] The library's collection, which is housed both in the library's main building and at Yale University's Library Shelving Facility in Hamden, Connecticut, totals roughly 1 million volumes and several million manuscripts.[1]

During the 1960s, the Claes Oldenburg sculpture Lipstick on Caterpillar Tracks (Ascending) was displayed in Hewitt Quadrangle. The sculpture has since been moved to the courtyard of Morse College, one of the university's residential dormitories.

The elegance of the Beinecke later inspired the glass-walled structure that protects and displays the original core collection (the books given by King George III and referred to as the King's Library) within the British Library building in Euston, London.[11]

The Beinecke Library in architectural context; the tower of the Sterling Memorial Library appears above it 
View of the neoclassical Hewitt Quadrangle surrounding the Beinecke 
Night-time exterior view 
Beinecke's rigorously geometric exterior, with the Yale Law School Gothic spires in the background 
By day, sunlight is filtered through the marble panels 
The entry level is flooded with indirect daylight 
Panoramic interior view of the Beinecke's mezzanine level (curved lines are caused by the wide-angle lens used to take the photograph) 

History

File:Yale - Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library 3 (44329696935).jpg
A glass tower displays and protects the rare books

In the late 19th century, rare and valuable books of the Library of Yale College were placed on special shelving at the College Library, now known as Dwight Hall. When the university received a multimillion-dollar bequest from John W. Sterling for the construction of Sterling Memorial Library in 1918, the university decided to create a dedicated reading room for its rare books, which became the building's Rare Book Room when the building opened in 1930. Because the bequest did not contain an allowance for books or materials, Yale English professor Chauncey Brewster Tinker petitioned Yale alumni to donate materials that would give the university a collection as monumental as its new building.[12] By the time Sterling opened, Tinker's appeal garnered an impressive collection of rare books, including a Gutenberg Bible from Anna M. Harkness and several major collections from the Beinecke family, most notably its collection on the American West.[12]

By 1958, the library owned more than 130,000 rare volumes and many more manuscripts.[12] The amassed collection proved too large for Sterling's reading room, and the reading room unsuited to their preservation. Having already given significant collections to Yale, Edwin and Frederick W. Beinecke—as well as Johanna Weigle, widow of their brother Walter—gave funds to build a dedicated rare books library building.[13] When the Beinecke Library opened on October 14, 1963, it became the home of the volumes from Rare Book Room, and three special collections: the Collection of American Literature, the Collection of Western Americana, and the Collection of German Literature. Shortly afterward, they were joined by the James Marshall and Marie-Louise Osborn Collection.

Beinecke Library became the repository for books in the Yale collection printed anywhere before 1800, books printed in Latin America before 1751, books printed in North America before 1821, newspapers and broadsides printed in the United States before 1851, European tracts and pamphlets printed before 1801, and Slavic, East European, Near and Middle Eastern books through the eighteenth century, as well as special books outside these categories.

Now, the collection spans through to the present day, including such modern works as limited-edition poetry and artists' books. The library also contains thousands of linear feet of archival material, ranging from ancient papyri and medieval manuscripts to the archived personal papers of modern writers.

Special collections

File:Beinecke library III.jpg
Closeup of rare books in the reduced-lighting library tower stacks
File:Beinecke-gutenburg-bible.jpg
The two volumes of an original Gutenberg Bible
The Voynich manuscript housed at Beinecke Library

The library is open to all Yale University students and faculty, and to visiting researchers whose work requires use of its special collections. In order to access materials, there are a few forms and policies that users must read.[14]

The holdings of the Beinecke Library include:

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Exhibitions

File:Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library Interior (34254026911).jpg
The climate-controlled central shelving stack of Beinecke Library is at right. The small illuminated display cases on the mezzanine level hold temporary exhibits.

In addition to items on permanent display such as the Gutenberg Bible, the Beinecke offers a year-round program of temporary exhibits drawn from its collections.[16] For example, in 2006 the library presented Breaking the Binding: Printing and the Third Dimension, a show of flap books, pop-ups, perspective books, panoramas, and peep-shows in printed form.[17] Display cases are located on the mezzanine level and at the ground floor entry level, and may be freely viewed by the general public whenever the library is open.

The Library celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2013.[18] There were two full-year exhibitions that explored the library's architecture and people as well as a series of showcases of rarely seen manuscripts, printed works, and visual objects from across all curatorial areas.[19]

Security

The Beinecke collection does not circulate; all materials are to be consulted in the reading room. The library hosts almost 10,000 research visits annually, almost half of which are with scholars having no formal affiliation to Yale University.[1]

Security measures were significantly increased after the well-known antiques dealer Edward Forbes Smiley III was caught cutting maps from rare books with an X-acto blade in 2005. Smiley's scheme was discovered when he dropped his concealed tool in the reading room, and he subsequently served several years in prison for thefts of rare documents valued in millions of dollars from the Beinecke and other libraries.[20] The library operates under a closed stack system, and rigorous security rules now allow carefully controlled access to materials under video surveillance.[21]

The glass-enclosed central stacks (not accessible to the public) can be flooded with a mix of Halon 1301 and Inergen fire suppressant gas if fire detectors are triggered.[22] A previous system using carbon dioxide was removed for personnel safety reasons.[23]

After an infestation of the death watch beetle was discovered in 1977, the Beinecke Library helped pioneer the non-toxic method of controlling paper-eating pests by freezing books and documents at −33 °F (−36 °C) for three days. All new acquisitions are given this treatment as a precaution, and the deep freeze method is now widely accepted for pest control in special collections libraries.[10][22][24]

In popular culture

  • In Uncommon Carriers, John McPhee admires a restaurant's display of "a glass tower of recumbent wines that may have been an architectural reference to the glass column of visible books in the Beinecke Library at Yale".[25]
  • In The Once and Future Spy by Robert Littell, an assassination attempt is made on a CIA analyst at the Beinecke Library.
  • In The Ninth House, the Beinecke Library is made a site for cult practice by a secret society called the Manuscript.

See also

Notes

  1. The Audubon collection includes two copies of the double elephant folio of Birds of America
  2. The Elizabethan Club collection is composed of about 300 volumes of 16th- and 17th-century literature, including the first four folios of Shakespeare, the Huth Shakespeare quartos, and first or early quartos of all the major dramatists
  3. Early manuscripts including more than 1,100 medieval and Renaissance codices and several hundred manuscript fragments dating from the fourth century through the Renaissance, as well as the Voynich Manuscript

References

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  14. Planning Your Research Visit | Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library. Beinecke.library.yale.edu. Retrieved April 12, 2014
  15. Yale University Library: Guide to the William J. Minor Horse Racing Papers
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  18. Special Events | Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library Archived February 2, 2014, at the Wayback Machine. Beinecke.library.yale.edu. Retrieved April 12, 2014
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  25. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found., p. 129

Further reading

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External links

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