
Table of Contents: WW I & the 1920's
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World War I and the
1920s
As World War I began in Europe and political tensions began to mount at home, the Brown University Library entered a brief period of decline. Students were fewer, faculty and staff left to join the conflict, budgets were reduced and fewer books came into the library. For five years the only acquisitions of note were a copy of Erasmus's De Duplici Copia Verborum ac Rerum (Antwerp, 1553) and the deposit by Mira Hoffman of her husband's collection of Napoleana. The William Henry Hoffman Napoleon Collection contains over 100 manuscripts, many signed by the Emperor, and 400 rare books, prints, art objects and examples of fine bindings. It was formally donated to the University in 1922 and still occupies its own room on the John Hay Library's top floor. Following the war the pace of activity increased on campus and in the library. In 1920
over
8,000 volumes were added by gift or purchase. Among those destined for Special Collections
were: the
manuscript log of HMS Wolverene for 1808-1815, written while this British warship
prowled the American coast during the War of 1812; Claude de Saumaise's
By 1922, the Harris Collection contained over 35,000 volumes including 118 books of Brazilian poetry acquired that year. Mrs. Robert L. Northrup donated the Whittington hall clock, that now faces the Reader Services Desk, in memory of her brother, Richard Drury Rice, Class of1916. The bronze bust of Dante by Paolo S. Abbate was installed in its present location to the left of the John Hay Library's main entrance. Other gifts in that year included a 12 volume set of Buddhist scriptures presented by the King of Siam. The Kimball Collection of 3,000 finely bound volumes, chiefly English literature, arrived from the estate of Walter H. Kimball, Class of 1894, in 1923. The same year, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., Class of 1897, purchased the Charles Woodberry McLellan Lincoln Collection for Brown. This collection, one of the five most important in the United States, contained 3,700 books and pamphlet s, about 120 documents and letters in Lincoln's hand, 235 broadsides and political posters, as well as medals, prints, photographs, plaques, busts and other museum objects for a total of over 6,000 items. This striking gift was the most important special collection the library had yet received in the 20th century. After the Lincoln Collection, acquisitions during the next few years pale in comparison, even though, in 1924, the library purchased Walt Whitman's manuscript for
In 1927, Rockefeller donated 435 more Lincoln letters plus $5,000 to the collection. The funds were later used to acquire the glass-plate negative of a photographic portrait of Lincoln taken by Alexander Gardner on August 9, 1863, and a copy of the reward poster issued for Lincoln's assassins complete with their photographs. Added to the University Archives during the 1920's were: a sketch of University Hall, Hope College and the President's House (circa 1825-1835); an 1804 letter from the selectmen of Plymouth to the Marquis de Lafayette and his reply; a commission for Zabdied Sampson, Class of 1803, signed by President Monroe; five early letters to David Howell, the first professor in Brown University; a manuscript volume (1772-1822) noting marriages and births recorded by Rev. William Rogers, Class of 1769; and silhouette portraits of Presidents Maxcy and Manning acquired from the Peale Museum of Philadelphia. Library purchases in the last two years of this decade included: a set of the
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Samuel A. Streit, Associate University Librarian for Special Collections
Excerpted from: Special Collections at Brown University: A History and Guide,
Providence, Rhode Island: The Friends of the Library of Brown University, 1988
Funding provided by Daniel G. Siegel (Class of 1957), and the Twenty-First Century Fund
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Last Updated: Thursday, 26-Jul-2007 10:35:33 EDT
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