When Was the Library of Congress Established? | History Hit

When Was the Library of Congress Established?

History Hit

05 Jun 2019

The Library of Congress, the main research facility for the US Congress, was established on 24 April 1800.

A bill signed by President John Adams transferring the seat of government from Philadelphia to the new capital of Washington mentioned the creation of a reference library for use by Congress.

The library was created using a fund of $5,000.

Main reading room at Library of Congress

The Thomas Jefferson collection

In August 1814 the original library was destroyed by invading British troops who set fire to the Capitol Building where it was housed.

Retired President Thomas Jefferson, who had amassed a vast collection of books over his lifetime, offered his personal collection as a replacement.

Congress paid $23,950 for the 6,487 books, which formed the foundation of today’s library.

On 13 September 1759, on the Plains of Abraham near the city of Quebec, an outnumbered British army fought a battle that would change the history of the world: the Battle of Quebec.
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The largest library in the world

Today the Library of Congress is the largest library in the world, with more than 162 million items made up of 38 million books and other print materials as well as photographs, recordings, maps, sheet music and manuscripts.

About 12,000 new items are added to the collection daily. The collection includes material in 470 different languages.

Official flag of the United States Library of Congress

Among its most precious items, the library includes the first known book printed in North America, “The Bay Psalm Book” (1640) and the 1507 world map by Martin Waldseemüller, known as ‘America’s Birth Certificate’, the first document on which the name America appears.

George. Where did it all go wrong? George Washington could have had a comfortable career as a loyal member of HIs Majesty's Virginia militia and colonial grandee. But no, he had to go and roll the dice. I am thrilled in this episode to be talking to historian Alexis Coe about her new biography of Washington. She has a fresh take on the first President, but no less scholarly for that.
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