Boston Public Library Announces $2.1 Million Philanthropic Investment in Founding Research Collection

Library will clean, catalog and preserve 400,000 volumes, making historic collection accessible to the public

BOSTON - MARCH 24, 2021 – The Boston Public Library (BPL) today announced it has received $2.1 million in private funding to revitalize the library’s Founding Research Collection. Two gifts are making this work possible: a contribution to the Boston Public Library Fund through an anonymous donor, and another from the Associates of the Boston Public Library. These funds will enable the library to clean, catalog, and preserve 400,000 volumes of the collection, making them fully accessible to the public for the first time in the digital era. 

“Together, these gifts represent one of the largest private philanthropic investments in the BPL’s research collections,” said Paula Sakey, Executive Director of the Boston Public Library Fund. “These investments speak to the importance of preserving and maintaining the Founding Research Collection’s extensive resources and making them accessible to the public. We look forward to returning this 16th – 20th century collection to our 21st century patrons, who will once again be able to easily explore and learn from these historic treasures.” 

The Founding Research Collection has formed an integral part of the library’s holdings since its inception in the 1850s and represents some of the very first volumes collected by the BPL, the nations first large, municipally funded public library. These volumes provided the general public with free access to the kinds of specialized reading materials that were usually held by private subscription libraries or by larger universities. Today, this collection spans five centuries and contains more than 500,000 volumes, thousands of which date from before 1820.  A large portion of the collection is only cataloged on physical cards, using a now retired classification system unique to the BPL created by founding Trustee Nathaniel B. Shurtleff, who later served as Boston’s mayor from 1868-1871.  

The collection contains books, pamphlets, journals, maps, atlases, illustrated portfolios, and moreIt also includes early American Bibles, hymn books, and rare specimens of early printing from nearly every state, as well as holdings in all major western languages, selections of Chinese and Japanese materials, and products of rare missionary presses from around the worldMany items in the collection are first editions or arone of few remaining copies of certain texts, making objects in this collection invaluable to researchers and scholars worldwide.  

“The Associates of the Boston Public Library is truly thrilled to be a partner in this effort,” noted Peter R. V. Brown, Chairman of the organization. “For the past twenty years, we have made grants to the library to help preserve and protect the wealth of remarkable items in the BPL’s Special Collections. Supporting this new work to make certain the Founding Research Collection is also conserved against the damage caused by time, and that it is made accessible to students, historians, and indeed every interested member of the public feels like important work to us. It will be a real joy to see the gems that will be uncovered as this collection is brought back to life!”  

To preserve the Founding Research Collection and make it available for public scholarship, the BPL will implement a comprehensive cleaning program to remove decades of accumulated dirt and debris amassed over the collection’s long history. This process will enable these collections to be handled, cataloged, and stored safely with long-term preservation needs in mindCurrently, many items in the Founding Research Collection are publicly accessible only on physical microfiche. For the cataloging portion of this preservation project, the BPL will create electronic records within the library’s online catalog that facilitate public discovery and retrieval of hundreds of thousands of volumes from the research collection and enable future digitization projects.  

“Ranging from illustrated books on natural history to rare volumes on linguistics, religion, sociology, and economics, the BPL’s Founding Research Collection’s value is immeasurable, both intrinsically and as a resource for patrons,” said Laura IrmscherBPL Chief of Collections. “Through these generous donations, the BPL can improve preservation conditions and deliver on their intended purpose, making these research items accessible and ‘Free to All.’ It is an essential piece of Boston and national history, and we look forward to sharing it with our patrons.” 

The BPL plans to kick off this preservation project later this year, and anticipates phase one will continue through 2023. Once the first phase of the project is complete, the BPL intends to continue this important work with the remainder of the Founding Research Collection. Additionally, the BPL’s Rare Books and Manuscripts Department is currently undergoing a complete $16m renovation, a project funded by the City of Boston. More information on the project can be found here. 

To learn about the BPL’s wider Special Collections departments, and the full BPL catalog visit bpl.org/special-collections-departments, and bpl.org 

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About the BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY   

Established in 1848, the Boston Public Library is a pioneer of public library service in America. It was the first large, free municipal library in the United States; the first public library to lend books; the first to have a branch library; and the first to have a dedicated children’s room 

The Boston Public Library of today is a robust system that includes the Central Library in Copley Square, 25 neighborhood branches, the Norman B. Leventhal Map and Education Center, the Kirstein Business and Innovation Center, and an archival center, offering public access to world-class special collections of rare books, manuscripts, photographs, and prints, along with rich digital content and online services 

The Boston Public Library serves nearly 4 million visitors per year and millions more online. All of its programs and exhibitions are free to all and open to the public 

The Boston Public Library is a department of the City of Boston, and overseen by its Board of Trustees. To learn more, visit bpl.org. 

About the BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY FUND  

The Boston Public Library Fund is the primary philanthropic arm of the Boston Public LibraryIts mission is to provide financial support to the Boston Public Library, ensuring that it remains viable, engaging, accessible, and free to all. The Fund fulfills this mission by working in partnership with the Library, donors, and other funders in supporting BPL programs and special initiatives. Support from the Fund supplements, but does not supplant, other BPL resources, including City of Boston funding. To learn more, visit bplfund.org. 

About the ASSOCIATES of the BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY 

The Associates of the Boston Public Library is an independent non-profit organization raising funds to support the preservation and promotion of the hundreds of thousands of treasures in the Library’s Special Collections. Their support helps to ensure that items such as a Shakespeare First Folio, prints by Toulouse-Lautrec, and William Lloyd Garrison’s personal copies of The Liberator are conserved, cataloged, digitized, and exhibitedTo learn more, visit associatesbpl.org.