ANS LIBRARY 上市 Deposited

SIXTH FLOOR & RARE BOOK ROOM

文章內容
  • The E-Sylum: Volume 7, Number 22, May 30, 2004, Article 5

    ANS LIBRARY: SIXTH FLOOR & RARE BOOK ROOM

    [The following is the second of two submissions by Dick
    Johnson on the new library of the American Numismatic
    Society. -Editor]

    Librarian Frank Campbell escorted me onto the elevator and
    we rose one floor. This is the second level of the American
    Numismatic Society's new home for the World's Largest
    Numismatic Library (on floors five and six). Imagine! Two
    floors of numismatic books, journals, documents, data! I had
    died and gone to numismatic book heaven!

    Layout of the sixth floor is similar to the fifth, with two more
    separate rooms. A small receptionist room to the right as you
    enter, and a large room at the far left rear for the rare books.
    This level will be the domain of assistant librarian Barbara
    Bonous-Smit. Her office is at the rear directly above Frank's
    on the floor below. I perceive this level will be the entrance for
    visitors of the future. Sign in please.

    Shelving -- similar to the movable shelves on the floor below
    ? is at the sides like on five. Here are all the library's numismatic

    journals and all the nonnumismatic books. These are already
    shelved and ready for action.

    Study tables are intended to be in the center of the room. I
    noted the wires to be connected to outlets at the tables. Thank
    you, thank you. My laptop is so old my batteries cost more than
    a new Dell computer (and twice as heavy). I need to plug in. At
    the old library there was only one table (on the lower level) that
    had a plug hidden next to the set of Benezits behind the only
    chair to access that plug. (Only once, though, did I have to ask
    someone to move so I could do so.)

    It is the Rare Book Room on this floor that is the epicenter of
    the numismatic book world. Here will be found the one-of-a-kind
    numismatic literature, the irreplaceable documents, the nearly
    150-year old library has acquired. [November 3, 2008 will be
    the library's 150th anniversary.] It is inconceivable you could
    write so much as a 2-page article on any numismatic subject
    without research at this resource.

    At first glance, most of what you see in the RB Room are
    archival boxes. Oh, what numismatic knowledge they contain!
    Frank pointed to a row of seven or eight gray boxes. ?Here is
    New Netherlands archives,? he said.

    ?Auction catalogs and bid books?? I asked of the NN archive.
    ?That plus some correspondence as well,? Frank replied, with
    mention of Walter Breen, John Ford, and others (sometime
    employees of the NYC numismatic firm, prominent in the 1950s
    and 60s). The story is these surfaced in Charles Wormser?s
    estate, were acquired by Anthony Terranova, who donated
    them to the library.

    Overall the appearance of what is on the shelves is Clean and
    Well Organized. Not only for the Rare Book Room but for
    the library total. So well organized ? despite the fact the shelf
    labels are not on the shelving yet ? that Frank and Barbara
    may have less to do. You won't need to ask them the location
    of what you are looking for.

    That, plus all the holdings are on computer, even down to
    articles in journals. (Not every article, is cited, of course, but
    citations to Coin World articles have long since passed the
    5,000 mark years ago, more than any other journal.)

    Seeing those well housed, labeled, organized, and indexed items
    ready for use ? particularly in the Rare Book Room ? made me
    think. What in my own library should end up here? I do have
    some rare books, one or two unique, the bid books from my
    own auction firm, perhaps some of my own files. A ten-drawer
    photo file, one file cabinet drawer of numismatic subjects,
    another of my writings.

    I made inquiry to Frank about receiving donations. I don't
    remember his exact words, but somehow it meant, ?later, not
    now.? His routine work has been set aside for the move. He
    did state it has been weeks since he viewed his email. He
    expected it contained thousands of messages, mostly public
    inquires requiring answers.

    So for the present, don't email Frank don't call, don't write.
    He's very busy. But think of what books in your library should
    be added to the World's Largest Numismatic Library.
    Meanwhile, there is a donation book auction to support the
    Francis D. Campbell Library Chair (details elsewhere). I
    couldn't think of a better service to numismatic literature.

    The library is slated to be available for the summer graduate
    seminar (for graduate students and junior faculty) June 1 and
    open to the public June 18."

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  • 2004-05-30
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  • 7

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