A Guide to the Virginia State Library, Office of the State Librarian, War Memorial Library Records 1921-1924;
A Collection in
the Library of Virginia
Accession Number 40256
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Library of Virginia
The Library of Virginia800 East Broad Street
Richmond, Virginia 23219-8000
USA
Email: archdesk@lva.virginia.gov(Archives)
URL: http://www.lva.virginia.gov/
© 2003 By the Library of Virginia.
Processed by: Laura E. Drake
Administrative Information
Access Restrictions
There are no restrictions.
Use Restrictions
There are no restrictions.
Preferred Citation
Virginia State Library. Office of the State Librarian. War Memorial Library Records, 1921-1924. Accession 40256, State Records Collection, The Library of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia.
Acquisition Information
Transferred.
Biographical/Historical Information
For many years, The Library of Virginia had no definitive home. Valuable early records were kept at Jamestown as early as 1676 and were then moved to the College of William and Mary for a brief period at the century's end. By 1780, extant records were moved to the Capitol in Richmond.
Coincidentally, in 1779, the Virginia General Assembly was presented among its legislation, "A Bill for Establishing a Public Library" drawn up by Thomas Jefferson. The bill provided for 2000 pounds yearly to be expended to maintain a State Library in Richmond. The facility was to be a reference library only without books being lent for home use. Perhaps ahead of its time, the bill failed to pass.
The Virginia State Library was created by an act passed by the General Assembly on January 23, 1823, to establish a public library with funds derived from the sale of William W. Hening's THE STATUTES AT LARGE. From 1823 to 1828, the Library was under the control of the governor and council. In 1828, the General Assembly created a joint committee on the library (located in a room in the southeastern corner of the Capitol) to oversee its administration. Use of the State Library was restricted to members of the state government in a policy that continued until at least 1856. The Secretary of the Commonwealth served ex officio as state librarian from 1832 to 1903.
The growth of the State Library was somewhat erratic. Book holdings increased from 1,313 in 1828 to 17,480 in 1856. Lack of funds and politics frequently intermingled to slow library development. General W.H. Richardson, State Librarian in 1852, became embroiled in an effort to remove him "to make way for some politician of democratic principles." At the close of Reconstruction, Dr. George William Bagby, then State Librarian, was terminated and his position abolished at the hands of Readjusters.
Eventually, on May 15, 1903, the General Assembly passed an act that created a library board to administer the library, authorized the deposit of public records in the library, provided for the publication of historical records by the library, and established a library fund for the purchase of books and private papers. The Library Board, which was responsible for naming the State Librarian, was itself appointed by the Board of Education. The General Assembly passed an act on March 29, 1944, transferring the power to appoint the Library Board to the governor.
While many public records somehow survived the Commonwealth's early years, many losses occurred due to fires, the ravages of war and negligence. When the library was moved, for example, in 1895 to a building separate from the Capitol, "chutes were constructed from the upper story of the Capitol to facilitate the delivery of books to the wagons of the junk dealer who had bought them." The move was poorly planned and the library's contents suffered great loss at the hands of those very authorities assigned to protect them.
The new facility quickly was found to be inadequate and efforts were made both in 1910 and 1920 to construct a proper building for the State Library and its collections. Ground was broken for the current facility on December 7, 1938. At last, on December 23, 1940, the newly completed Virginia State Library was opened to the public.
The Virginia State Library adopted the name, the Virginia State Library and Archives, in early 1987 to more adequately reflect its mission and purpose today. In July 1, 1994 the name was changed to The Library of Virginia. It serves as a general reference and research library, as the official repository of state archives and publications, and as a repository of state and federal documents. It provides assistance and advice to libraries around the state, and it administers state and federal library funds. The Archives and Records Division of the library administers the state records management program, arranges and describes records deposited in the division, and provides assistance and advice to state and local government agencies concerning the management of their records. Additionally, the agency produces many publications. The most notable among those regularly issued are the quarterly VIRGINIA CAVALCADE and the annual accession reports of the Archives and Records Division showing its most recent records and manuscript acquisitions.
Scope and Content Information
Contains correspondence and notes related to the planning of a War Memorial Library to serve as the new home of the Virginia State Library. Included in the collection are inquiries to other state libraries and major research libraries in the United States regarding their facilities and use by patrons. Conceived to serve both as the new State Library and a memorial to those to served in World War I, the War Memorial Library was a joint venture between the War Memorial Commission and the State Librarian and the Library Board. The War Memorial Library building was never constructed, and the Virginia State Library remained in the Old Finance Building until 1939, when it moved to the building at 11th Street and Capitol Square.
Arrangement
ArrangementAlphabetical.
OrganizationArranged into one (1) series, Alphabetical Files.
Contents List
Contains correspondence and notes regarding the planning of the War Memorial Library.
Alphabetical
- Box 1 Folder 1
Call for Proposals
- Box 1 Folder 2
Correspondence: A
- Box 1 Folder 3
Correspondence: B
- Box 1 Folder 4
Correspondence: C
- Box 1 Folder 5
Correspondence: D
- Box 1 Folder 6
Correspondence: E
- Box 1 Folder 7
Correspondence: F
- Box 1 Folder 8
Correspondence: G
- Box 1 Folder 9
Correspondence: H
- Box 1 Folder
10
Correspondence: I
- Box 1 Folder
11
Correspondence: J
- Box 1 Folder
12
Correspondence: K
- Box 1 Folder
13
Correspondence: L
- Box 1 Folder
14
Correspondence: M
- Box 1 Folder
15
Correspondence: N
- Box 1 Folder
15
Correspondence: P
- Box 1 Folder
16
Correspondence: P
- Box 1 Folder
17
Correspondence: R
- Box 1 Folder
18
Correspondence: S
- Box 1 Folder
19
Correspondence: T
- Box 1 Folder
20
Correspondence: W
- Box 1 Folder
21
Correspondence in reference to joint meeting of the Library Board and War Memorial Committee
- Box 1 Folder
22
Inquiries to Other Libraries
- Box 1 Folder
23
Notes
- Box 1 Folder
24
Oversize: A
- Box 1 Folder
25
Photographs