Widener Library


The Harry Elkins Widener Memorial Library, housing some 3.5million books, is the centerpiece of the Harvard Library system. It honors 1907 Harvard College graduate and book collector Harry Elkins Widener, and was built by his mother Eleanor Elkins Widener soon after his death in the sinking of the Titanic in 1912.
Widener's "vast and cavernous" stacks hold works in more than one hundred languages which together comprise "one of the world's most comprehensive research collections in the humanities and social sciences." Its of shelves, along five miles of aisles on ten levels, comprise a "labyrinth" which one student "could not enter without feeling that she ought to carry a compass, a sandwich, and a whistle."
At the building's heart are the Widener Memorial Rooms, displaying papers and mementos recalling the life and death of Harry Widener, as well as the Harry Elkins Widener Collection,
"the precious group of rare and wonderfully interesting books brought together by Mr. Widener",
to which was later added one of the few perfect Gutenberg Biblesthe object of a 1969 burglary attempt conjectured by Harvard's police chief to have been inspired by the 1964 heist film Topkapi.

Background, conception and gift

Predecessor

By the opening of the twentieth century alarms had been issuing for many years about Harvard's "disgracefully inadequate"
library, Gore Hall, completed in 1841
and declared full in 1863.
Harvard Librarian Justin Winsor concluded his 1892 Annual Report by pleading, "";
his successor Archibald Cary Coolidge asserted that the Boston Public Library was a better place to write an thesis.
Despite substantial additions in 1876 and 1907,
in 1910 a committee of architects termed Gore Hall
With university librarian William Coolidge Lane reporting that the building's light switches were delivering electric shocks to his staff,
and dormitory basements pressed into service as overflow storage
for Harvard's 543,000 books,
the committee drew up a proposal for replacement of Gore in stages. Andrew Carnegie was approached for financing without success.

Death of Harry Widener

On April 15, 1912, Harry Elkins Widenerscion of two of the wealthiest families in America, a 1907 graduate of Harvard College, and an accomplished bibliophile despite his youthdied
in the sinking of the Titanic.
His father George Dunton Widener also perished, but his mother Eleanor Elkins Widener survived.
Harry Widener's will instructed that his mother, when "in her judgment Harvard University shall make arrangements for properly caring for my collection of books... shall give them to said University to be known as the Harry Elkins Widener Collection",
and he had told a friend, not long before he died, "I want to be remembered in connection with a great library, I do not see how it is going to be brought about."
To enable the fulfillment of her son's wishes Eleanor Widener briefly considered funding an addition to Gore Hall, but soon determined to build instead a completely new and far larger library building"a perpetual memorial"
to Harry Widener, housing not only his personal book collection but Harvard's general library as well,
with room for growth.
As Biel has written, "The committee's Beaux Arts design, with its massiveness and symmetry, offered monumentality with nothing more particular to monumentalize than the aspirations of the modern university"until the Titanic sank and "through delicate negotiation, convinced Eleanor Widener that the most eloquent tribute to Harry would be an entire library rather than a rare book wing."

Terms and cost of gift

To her gift Eleanor Widener attached a number of stipulations,
including that the project's architects be the firm of Horace Trumbauer& Associates,
which had built several mansions for both the Elkins and the Widener families.
"Mrs. Widener does not give the University the money to build a new library, but has offered to build a library satisfactory in external appearance to herself," Harvard President Abbott Lawrence Lowell wrote privately.
"The exterior was her own choice, and she has decided architectural opinions."
Harvard historian William Bentinck-Smith has written that

Building

Dedication

The building was dedicated immediately after Commencement Day exercises on June24, 1915.
Lowell and Coolidge mounted the steps to the main door, where Eleanor Widener presented them with the building's keys.
The first book formally brought into the new library was the 1634 edition of John Downame's The Christian Warfare Against the Devil, World, and Flesh,
believed to be the only volume, of those bequeathed to the school by John Harvard in 1638, to have survived the 1764 burning of Harvard Hall.
In the Memorial Rooms, after a benediction by Bishop William Lawrence, a portrait of Harry Widener
was unveiled, then remarks delivered by Senator Henry Cabot Lodge and Lowell.
Afterward "the doors were thrown open, and both graduates and undergraduates had an opportunity to see the beauties and utilities of this important university acquisition."
"I hope it will become the heart of the University," Eleanor Widener said, "a centre for all the interests that make Harvard a great university."

Widener Memorial Rooms

The central Memorial Roomsan outer rotunda housing memorabilia of the life and death of Harry Widener, and an inner library displaying the 3300 rare books collected by himwere described by the Boston Sunday Herald soon after the dedication:
Conversely, "even from the very entrance one will catch a glimpse in the distance of the portrait of young Harry Widener on the further wall, if the intervening doors happen to be open."
For many years Eleanor Widener hosted Commencement Day luncheons in the Memorial Rooms.
The family underwrites their upkeep,
including weekly renewal of the flowersoriginally roses but now carnations.

Amenities and deficiencies

Touted as "the last word in library construction",
the new building's amenities included telephones, pneumatic tubes, book lifts and conveyors, elevators,
and a dining-room and kitchenette "for the ladies of the staff".
Advertisements for the manufacturer of the building's shelving highlighted its "dark brown enamel finish, harmonizing with oak trim",
and special interchangeable regular and oversize shelves meant that books on a given subject could be shelved together regardless of size.
The Library Journal found "especially interesting not so much the spacious and lofty reading rooms" as the innovation of placing student carrels and private faculty studies directly in the stack, reflecting Lowell's desire to put "the massive resources of the stack close to the scholar's hand, reuniting books and readers in an intimacy that nineteenth-century had long precluded".
Nonetheless, certain deficiencies were soon noted.
A primitive form of air conditioning was abandoned within a few months.
"The need of better toilet facilities has been pressed upon us during the past year by several rather distressing experiences," Widener Superintendent Frank Carney wrote discreetly in 1918.
And after a university-wide search for castoff furniture left many of the stacks' 300 carrels still unequipped, Coolidge wrote to "There is something rather humiliating in having to proclaim to the world that unequalled opportunity to the scholar and investigator who wishes to come here, but that in order to use these opportunities he must bring his own chair, table and electric lamp."
Later-built tunnels, from the stacks level furthest underground, connect to nearby Pusey Library, Lamont Library,
and Houghton Library.
An enclosed bridge connecting to Houghton's reading room via a Widener windowbuilt after Eleanor Widener's heirs agreed to waive her gift's proscription of exterior additions or alterationswas removed in 2004.
Houghton and Lamont were built in the 1940s to relieve Widener,
which had become simultaneously too smallits shelves were fulland too largeits immense size
and complex catalog made books difficult to locate.
But with Harvard's collections doubling every 17 years, by 1965 Widener was again close to full,
prompting construction of Pusey, and in the early 1980s library officials "pushed the panic button" again, leading to the construction of the Harvard Depository in 1986.

Collections and stacks

Harry Elkins Widener Collection

The works displayed in the Memorial Rooms comprise Harry Widener's collection at the time of his death, "major monuments of English letters, many remarkable for their bindings and illustrations or unusual provenance":
Shakespeare First Folios;
a copy of Poems written by Wil.Shake-speare, gent. in its original sheepskin binding;
an inscribed copy of Boswell's Life of Samuel Johnson; Johnson's own Bible ;
and first editions, presentation copies, and similarly valuable volumes of Robert Louis Stevenson, Thackeray, Charlotte Brontë, Blake, George Cruikshank, Isaac Cruikshank, Robert Cruikshank
and Dickensincluding the petty cash book kept by Dickens while a young law clerk.
Book collector George Sidney Hellman, writing soon after Harry Widener's death, observed that he was "not satisfied alone in having a rare book or a rare book inscribed by the author; it was with him a prerequisite that the volume should be in immaculate condition."
Harry Widener "died suddenly, just as he was beginning to be one of the world's great collectors,"
said the Collection's first curator.
"They formed a young man's library, and are to be preserved as he left it"except
that the Widener family has the exclusive privilege of adding to it.
Harvard's "greatest typographical treasure"
is one of the only thirty-eight perfect copies extant of the Gutenberg Bible,
purchased while Harry was abroad by his grandfather Peter A.B. Widener and added to the Collection by the Widener family in 1944.
Like all Harvard's valuable books, works in the Widener Collection may be consulted by researchers demonstrating a genuine research need.

Parallel classification systems and dual catalogs

Like many large libraries, Widener originally classified its holdings according to its own idiosyncratic systemthe "Widener" systemwhich follows "the division of knowledge in its formulation. The Aus class contains books on the Austro-Hungarian Empire; the Ott class serves the purpose for the Ottoman Empire. Dante, Molière, and Montaigne each gets a class of his own."
In the 1970s new arrivals began to be classified according to a modified version of the Library of Congress system.
The two systems' differences reflect "competing theories of knowledge... In a sense, the Widener system was Aristotelian; its divisions were empirical, describing and reflecting the languages and cultural origins of books and highlighting their relations to one another in language, place, and time;, by contrast, was Platonic, looking past the surface of language and nation to reflect the idealized, essential discipline in which each might be said to belong."
Because of the impracticality of reclassifying millions of books, those received before the changeover remain under their original "Widener" classifications. Thus among works on a given subject, older books will be found at one shelf location and newer ones at another.
In addition, an accident of the building's layout led to the development of two separate card catalogsthe "Union" catalog and the "Public" cataloghoused on different floors and having a complex interrelationship "which perplexed students and faculty alike." It was not until the 1990s that the electronic Harvard On-Line Library Information System was able to completely supplant both physical catalogs.

Departmental and special libraries

The building also houses a number of special libraries in dedicated spaces outside the stacks, including:
There are also special collections in the history of science, linguistics, Near Eastern languages and civilizations, paleography, and Sanskrit.
The contents of the Treasure Room, holding Harvard's most precious rare books and manuscripts were transferred to newly built Houghton Library in 1942.

In literature and legend

Literary references

In H. P. Lovecraft's fictional universe Cthulhu Mythos, Widener is one of five libraries holding a 17th-century edition of the Necronomicon, hidden somewhere in the stacks.
Thomas Wolfe, who earned a Harvard master's degree in 1922, told Max Perkins that he spent most of his Harvard years in Widener's reading room. He wrote of through the stacks of that great library like some damned soul, never at restever leaping ahead from the pages I read to thoughts of those I want to read"; his alter ego Eugene Gant read with a watch in his hand, "laying waste of the shelves."
Historian Barbara Tuchman considered "the single most formative experience" of her career the writing of her undergraduate thesis, for which she was "allowed to have as my own one of those little cubicles with a table under a window" in the Widener stacks, which were "my Archimedes' bathtub, my burning bush, my dish of mold where I found my personal penicillin."

Burglary and other incidents

Over the years, Widener has been the scene of various criminal exploits "infamous for their fecklessness and ignominity."

Joel C. Williams

In 1931 former graduate student Joel C. Williams was arrested after attempting to sell two Harvard library books to a local book dealer. Charles Apted and other Harvard officials visited Williams' home
where
they found thousands of books which Williams had stolen over the years, many badly damaged. The "absolutely crazy" Williams would "go to students studying in Widener and ask them what course they were taking. He would then borrow all the books for that course in the library. Then no one could get any to study", library official John E. Shea later recalled.
Despite the misleading implication of bookplates placed in the 2504 recovered books, Harvard's charges against Williams were dropped after he was indicted on book-theft charges in another jurisdiction, which imposed a sentence of hard labor. After the unrelated arrest of a book-theft ring operating at Harvard, there was a "noticeable increase in the number of missing books secretly returned to the library", the Transcript reported in 1932.

Gutenberg Bible theft

On the night of August 19, 1969 an attempt was made to steal the library's Gutenberg Bible, valued at $1million.
Equipped with a hammer, pry bar, and other burglarious implements,
the 20-year-old would-be thief hid in a lavatory until after closing, then made his way to the roof, from which he descended via a knotted rope to break through a Memorial Room window.
But after smashing the bible's display case and placing its two volumes in a knapsack, he found that the additional 70 pounds made it impossible for him to reclimb the rope.
Eventually he fell some to the pavement of one of the light courts, where he lay semiconscious
until his moans were heard by a janitor;
he was found about 1a.m.
with injuries including a fractured skull.
"It looks like a professional job all right, in the fact that he came down the rope," commented Harvard Police Chief Robert Tonis. "But it doesn't look very professional that he fell off."
Tonis speculated that the attempt may have been modeled on a similar caper depicted in the 1964 filmTopkapi,
though a retired Harvard librarian later commented that the thief "evidently knew nothing about booksor, at least, about selling them... There was no explanation of what he expected to do with the Bible."
Only the books' bindings were damaged.
Since the incident only one or the other Bible volume is on display at any given time
and a replica has been substituted at times of heightened security concern.

1969 Vietnam War protests

In the spring of 1969, during Harvard student demonstrations against the war in Vietnam, rumors spread of a possible attack on Widener.
Following the occupation of University Hall by protesters, and their subsequent violent ejection by police, volunteer librarians and faculty stood watch inside Widener for several nights.

"The Slasher"

Around 1990, empty bindings stripped of their pages began to appear in the Widener stacks. In time some 600 mutilated books were discovered, the vandal particularly targeting works on early Christianity in Greek, Latin, or unusual languages such as Icelandic.
Notes left at Widener, and later at Northeastern University, threatened graphically described mutilations of library workers, cyanide gas attacks,
and bombings of libraries and a local bank.
Other notes instructed that $500,000 be left in a Northeastern library, demanded that Northeastern "terminate all Jew personnel", and directed that $1million be left in the Widener stacks:
These "ransom drops" were staked out by the FBI,
and surveillance cameras installed in ersatz books, without result.
In 1994 police connected an incident at Northeastern, in which a library worker there was caught stealing chemistry books, with the fact that chemistry texts had been among the works mutilated at Widener.
Officials found "a kind of renegade reference room" in the worker's basement,
including library books, piles of ripped-out pages, a microfilm camera, and hundreds of unusable microfilms he had haphazardly made of the books he had destroyed.
At trial "The Slasher" said he had acted in revenge for the eighteen months he had been detained in a state psychiatric hospital after expiration of a six-month jail term he had received for a minor offense.

Artwork

Two of Gore Hall's granite pinnacles were preserved, and flank Widener's rear entrance.
In the 1920s the university commissioned John Singer Sargent to paint, within the fourteen-foot-high arched panels flanking the entrance to the Memorial Rooms, two murals giving tribute to Harvard's World WarI dead: Death and Victory and Entering the War.
The accompanying inscription, by Lowell, reads: "Happy those who with a glowing faith/ In one embrace clasped Death and Victory".
With Memorial Church, which directly faces Widener, these constitute what the Boston Public Library calls "the most elaborate World WarI memorial in the Boston area."
Above the Memorial Rooms entrance is inscribed:

Restrictions on women

The building originally included a separate Radcliffe Reading Room behind the card catalogs"barely large enough for a single table"to which female students were restricted "for fear their presence would distract the studious Harvard men" in the main reading room.
In 1923 a sequence of communications between Librarian William Coolidge Lane and another Harvard official dealt with "the incident of Miss Alexander's intrusion into the reading room",
and Keyes Metcalf, Director of University Libraries from 1937 to 1955, wrote that early in his tenure a Classics professor "rushed into my office, looking as if he were about to have an apoplectic stroke, and gasped, 'I've just been in the reading room, and there is a Radcliffe girl in there! By then female graduate students were permitted to enter the stacks, but only until 5p.m., "after which time it was thought they would not be safe there".
"Even the ever-present problem of inadequate lavatories worked to deny functional access to women", wrote Battles. "Patrons requesting directions to a women's restroom were routinely misled, denied access, or simply told that such things did not exist at a college for men such as Harvard."
By World WarII "we could go into the and use the encyclopedias and things like that there, if we stood up, but we couldn't sit down",
and only by special permission could a woman work in the building in the evening.

Renovation

A five-year, $97million renovation completed in 2004
added fire suppression and environmental control systems, upgraded wiring and communications, remodeled various public spaces, and enclosed the light courts to create additional reading rooms
.
"Claustrophobia-inducing" elevators were replaced,
the bottom shelves on the lowest stacks level were removed in recognition of chronic seepage problems,
Widener's "olfactory nostalgia... actually the smell of decaying books" was addressed,
and unrestricted light and airseen as desirable when Widener was built but now considered "public enemies one and two for the long-term safety of old books"were brought under control.
Some changes required that the Widener family grant relief
from the terms of Eleanor Widener's gift, which forbade that "structures of any kind erected in the courts around which the is constructed, but that the same shall be kept open for light and air".
The need to relocate each of the building's 3.5million volumes twicefirst to temporary locations, then to new permanent locations, as work proceeded aisle by aislewas turned to advantage, so that by the end of the renovation related materials in the library's two classification systems were physically adjacent for the first time;
the chart showing the floor and wing location, within the stacks, of each subject classification was revised sixty-five times during construction.
The project received the 2005 Library Building Award from the American Library Association and the American Institute of Architects.