The Athenæum's
collections consist of over a half a million volumes and are
particularly strong in the areas of Boston history, New England state
and local history, biography, English and American literature, and the
fine and decorative arts. Holdings are arranged in six major divisions:
1) books on the open shelves; 2) rare material (including manuscripts
and special collections; 3) fine
art, prints,
engravings, and photographs; 4) maps; 5) reference
material; and 6) newspapers, periodicals, and microfilm.
SPECIAL COLLECTIONS
From the 15th-century
rarities included in the King's Chapel collection to a rich abundance
of Confederate States imprints, the Athenæum's Special
Collections reflect a continuing concern not only for cultivating
strengths to serve the needs of library patrons, but also for
preserving historically valuable books, prints, and photographs for the
use of scholars and researchers and the enlightenment of future
generations of readers.
Special Collections
include: Confederate
States imprints; 18th-
and 19th-century tracts; early
Boston newspapers;
early United States documents; 19th-century
prints and photographs; Gypsy
literature; the
King's Chapel Collection (mostly 17th-century historical and
theological works); early
American broadsides; books from the libraries of George Washington, General Henry Knox,
and Jean Louis,
Cardinal Cheverus; an Author's
Collection featuring first editions and related works by John
Fowles, Lord Byron, T.S. Eliot, and John Masefield; the Danforth
Collection of chemistry and alchemy books; books published by Boston
publisher Crocker and Brewster; private
press collections, including a large portion of the archives of the
Merrymount Press; and early
publications in Native American languages.
THE FINE ARTS COLLECTION
From its early days the
Athenæum was a center for the fine arts, and was Boston's
first museum of fine arts. M. M. Swan writes in her book The
Athenæum Gallery, 1827-1873: The Boston Athenæum as
an Early Patron of Art, that "for almost fifty years
following its first art gallery
exhibition in 1827, the trustees purchased paintings and sculpture,
European and American, and fostered the production of works of art by
exhibitions." In 1873 and 1874 the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, which
had been incorporated in 1870, occupied two of the four
Athenæum galleries, and when it moved in 1876 to its new
quarters in Copley Square much of the Atheæum's art
collection was deposited there to form the nucleus of the new museum.
The Athenæum retained many remarkable works still to be seen
in the building, however, including busts of Washington, Franklin, and
Lafayette by Jean Antoine Houdon; the Mather Brown portrait of John
Adams, which once belonged to Thomas Jefferson; John Singer Sargent's
portrait of Annie Adams Fields; several portraits by Gilbert Stuart;
the large painting of Thomas Handasyd Perkins by Thomas Sully in the
first floor Reading Room; and the full length portraits of Daniel
Webster and John Marshall by Chester Harding, which hang in the
Athenæum's vestibule. The Athenæum still actively
acquires works of art relevant to the collection, usually by gift and
occasionally by purchase. Thanks to the generosity of two descendants,
the Athenæum now owns the largest collection of the work of
American painter Cephas Thompson, and has recently purchased works by
Asher B. Durand and Chester Harding.
MANUSCRIPTS
The Athenæum's
collection of manuscripts grew steadily from the founding of the
institution, but it was not until the stewardship of Librarian Charles
Knowles Bolton that efforts were first made to develop and organize
this material. Today the Athenæum is interested in donations
of unpublished material which in some way relates to the history of the
institution, its founders, and members, or manuscripts which help
document the influence of the Atheæum on the literary,
social, and artistic culture of Boston. Significant manuscripts already
in the collection include the papers of Atheæum Trustee
Samuel Eliot; the William Tudor papers; papers of Commodore Isaac Hull;
papers of architects Charles Bulfinch, Alexander Parris, George Minot
Dexter, Nathaniel Bradlee, John H. Sturgis, Ogden Codman, and Richard
Clipston Sturgis; artists' papers (Amasa Hewins, Isaac Sprague, Cephas
Thompson, Cecilia Beaux, Francesca Alexander, John Singer Sargent); and
papers of merchant John Perkins Cushing, Robert Morris (African
American lawyer and abolitionist), and P.T. Barnum and Moses Kimball
(showmen). The records of the Provident Institution for Savings, the
second savings bank to be established in the United States, came as a
gift to the Athenæum in 1993. Modern additions to the
collection include the papers of historian Stewart Mitchell, and the
papers of long-time Boston School Committee member Joseph Lee.
The Athenæum
maintains not only its own, but also the institutional archives of two
earlier Boston cultural institutions, the Anthology Society and the
Boston Library Society; the Boston Library Society merged with the
Athenæum in 1939. The Boston Library Society records include
information on early members, and catalogs and reading lists from this
early Boston institution. The Anthology Society records chronicle the
evolution of a small group of scholars who became the founders of the
Boston Athenæum. As the founders and proprietors of the
Atheæum were also the dynamic builders of Federal Boston, the
Athenæum archives preserve crucial records relative to 18th-
and early 19th-century literary and cultural development in the city.
Taken all together, these archives provide a complete and unbroken
record of Boston cultural development from 1792 until the present day.
50
Books Plus Three: Special Collections Reports (plus illustrations) from
Stanley Ellis Cushing, Curator of Rare Books
Thomas
Moore's The Ferns of Great Britain and Ireland,
1855
Pierre-Joseph Redouté's Traite
des arbres et arbustes que l'on cultive en France