====== Libraries ====== The university has had a number of libraries, both public and clubs, over the years. Collections have been held in multiple locations over the years. ===== Head Librarian ===== * Henry Hill Goodell (1885-1899) * Ella Frances Hall (1899-1908) * Charles R. Green (1908-1921) * Henry S. Green (1921-1924) * Basil Boise Wood (1924-1952) * Hugh Montgomery (1952-1966) ===== Director of Libraries ===== * David Clay (1966-1972) as Director of Libraries * Merle Boylan Jr. (1972-1973) as University Librarian and Director * Richard Talbot (1973-1996) * Margo Crist (1997-2003) * Gerald “Jay” Shafer (2004-Summer 2016) ===== Dean of Libraries ===== * Simon Neame (Summer 2016-Summer 2021) * Jennifer Friedman (July/Aug 2021 as Acting Dean) * Sarah Hutton (August 2021-Present as Interim Dean) ===== Timeline ===== ==== South College reading room: 1887? ==== * No library building for the first 20 years of Mass Aggie’s existence * Supplemented by literary societies and Amherst College begins lending materials in 187? *1880: Library open for nine hours a week *1883: Alumni Library Committee seeks funds for stone library building *1885: 500 Volumes collected *Fire Destroys Collection (Redeveloped by faculty donation) ==== Old Chapel Library: 1884/1885 ==== *Built between 1884 and 1885 *First floor is the first official library space on campus *ca. 1890: 10,000 Volumes *1907: 28,000 volumes *1910: Chapel is wired for electricity *1915: Stockbridge Hall and Bowker Auditorium open *The Chapel becomes the “Chapel Library” ==== Goodell Library: 1935 ==== *Goodell opened initially as a library building to hold 135,000 volumes *Chapel becomes “Old Chapel” *1952: Hampshire Inter Library Loan Center opens in South Hadley *Disbanded in 1977 *1960: Goodell addition completed to house 460,000 volumes *1960s: A Proposal for Undergraduate Library Services: 1970-1980 *Beginning of the push for a new library and building programs that result in the Tower Library *Goodell will be overrun by the mid 70s, need for a new building will be critical by the 1980s *April 28, 1969: Ground broken on the Tower Library *1970s: Budget for acquisitions begins to shrink *1971: One Millionth Volume added to the Collection ==== University Library Tower: 1973 ==== *1973: Building opens, move takes place between May 24 and June 26 *Branches opened at the Morrill Biological Sciences Library and the Physical Sciences Library at the Lederle Lowrise, Music Library in Fine Arts Center *University Archives established in 1973 *1974: UMass Circulation System is automated *1977: HILC disbanded, Five College Consortium origins begin *Labor Day Weekend 1979: Tower Library closed for an indeterminate amount of time *Dec. 5, 1979: Tower opened for limited use, deck remains closed *Dec. 13, 1979: 500 person occcupancy limit *Expected to return to normal use in 1982 *1980s: Automation of the Five College Consortium System *Beginning of serious campus financial crises *Acquisitions budget falls in fiscal years 1982-86, rises 1986-88, falls 1988-92, rises 1992-94 (maintains 1994-99), rises 1999-01 *Response to 9/11 is to eliminate library acquisitions funding -- drops from 4.5 million to zero *1986: Mass Transformation project *June 16, 1986: Library reopens following extensive renovations to add two new floors *Fiscal Year 89: ⅓ of the budget bunding is lost, majority of serials cancelled , acquisitions program changes to “austere”; continues into FY 90 *1990s: Safety concerns begin to be raised by students ==== W.E.B. Du Bois Library: 1996 ==== *Second Student movement convinces Board of Trustees to rename the Tower Library *September 1996: Calipari Room opens *2000: UMass Libraries Shared Digital Repository for the five UMass campuses *December 2000: Three Millionth Volume Added *Fiscal Year 01: Digital Databases begin to be collected *Supplement the Serials being cut due to budget cuts *September 2001: Physical and Biological Science Libraries combine to form the Integrated Science and Engineering Library/ISEL opens February 2004? *Name drops the word “Integrated” in the early 2010s *Response to 9/11 *Budget from state reduced from $14-11 Million, $1 Million of the acquisitions budget is lost *October 2001: Music Reserves Library integrated into Du Bois, Reserves Lab remains in Fine Art Center with heavily used materials *December 2001: Book purchases are halted due to budget restraints, $1 Million in journals cancelled *October 2005: Learning Commons dedicated *Additional donation by Microsoft in June 2006 *Renovations to 2nd and 3rd floor financed *Expansion into User Services rather than a book depository *2006: 90% increase in student use of the library since Learning Commons dedication *2010: Renovations are completed bringing the Learning Commons and lower floors to their current state (a project which began in 2005 and went into high gear in 2010) *2011: Team Based Learning Classroom opens in the Learning Commons *Open Access initiatives begin in conjunction with the Provost's office *2012: Multimedia Commons at early stages (becomes the Digital Media Lab) *Cafe moves to its current Location *2014: Open Access initiatives continue *March 13, 2020: staff and librarians sent home as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Remote work begins *August 2, 2021: staff and librarians return to work on campus amid ongoing COVID-19 pandemic