Lamont Library

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Entrance facing Loeb House

Lamont Library, in the south-east corner of Harvard Yard in Cambridge, Massachusetts, houses the Harvard College Library's primary undergraduate collection in humanities and social sciences.[1] It was the first library in the United States specifically planned to serve undergraduates.[2]:{{{3}}}

Overview

Lamont was built as part of a program to address dwindling stack space, and patron overcrowding, at Widener Library.[citation needed] Keyes D. Metcalf, Librarian of Harvard College and Director of the Harvard University Library from 1937 to 1955, planned the building with Boston architect Henry R. Shepley.[2] Opened in 1949, it is named for its principal donor, Harvard alumnus Thomas W. Lamont.[3]

Lamont's general collection of 200,000 volumes[4] began with transfers from Widener, the Boylston Hall reserve-book collections, and the Harvard Union Reading Room. A modified version Dewey classification scheme was used, and the main spaces included capacious open-shelf alcoves for browsing, study, and research. The Library of Congress Classification system was adopted in the 1970s.[citation needed]

After Littauer Library closed in 2007, Lamont became the home library for HCL's former Social Sciences Program. Four units of the Social Sciences Program—​​Documents Services, Microform Services, Numeric Data Services, and Environmental Information Services—​​were combined with Lamont Reference Services. Lamont houses the College Library's major research collections in government documents and microform collections across all disciplines.[2]

References

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External links

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