Houghton Library

Houghton is the primary repository for Harvard's rare books and manuscripts. The wealth of primary source material is managed by an expert staff and augmented by exhibitions, lectures, seminars, publications and courses.

 
 
 
 

HOURS OF OPERATION

 
April 07 - April 13
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
General HoursClosed09:00a - 05:00p09:00a - 07:00p09:00a - 07:00p09:00a - 07:00p09:00a - 05:00p09:00a - 05:00p
April 14 - April 20
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
General HoursClosed09:00a - 05:00p09:00a - 07:00p09:00a - 07:00p09:00a - 07:00p09:00a - 05:00p09:00a - 05:00p
April 21 - April 27
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
General HoursClosed09:00a - 05:00p09:00a - 07:00p09:00a - 07:00p09:00a - 07:00p09:00a - 05:00p09:00a - 05:00p
 
 

CONTACT INFORMATION

 
Contact by Phone
Main:
(617) 495-2441
Reference:
(617) 495-2440
Fax:
(617) 495-1376
Contact by Email / Web
Main:
Houghton_Library@harvard.edu
Website
 
Official Website
Baloon
Houghton Library Harvard Yard, Harvard University Cambridge, MA 02138
Map
 
 

ABOUT

 

Houghton is the primary repository for Harvard's rare books and manuscripts. The wealth of primary source material is managed by an expert staff and augmented by exhibitions, lectures, seminars, publications and courses.

Announcements

  • Roger Gaskell, an antiquarian bookseller based in the United Kingdom, will be delivering a lecture entitled A Peculiar Facility for Imagining: Visual Strategies in the early Royal Society on Tuesday, April 16, at 5:30 p.m. in the Edison and Newman Room in Houghton Library. The lecture will examine scientific illustrated books by early fellows of the Royal Society of London, and their European counterparts, published in the 1660s and 1670s. Gaskell, who is also a faculty member of the Rare Book School at the University of Virginia, will discuss how making the printed book the focus of attention shows that different ways of using images is dependent as much on the circumstances of production as on the author’s scientific message.
  • Forging the Moon: or, How to Spot a Fake Galileo is the subject of the 97th George Parker Winship Lecture to be delivered on Wednesday April 10th at 5:30 by Professor Nick Wilding of Georgia State University.Wilding examines the appearance a number of forged copies of several titles by Galileo that have appeared in private collections, institutional libraries and on the rare book market in the last decade.
  • Houghton's Private Proust: Letters and Drawings to Reynaldo Hahn exhibit was featured in the Gazette.
 

Collections

 

Overview of Collections

Collections range across the history of civilization with particular strengths in European and American history and literature. The collections are especially strong in manuscripts, printing and graphic arts and theatre history. See the Houghton Library Collections page for more information.

Modern Books & Manuscripts

The Modern Books & Manuscripts Collection encompasses materials in all formats dating from 1800 to the present. The department has responsibility for approximately 9.5 million manuscripts and 250,000 rare books and serials, many with important associations, plus substantial numbers of printed ephemera, photographs, drawings, paintings, and objects.

Printing & Graphic Arts

The Printing & Graphic Arts Collection documents the development of letterform, from 13th century manuscripts to contemporary digitized type, and all aspects of the art of the book, including design, printing, illustration, and paper.

Early Books & Manuscripts

The Early Books & Manuscripts Collection includes material dating from approximately 3000 BCE to 1600 CE and ranges from papyri to early and illuminated manuscripts to early printed books. While there is an emphasis on Western languages and cultures, the collection is also strong in Arabic, Indic, Persian, and Syriac manuscripts. (MS Lat 167, Houghton Library, Harvard University).

Theodore Roosevelt Collection

The Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Harvard College Library, is a comprehensive group of manuscript, printed, pictorial, and ephemeral materials relating to Theodore Roosevelt, twenty-sixth president of the United States. It is organized into the Roosevelt class--a classified sequence primarily of printed items; a manuscript collection; and other archival record series enumerated in the general collection guide.

Harvard Theatre Collection

The Harvard Theatre Collection, which was founded in 1901 through the efforts of Prof. George Pierce Baker, was the first collection of its kind to be established in this country, and it stands as one of the largest performing arts collections in the world, the oldest theatre collection in the world of international significance.

Harry Elkins Widener Collection

Harry Elkins Widener (1885-1912), Harvard Class of 1907, formed an extraordinary collection of books, manuscripts, and drawings during his short lifetime. His original library, collected prior to his death on the Titanic in 1912, consists of approximately 3,300 volumes housed in the Memorial Room in Widener Library.

The Donald & Mary Hyde Collection of Dr. Johnson and Early Modern Books and Manuscripts

Early Modern Books & Manuscripts includes materials produced 1600-1800, and is especially strong in English literature, U.S. history, history of science, and book history. The centerpiece of the department is the Donald & Mary Hyde Collection of Dr. Samuel Johnson. 

 
 

LIBRARY STAFF

 
Accardo, Peter Coordinator of Programs accardo@fas.harvard.edu Request an Appointment
Capobianco, James Reference Librarian jcapob@fas.harvard.edu Request an Appointment
Cawelti, Andrea Ward Project Music Cataloger cawelti@fas.harvard.edu Request an Appointment
Cole, Heather Assistant Curator of Modern Books and Manuscrips/Curator of the Theodore Roosevelt Collection hgcole@fas.harvard.edu Request an Appointment
Day, Lewis Technical Services Librarian lewisday@fas.harvard.edu Request an Appointment
Denison, Suzanne Project Archivist denison@fas.harvard.edu
Halpert, Susan Reference Librarian shalpert@fas.harvard.edu Request an Appointment
Hardman, Emilie Metadata and Reference Asst. ehardman@fas.harvard.edu
Hoggatt, Micah Reference Assistant mhoggatt@fas.harvard.edu Request an Appointment
Howarth, Rachel Associate Librarian of Houghton Library for Public Services rhowarth@fas.harvard.edu
Klyagin, Irina Archivist iklyagin@fas.harvard.edu Request an Appointment
Linklater, Christina Project Music Cataloger linklat@fas.harvard.edu Request an Appointment
Morris, Leslie Curator of Modern Books & Manuscripts leslie_morris@harvard.edu
Overholt, John Curator of the Donald and Mary Hyde Collection of Dr. Samuel Johnson and of Early Modern Books and Manuscripts overholt@fas.harvard.edu
Stinchcomb, Dale Curatorial Assistant dstinchcomb@fas.harvard.edu Request an Appointment
Walhout, Emily Library Assistant ewalhout@fas.harvard.edu
Wisner, Melanie Accessioning Archivist mmwisner@fas.harvard.edu
 

VISITOR POLICIES

 
  • Visitor
  • Houghton Library is open without fee to all adult researchers regardless of academic affiliation. We cannot accommodate students younger than college-age in the Reading Room, but catalogs, online finding-aids and most digitized items can be accessed by anyone.

    All users of the Houghton Reading Room must register for a Special Collections Request Account. Patrons can register online by creating a Special Collections Request Account. For more information see Access to Special Collections.

    Patrons who are not currently affiliated with Harvard University or who do not hold a Special Borrower Card will need to visit the Library Privileges Office at Widener Library to obtain a Harvard College Library Special Collections Card.  Patrons are required to present a valid Harvard ID, HCL Special Borrower Card, or HCL Special Collections Card at the library in order to use materials. See Houghton's Admittance page.

 
 

ACCESSIBILITY

 
  • Houghton's front door is accessible via a flight of steps up from the level of Quincy Street. Alternative access without stairways may be arranged by phoning Public Services at 617-495-2440. See Houghton Library Disability Services.