The Civil Rights History Project: Survey of Collections and Repositories
Library of Virginia
800 East Broad Street
Richmond, Virginia
23219
Phone: 804-692-3500
Repository URL: http://www.lva.virginia.gov/
Repository code: vi
Repository description (extant): The Library of Virginia was created by the General Assembly in 1823 to organize, care for, and manage the state's growing collection of books and official records -- many of which date back to the early colonial period. The Library occupied rooms on the third floor of the Capitol in Richmond until 1895, when Virginia erected a new Library and office building on the eastern side of Capitol Square. Outgrowing this location, the Library in 1940 moved to a handsome, new art-deco building on Capitol Street, adjacent to City Hall and the Executive Mansion. In 1997, the Library opened to the public at 800 East Broad Street, its fourth home since its founding.
The Library houses the most comprehensive collection of materials on Virginia government, history, and culture available anywhere. The collections illustrate the rich and varied past of the commonwealth, documenting the lives of Virginians whose deeds are known to all, as well as those of ordinary citizens whose accomplishments are the foundation of our heritage.The Library's printed, manuscript, map, and photographic collections attract researchers from across the country and the world, while the Library's Web sites provide collection-based content and access to our digital collections to those at great distances who are not able to travel to Richmond. In addition to managing and preserving its collections, the Library supplies research and reference assistance to state officials, provides consulting services to state and local government agencies and to Virginia's public libraries, administers numerous federal, state, and local grant programs, publishes award-winning books on Virginia history, provides educational programs and resources on Virginia history and culture for students and teachers, and offers the public a wide array of exhibitions, lectures, book-signings, and other programs.
In addition to the main Library building, the Library manages the State Records Center in Henrico County where inactive, non-permanent records of state agencies and local governments are housed.
Repository type: State Archive/Library
Collections:
49th governor's conference in Williamsburg, Virginia
Ted Dalton interview
Living history makers: an inquiry into Virginia politics with Jim Latimer, Colgate W. Darden, William M. Tuck
Living history makers: an inquiry into Virginia politics: J. Lindsay Almond, Jr., governor of Virginia, 1958-1962
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