{"id":12009,"date":"2017-07-20T11:00:44","date_gmt":"2017-07-20T15:00:44","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=12009"},"modified":"2024-01-26T15:09:15","modified_gmt":"2024-01-26T20:09:15","slug":"new-history-of-the-nlm-the-old-red-brick","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2017\/07\/20\/new-history-of-the-nlm-the-old-red-brick\/","title":{"rendered":"A New History of NLM: The \u201cOld Red Brick\u201d"},"content":{"rendered":"

By Anne Rothfeld ~<\/em><\/p>\n

This is the fourth <\/em>post in a series of nine<\/a> which serializes the new book <\/em>US National Library of Medicine in the popular <\/em>Images of America series of Arcadia Publishing. A hardback version of the book is available from booksellers, and an electronic version of the complete book<\/a> and original versions of\u00a0the 170+ images<\/a>, which appear in it in black and white, are archived and freely available in NLM Digital Collections<\/a>.\u00a0 The Intramural Research Program of the US National Institutes of Health<\/a>, National Library of Medicine, supported the research, writing, and editing of this publication. We hope that you will add it to your summer reading list!<\/em><\/p>\n

The surgeon general\u2019s Library moved into Ford\u2019s Theatre in 1866, but it was not until 1883 that Surgeon General Robert Murray consolidated the Library and the Army Medical Museum into a single administrative institution, with John Shaw Billings as its director. By this time, the institutions could not move out of the building soon enough. Hastily constructed, Ford\u2019s Theatre was never suited to house a library or museum, despite its floors being subdivided with iron bookshelves and museum storage space. The rapidly expanding collections soon exceeded the available storage capacity, and their weight strained the floors nearly to the point of collapse, which they did in 1893, after the Library and Museum had moved out. Even before that terrible incident, Museum and Library staff worked in constant fear that a fire would destroy the collections. Dim lighting came from outdated gas and oil lamps, and the lack of air circulation created dank and stifling work spaces. For Surgeon General Murray, the Library \u2019s location was untenable.<\/p>\n

\"Architecture<\/a>
A set of architectural plans for the new Library and Museum by Cluss & Schulze, dating from around 1885.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

After several years of conceiving building designs and lobbying Congress for funds, Billings embarked on an effort to create a more suitable home for the Library and the Museum. To develop the overall concept of a new building, he referred to his own experiences of surveying Army hospital facilities during the Civil War and working with the trustees of the Johns Hopkins estate to design Johns Hopkins Hospital. Billings consulted with Adolf Cluss, the influential German architect, to shape the form and function of a new building. They designed an elegant and practical four-story structure consisting of two large wings\u2014one for the Army Medical Museum and the other for the Library\u2014connected by a center building that housed offices and workrooms. Constructed of red brick, concrete, and iron, the entire building was effectively fireproof. As a precaution, each wing could be sealed off from the rest of the building to prevent fires from spreading. Light streamed through rows of large windows on the exterior walls, and heat from a steam boiler flowed throughout the air ducts of the building. In the rear courtyard, a small annex held the lavatories and the Army\u2019s pathological and biological laboratory.<\/p>\n