{"id":12013,"date":"2017-07-27T11:00:28","date_gmt":"2017-07-27T15:00:28","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=12013"},"modified":"2023-07-07T15:40:05","modified_gmt":"2023-07-07T19:40:05","slug":"new-history-of-the-nlm-a-new-name-and-a-new-home","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2017\/07\/27\/new-history-of-the-nlm-a-new-name-and-a-new-home\/","title":{"rendered":"A New History of NLM: A New Name and A New Home"},"content":{"rendered":"

By Jeffrey S. Reznick and Susan L. Speaker ~<\/em><\/p>\n

This is the sixth post in a series of nine<\/a> which serializes the new book<\/em> US National Library of Medicine in the <\/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, including the 170+ black-and-white images which appear in it, is freely available via NLM Digital Collections<\/a>. 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

During the sunny and warm afternoon of June 12, 1959, dignitaries and guests gathered on the campus of the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda to break ground for the new National Library of Medicine. Only a few years earlier, Senators Joseph Lister Hill and John F. Kennedy had introduced a bill to transfer the Library to the US Public Health Service and rename it from the Armed Forces Medical Library, as it had been known since 1952, to the National Library of Medicine. President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the bill into law on August 3, 1956, paving the way for the ground breaking in 1959 and the dedication of the new Library building two and a half years later, on December 14, 1961.<\/p>\n