{"id":12019,"date":"2017-08-04T11:00:24","date_gmt":"2017-08-04T15:00:24","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=12019"},"modified":"2023-07-07T15:44:04","modified_gmt":"2023-07-07T19:44:04","slug":"new-history-of-the-nlm-the-library-in-the-21st-century","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2017\/08\/04\/new-history-of-the-nlm-the-library-in-the-21st-century\/","title":{"rendered":"A New History of NLM: The Library in the 21st Century"},"content":{"rendered":"

By Jeffrey S. Reznick and Kenneth M. Koyle ~<\/em><\/p>\n

This is the final <\/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

Looking to the future has been a common theme in the history of the Library. When Joseph Lovell sent the latest medical journals and texts to the department\u2019s medical officers in the field, he was well aware that such publications would be essential for current and future medical professionals. Interim Surgeon General Benjamin King requested funds to build what would become the core collection of the Library, and Thomas Lawson sought to grow the collection into a legitimate library. When John Shaw Billings was posted to the Office of the US Army Surgeon General in 1865 and put in charge of its small collection of books, he soon envisioned creating the most comprehensive medical collection possible. As the collection grew, Billings realized that it needed to be \u201ccatalogued and open . . . as complete as it can be made\u201d and searchable by subject, which had never before been possible. Over the course of the following century, generations of dedicated public servants\u2014men and women from a variety of backgrounds\u2014brought the vision of John Shaw Billings to reality: the US National Library of Medicine, the largest medical library in the world. Modern leaders of the Library\u2014from Harold W. Jones to Joseph H. McNinch to Frank B. Rogers to Martin M. Cummings\u2014similarly looked forward as they engaged in the era of electronics and computers and what is known today to be the digital era, all to enable individuals across the nation and around the world to discover and easily use the Library\u2019s collection for research, education, and clinical care.<\/p>\n