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The College Moves Salisbury House Library Collection to Campus

Aug 30, 2019

The College has acquired and moved the Des Moines Salisbury House’s library collection of nearly 5,000 rare books and historic documents to Burling Library.

Among the rare items in the collection are:

  • A leaf from the original printing of the Gutenberg Bible in 1455
     
  • Galley proofs of Tales Told of Shem and Shaun, the working title of Finnegans Wake, with handwritten edits by James Joyce; and a 1935 limited edition of Joyce’s Ulysses with original illustrations by Henri Matisse
     
  • Signed books and documents by King Louis XVI and the Marquis de Lafayette, Queen Elizabeth I, John Hancock, Joshua Reynolds, Abraham Lincoln, Ulysses Grant, Cardinal Richelieu, Walt Whitman, Mark Twain, and many other renowned individuals
     
  • The Kelmscott Chaucer, printed on handmade paper by Kelmscott Press in 1896, which contains many of Geoffrey Chaucer’s works and 87 woodcut illustrations by Victorian painter Edward Burne-Jones
     
  • Correspondence between Salisbury House owner and builder Carl Weeks and prominent authors such as D. H. Lawrence and Ernest Hemingway

“It is important to 鶹ý and the Salisbury House Foundation board that this important collection remain in Iowa, so we are very pleased to house it in our Special Collections and Archives. The College will safeguard the integrity of the collection and make its contents more accessible to researchers, faculty, students and the general public,” says Mark Christel, Samuel R. and Marie-Louise Rosenthal Librarian.

In addition, the College will perform any needed preservation work, catalog the entire collection, and begin to digitize unique items from the collection. The College is hiring a project archivist for a three-year term appointment who will assist with integrating and managing the new collection.

The College Will Greatly Expand Access to The Collection

“We intend for the collection to foster a richer partnership between 鶹ý and the Salisbury House,” Christel adds. “In the next few months, the College will provide Salisbury House with a new archival-quality display case and a digital kiosk for its library that will enable visitors to view highlights of the collection on site. During events such as Salisbury House’s annual Shakespeare on the Lawn productions, for example, visitors to the historic home could view Shakespeare’s Second Folio in the display case and peruse the folio’s digitized pages of the featured play on the digital kiosk.”

“Salisbury House guests will have access to the Weeks family’s library collection that was never before possible,” says Kit Curran, executive director of Salisbury House and Gardens. “The archival-quality case and digital display 鶹ý College is providing to Salisbury House will add an exciting, interactive and educational tool for our guests. They will be able to experience the magic contained in the words and illustrations inside the book covers.”

New Collection Adds Treasures to Library Holdings

The addition of the Salisbury House collection has doubled the College’s collection of books published from 1450 to 1500, says Special Collections Librarian and Archivist Chris Jones.

“The Salisbury collection contains books from so many eras that they demonstrate the evolution of book publishing in the West over hundreds of years,” Jones adds. “For example, there are books from the 1400s that don’t have a title page because the title page had not been invented yet.

“We also have a volume in Latin by Thomas Aquinas titled Catena aurea super quattuor evangelistas that was published in 1475. This hand-decorated oversized book is 18 inches tall with back and front covers made from pieces of wood. That’s why the front and back covers of books are now referred to as boards.”

Integrating the Collection into Classes, Research

Faculty members are starting to explore the collection in hopes of incorporating elements of it into their classes and research.

“There are so many rare – and even one-of-a-kind – treasures in this collection that, on a first visit, one flits from book to book like a butterfly after nectar in a field of flowers,” says Jon Andelson ’70, professor of anthropology and director of the Center for Prairie Studies. “The potential uses of the collection by students and faculty are literally endless. The College is extremely fortunate to have acquired it.”

Andelson noted the collection contains many volumes about American Indians and the West, which he can use in his anthropology classes, as well as some rare religious imprints, which he may employ in his course about religion.

Sarah Purcell ’92, chair of the history department and L.F. Parker Professor of History, says she looks forward to delving into the collection.

“I have worked with librarians to use 鶹ý College Special Collections as a laboratory for many different classes, and these new additions to our collection will add a huge dimension to student learning about technology, printing, books, popular culture, and so much more,” Purcell says.

“Students get to perform hands-on investigation on very rare books to learn about the intellectual and material development of knowledge over the past five centuries,” she adds. “Nothing beats working with the real thing, and these additions to the collection really enhance student learning at 鶹ý.”


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