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the Regents, in their interest and variety, exhibit fully this development of the Institution.*

The building occupied by the Institution was completed in the spring of 1855. It is four hundred and twenty-six feet in length, and of irregular width and height. It was erected from the designs of Mr. James Renwick, of New York, and is in the Lombard style of architecture. Its cost, including furniture, is estimated at about three hundred thousand dollars.

The chief acting officer of the Institution is the Secretary, who has the general superintendence of its literary and scientific operations. He is aided by an Assistant Secretary, acting as Librarian." The former office has been held from the commencement by Joseph Henry, late Professor of Natural Philosophy at the College of New Jersey, and author of a valuable series of Contributions to Electricity and Magnetism, published in the American Philosophical Transactions, Silliman's Journal, the Journal of the Franklin Institute, and other similar publications. He was the first to apply the principle of magnetism as a motor, and has made many other valuable contributions to science.

The first Assistant Secretary was Mr. Charles C. Jewett, former Professor of Modern Languages and Literature at Brown University. In his capacity of librarian, he prepared a valuable report on the Public Libraries of the United States of America, which was printed by order of Congress in 1850, as an appendix to the fourth annual report of the Board of Regents of the Institution. He also perfected a system of cataloguing public or other important libraries, by stereotyping separately the title of each work, so that in printing or reprinting, these plates may be used as type, securing both accuracy and

economy.

Professor Spencer F. Baird, editor of the Iconographic Encyclopædia, is now Assistant Secretary, and has been actively engaged in the adjustment of the museum. The exchange of publications and specimens with foreign and domestic institutions, a work involving an immense amount of correspondence and other labor, are also under his care; besides which, he has aided in fitting out the natural history department of nearly all the government exploring expeditions for several years. A report from his pen, "On the Fishes observed on the coasts of New Jersey and Long Island during the summer of 1854," is appended to the Ninth Annual Report of the Institution.

Considerable agitation has arisen in the councils of the Institution and before the public, with respect to the disposition of the funds in the matter of the formation of a large public library. Congress, by the act of 1846, led by the eloquent speech of Rufus Choate the previous year on the subject in the Senate, and the advocacy of George P. Marsh in the House of Representatives, allowed an annual sum for this purpose of twenty-five thou sand dollars. The arrangement of the fund, how

We would particularly refer to the Ninth Annual Report for the year 1864, for a highly interesting exhibition of the practical working of the Institution.

When the Institution was set in motion in 1846, an additional sum of two hundred and forty-two thousand dollars had accrued from interest, which was allowed in the act of

ever, and the views of the managers which have leaned rather to scientific than literary purposes, and promoted expensive schemes of publication have thus far defeated this object. A struggle in the body of the Regents on the library question, and the exercise of discretion in the interpretation of the original act of Congress, has ended in the resignation of the Hon. Rufus Choate, member as citizen of Massachusetts, and the withdrawal of Mr. Charles C. Jewett, the assistant secretary, acting as librarian.*

The whole question is one of much intricacy of detail, involving the method of appropriation of the fund for building and the practical available resources on hand, as well as the theoretical adjustment of the respective claims of literature and science; and the relative advantages of a grand national library, and a system of learned publications.t

THE ASTOR LIBRARY, NEW YORK.

This institution was founded by the late John Jacob Astor of the city of New York, by a bequest which is thus introduced in a portion of his will, dated August 22, 1839: "Desiring to render a public benefit to the city of New York, and to contribute to the advancement of useful knowledge, and the general good of society, I do, by this codicil, appropriate four hundred thousand dollars out of my residuary estate, to the establishment of a public library in the city of New York." To carry out his intentions, he named as trustees the Mayor of the City and Chancellor of the State ex officio; Washington Irving, William B. Astor, Daniel Lord, jr., James G. King, Joseph G. Cogswell, Fitz Greene Halleck, Henry Brevoort, jr., Samuel B. Ruggles, Samuel Ward, jr., and Charles A. Bristed.

The trustees were incorporated by the state legislature in January, 1849. Mr. Washington Irving was immediately after elected President, and Mr.

Joseph G. Cogswell, who had been long engaged in the work, having entered upon it previously to the death of Mr. Astor, was confirmed as superintendent. In the words of the Annual Report to the Legislature for 1853, signed by Mr. Washington Irving: "Mr Astor himself, during his life, had virtually selected Mr. Cogswell for that important post; and it is but due alike to both mainly attributed to the wisdom of that selecto add, that the success of the library must be

tion."

Congress for building purposes, leaving the income of the original sum, about thirty thousand dollars a year, for the sup port of the establishment. To increase this fund, a portion of the accumulated interest has been added to the principal, and gradual appropriations made for the buildings. Under this plan the objects of the Institution are somewhat delayed, but its income will hereafter be increased, it is calculated, by some ten thousand dollars per annum.

Since the retirement of Mr. Jewett, the library has been placed temporarily under the charge of Mr. Charles Girard, a former pupil of Professor Agassiz, who is engaged on a catalogue of the publications of learned societies and periodicals in the library, the first part of which is published în Vol vii of the Contributions.

We may refer for the arguments on this subject to the majority and minority reports in 1854, of the Hon. James A. Pearce and the Hon. James Meacham of the Special Committee of the Board of Regents on the Distribution of the Income. An article in the North American Review for October, 1554, by Mr. Charles Hale, gives the views of the "library” party.

The Astor Library.

A site

By the terms of the bequest, seventy-five thousand dollars were allowed for the erection of the library building; one hundred and twenty thousand for purchasing books and furniture; while the remaining two hundred and five thousand dollars were to be invested "as a fund for paying the value of the site of the building, and for maintaining and gradually increasing the said library, and to defray the necessary expenses of taking care of the same, and of the accommodation of persons consulting the library." for the building was to be chosen from property of the testator on Astor or Lafayette Place. The selection was made from the latter, a plot of ground, sixty-five feet in front and rear, and one hundred and twenty feet in depth. Twenty-five thousand dollars were paid for this ground. The corner-stone of the building was laid in March, 1850; the whole was completed for the prescribed sum in the summer of 1853. The following extract from the Report for that year exhibits some interesting details of the excellent financial management which has attended this undertaking.

An additional expenditure of $1590, for groined arches, which became desirable to render the building more secure from fire, was liberally borne by Mr. William B. Astor. It was not practicable to include in this $75,000, sundry items of expense for equipping the building, including apparatus for warming, ventilating, and lighting, and the shelves needed for the books. The running length of the shelves is between twelve and thirteen thousand feet, and they have cost $11,000. The aggregate of these various items of equipment is $17,141.99. It has been paid mainly by surplus interest accruing from the funds while the building was in progress, amounting to 16,000.53, and the residue by a premium of $3672.87, which was realized from the advance in value of U. S. stocks, in which a part of

the funds was temporarily invested; so that, after paying in full for the building and its equipments, the fund of $180,000 not only remains undiminished, but has been increased $2530.88. It is wholly invested in mortgages, except $3500 in U. S. stock, charged at par, but with 122 per cent. in market. There is no interest in arrear on any of the mortgages.

The statement with regard to the library fund is equally satisfactory.

Of the fund of $120,000, especially devoted to the purchase of books, the trustees cannot state with entire precision the amount expended up to December 31, 1853, for the reason given in the treasurer's report, that several of the bills and accounts yet remain unliquidated. He states, however, the amount actually advanced by him to be $91,513.83, and he estimates the unsettled bills at $4500, making $96,113.83 in all. This will leave an unexpended balance of $23,886.17 applicable to the further purchases of books, in addition to that part of the income of the $180,000 to be annually devoted to the gradual increase of the library. The number of volumes now purchased and on the shelves is about 80,000. The superintendent states that the expen diture of the remaining $23,886.17 will probably increase the number to one hundred thousand.

It is seldom that the collection of books of a public library is made with equal opportunities, and with equal ability and fidelity. From the outset the work has been systematically undertaken. The superintendent began his labors with the collection of an extensive series of bibliographical works provided at his own cost, and which he has generously presented to the library. While the building was in progress, Mr. Cogswell was employed in making the best purchases at home and abroad, visiting the chief book marts of Europe personally for this object. When the building, admirably adapted for its purpose, by its light, convenience, elegance, and stability, was ready, a symmetrical collection of books had been prepared for its shelves. The arrangement follows the classification of Brunet, in his "Manuel du Libraire." Theology, Jurisprudence, the Sciences and Arts (including Medicine, the Natural Sciences, Chemistry and Physics, Metaphysics and Ethics, the Mathematics, and the Fine Arts, separately arranged); Literature, embracing a valuable linguistic collection, and a distinct grouping of the books of the ancient and modern tongues; History, with its various accessories of Biography, Memoirs, its Civil and Ecclesiastical divisions and relations to various countries-follow each other in sequence.

To these divisions is to be added "a special technological department, to embrace every branch of practical industry and the mechanic arts," generously provided for at an expense of more than twelve thousand dollars, by a gift from Mr. William B. Astor.

With respect to the extent of the use of the library, we find the following interesting statement in the Annual Report of the Superintendent, dated Jan. 1855.

One hundred volumes a day is a low average of the daily use, making the whole number which have been in the hands of readers since it was opened about 30,000, and as these were often single volumes of a set of from two to fifty volumes, it may

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be considered certain that more than half of our whole collection has been wanted during the first year. But this is a matter in which numerical statistics do not afford much satisfaction; nothing short of a specification of the books read or consulted would show the importance which the library is to the public, as a source of information and knowledge, and as this cannot be given, a more general account must serve as a substitute. On observing the classes and kinds of books which have been called for, I have been particularly struck with the evidence thus afforded of the wide range which the American mind is now taking in thought and research; scholastic theology, transcendental metaphysics, abstruse mathematics, and oriental philology have found many more readers than Addison and Johnson; while on the other hand, I am happy to be able to say, that works of practical science and of knowledge for every-day use, have been in great demand. Very few have come to the library without some manifestly distinct aim; that is, it has been little used for mere desultory reading, but for the most part with a specific view. It would not be easy to say which department is most consulted, but there is naturally less dependence upon the library for books of theology, law, and medicine, than in the others, the three faculties being better provided for in the libraries of the institutions especially intended for them. Still, in each of these departments, the library has many works not elsewhere to be found. It is now no longer merely a matter of opinion; it is shown by experience that the collection is not too learned for the wants of the public. No one fact will better illustrate this position than the following: in the linguistic department it possesses dictionaries and grammars, and other means of instruction in more than a hundred languages and dialects, four-fifths of which have been called for during the first year of its operation. Our mathematical, mechanical and engineering departments are used by great numbers, and they are generally known to be so well furnished, that students from a distance have found it a sufficient object to induce them to spend several weeks in New York to have the use of them. The same remark applies to natu

ral history, all branches of which are studied here In entomology we are said to have the best and feilest collection in this country to which naturalist have free access. Passing to the historical side of the library we come to a department in which a very general interest has been taken-far more general than could have been anticipated in our country-it is that of heraldry and genealogy. Among the early purchases for the library there were but few books of this class, as it was supposed but few would be wanted; a year or two's experi ence proved the contrary, and the collection has been greatly enlarged; it is now sufficiently ample to enable any one to establish his armorial bearings and trace his pedigree at least as far back as the downfall of the Western empire. From this rapid glance at the library, it has been seen that there are students and readers in all departments of it, and that no one greatly preponderates over the rest; stil I think it may be stated, that on the whole that of the fine arts, taken collectively, is the one which has been most extensively used; practical architects and other artists have had free access to it, many of whom have often had occasion to consult it.

The arrangements of the library afford every requisite facility for the consultation of these books. It is open to visitors from all parts of the country or the world, without fee or special introduction. All may receive the benefit of its liberal endowment. It is simply to open the door, ascend the cheerful stairway to the main room, and write on a printed form provided the title of a desired volume. As every day finds the library richer in books, and a system of special catalogues by departments is in preparation, creating new facilities in the use of them, the visitor will soon, if he may not already, realize the prediction of Mr. George Bancroft, "of what should and must become the great library of the Western Continent." We could, at the close of our long journey in these volumes, wish for no more cheerful omen of the bountiful literary future.

THE END

INDEX.

[The capitals indicate the longer biographical articles, which may be consulted for the detailed account of the persons referred to.
The names in italics indicate the selections.]

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Adams, Miss Abigail, correspondence of, 1. 185.
Adams, Mrs. Abigail, letters by, i. 188.

Remarks on execution of Marie Antoinette, i.
189.

Adams, Charles Francis, edition of John Adams's
Diary, i. 184.

Edition of letters of John Adams to his wife, i
185.

Memoir of Mrs. Abigail Adams, i. 185.

ADAMS, HANNAH, 1. 408.

ADAMS, JOHN, i. 184.

Admires the French ladies, i. 188.
Choice of Hercules, the, i. 186.

Compliment by, to Mercy Warren, i. 163.
Correspondence with Cunningham, i. 625.
Correspondence with Jefferson, i. 241.
Description of the morning, i. 187.
Disputes between military officers, i. 188.
Letter on John Quincy Adams to Benjamin
Waterhouse, i. 556.

Letter to, on his election to the Presidency, by
Mrs. Adams, i. 189.

Notice of Aaron Bancroft, i. 407.

Notice of Berkeley's lines on America, i. 169.
Notice of the College of New Jersey, i. 273.
Notice of Common Sense, i. 198.
Notice of John Dickinson, i. 183.

Notice of Duché's prayer in the Continental
Congress, i. 220.

Notice of P. Du Simitière, i. 178.

Notice of J. Galloway, i. 172.

Notice of Francis Hopkinson, i. 211.

Notice of T Paine's claims in the American Re-
volution, i. 198.

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Adams, William, discourse on Prof. Stuart, ii. 20.
Address of the New York Convention. John Jay,
i. 263.

Addresses and Speeches by R. C. Winthrop, ii. 501.
ADLER, GEORGE J., ii. 735.

Adulator, the, by Mercy Warren, i. 163.
Advent, Church of the, ii. 394.

Advice to Authors. Philip Freneau, i. 336.
Advice to a Raven in Russia. Joel Barlow, i. 397.
Affection, a poem. Susanna Rowson, i. 503.
Agathangelus, passage from. Increase Mather, i. 59.
Age, intellectual delight of. James Logan, i. 78.
Age of Reason by Thomas Paine, i. 199.
Agriculture, Washington's letters on, i. 180.
AINSLIE, HEW, ii. 160.

Ainsworth, Henry, notice of, i. 16.

Airs of Palestine, specimens of. John Pierpont,

ii. 72.

Aitken, Robert, account of, 1. 198.

Al Aaraaf, by Edgar A. Poe, i. 537.

Alciphron, G. Berkeley's, written at Newport, i.

167.

ALDRICH, JAMES, ii. 499.

Alethia, the Tragedy of, by M. M. Davidson, ii. 483.
Alexander, A., History of the Log College, i. 272.
Alexander, A. (of Phila.), i. 128.

ALEXANDER, ARCHIBALD, i. 614.

Account of S. S. Smith, i. 274.

Lines on J. Beveridge, i. 129.
Notice of Samuel Miller, 1. 569.

Alexander, Caleb, 1. 306.

Alexander, James W. 1. 615.

Description of Jonathan Edwards's preaching,
i. 95.

On J. Witherspoon, i. 276.

Projects a Commentary on the Scriptures, ii. 268.
Alexander, Joseph A., i. 615.
Alexander, Stephen, i. 274.
Alexander, William, i. 614.

Alexander meets Darius, poem. Anne Bradstreet,

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744

Algerine Captive, by Royal Tyler, i. 416.

Passages from. Royal Tyler, i. 418.
Algerine Captives, treatment of, i. 609.

Algic Researches, by Henry R. Schoolcraft, ii. 152.
Alhambra, by Washington Irving, ii. 49.

Ali Bey, Travels of, by S. L. Knapp, ii. 62.

Alison, A., Abridgment of his History of Europe, by
E. S. Gould, ii. 468.

ALISON, FRANCIS, i. 389.

School in Maryland, i. 170.

Allan, John, a friend of Edgar A. Poe, ii. 536.
ALLEN, ETHAN, i. 206.

Lines on. Lemuel Hopkins, i. 319.
Noticed in Graydon's Memoirs, i. 353.

Allen, Ira, i. 208.

Donation of land to University of Vermont, ii.

129.

ALLEN, JAMES, i. 235.

ALLEN, PAUL, i. 643, ii. 80, 162.

Allen, William, President of Bowdoin, ii. 193.

Anecdote of Lemuel Hopkins, i. 321.
Character of Samuel Hopkins, i. 150.

Alice, by J. V. Huntington, ii. 611.
ALLSTON, WASHINGTON, ii. 12.

Belshazzar's Feast. Cyrus A. Bartol, ii. 616.
Lectures on, by William Ware, ii. 175.

Almanac, American, i. 665, ii. 166.

Almanac Maker, The. Philip Freneau, i. 343.

Almanac, New England, by Isaiah Thomas, 1. 302.

Almanac, Poor Richard's, i. 108.

Alpine Sheep, the. Maria Lowell, ii. 660.

ALSOP, JOHN, i. 497.

ALSOP, RICHARD, 1. 495.

Notice of, by E. H. Smith, i. 601.

America, benefits to, of our National Literature.

Edward Everett, ii. 171.

Berkeley's verses on Arts and Learning in, i.

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Independence of, foreseen, by Ezra Stiles, i. 159.
H. H. Bracken-
Prophecy of the greatness of
ridge, i. 298.

Prophecy of, by Sir Thomas Browne, i. 169.

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ii. 318.
Annoyer, the.

N. P. Willis, ii. 441.

Prophecy of religion in, by George Herbert, i. Anthology Club, ii, 268.

169.

Prophecy of, by Bp. Shipley, 1. 169.

Relations of, to France and Great Britain in
1808. J. S J. Gardiner, i. 535.

Rising glory of, by H H. Brackenridge and P.
Freneau, i. 289, 327.

To Great Britain. Washington Allston, ii. 16.
AMERICAN ACADEMY OF ARTS, 1. 664.

Annals, by Abiel Holmes, 1. 513.
ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY, 1. 302.

Mather alcove in the library of the, i. 62.
Bards, a satire, by Robert Waln, ii. 257.
Biography, by S. L. Knapp, ii. 62.

Biography, by Jared Sparks, ii. 166.

Colonies, isolation of, a promotion of democracy,

G. W. Burnap, ii. 351.

Democrat, by J. F. Cooper, ii. 110.

Farmer's Pleasures. Hector St. John, i. 174.
Flag, the. J. R. Drake, ii. 207.

Governors, memoirs of, by J. B. Moore, ii. 326.
i. 198.
Independence, verses on,

In England, by A. S. Mackenzie, ii. 361.
Life, round of. Timothy Dwight, i. 363.
Literature, history of, proposed by John Neal,

ii. 163.

ANTHON, CHARLES, i. 385.
Anthon, John, ii. 355.

Anti-Lucretius, of Cardinal de Polignac, i. 110.
Antioch College, ii. 224.

Antiquity, close of. Samuel Eliot, ii. 699.
Anti-rent novels, by J. F. Cooper, ii. 112.

Ape, the travelled. Timothy Dwight, i. 362.
Aphorisms. Joseph Bartlett, i. 508.
Apology, the. R. W. Emerson, ii. 368.
Appeal, by R. Walsh, ii. 38.

Appleton, the Rev. Jesse, President of Bowdoin, i

193.

Application of Redemption, passage from. Thomas

Hooker, i. 25.

Approach of Age, the. James Lawson, ii. 281.
Apthorpe, East, i. 144.

Archæologia Americana, i. 303.

Archdale, John, New Description of Carolina, 1707,

i. 131.

Arctic Incidents. E. K. Kane, ii. 698.
Arcturus, ii. 640, 646.

Ariadne. Sara J. Lippincott, ii. 686.
ARMSTRONG, JOHN, i. 480.

Army assembled at New Amsterdam. Washing
ton Irving, ii. 57.

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