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Year 7 – 1867: Paul Clifford by Edward Bulwer Lytton

Published: London, 1867 This volume is not a first edition, nor is it part of the Libraries’ rare and special collections. It’s in the open stacks, part of a 19-volume set of the novels of Edward George Earle Lytton Bulwer Lytton, 1st Baron. Though this specific title hasn’t circulated during the past few years, some of Bulwer Lytton’s many other novels are still read on occasion. His Last Days of Pompeii has been filmed repeatedly (and badly) beginning in the silent era and up through the 1980s, when it was turned into a TV miniseries. But if the author is […]

Year 6 – 1866: A Theoretical and Practical Treatise on Midwifery by Pierre Cazeaux

Published: Philadelphia, 1866 “When a book reaches its sixth edition,” we read here, “a preface is hardly needed.”  Still today, the continuous reprinting of a work is often a mark of its enduring value.  When it came to obstetrics in the latter half of the 19th century, both Europeans and Americans turned to Pierre Cazeaux, an unchallenged expert who had served on the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Paris and worked at one of Paris’s largest lying-in hospitals.  As late as 1884, when the seventh American edition of this work was published, The Weekly Medical Review still lauded […]

Year 5 – 1865: The Grammar of Ornament by Owen Jones

Published: London, 1865 Today, we showcase a book that is important for its intellectual and artistic content, and also serves as an outstanding example of the art and technology of colored book illustration. Owen Jones studied architecture, but his real interest was in architectural ornament. Early in his career he was heavily influenced by Egyptian, Turkish, and Moorish aesthetics. His designs for the interior of London’s Christ Church (1842) and, particularly, for the Crystal Palace at the Great Exhibition of 1851, attracted wide attention. The Grammar of Ornament is Jones’ attempt to articulate specific principles of decorative beauty, with a […]

Year 4 – 1864: Testimonies Concerning Slavery by Moncure D. Conway

Published: London, 1864 The Civil War had a major impact on MIT’s early history. On April 10, 1861, Governor John Andrew signed the act of the Massachusetts Legislature establishing the Institute. Exactly two days later Fort Sumter was attacked, and the conflagration began. Of course MIT’s opening would be delayed. But the nightmare at the root of the war – slavery – was already an issue of importance to MIT’s founder, William Barton Rogers. His personal library, now part of the MIT Libraries’ special collections, includes tracts condemning the practice. This particular antislavery volume is inscribed to Rogers by its […]

Year 2 – 1862: Border Lines of Knowledge in Some Provinces of Medical Science: An Introductory Lecture by Oliver Wendell Holmes

Published: Boston, 1862 Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. did it all: doctor, professor, poet, novelist, BFF with Emerson and Longfellow, and 19th century superstar.  He’s remembered for coining the term “anaesthesia,” as well as for noting – before the articulation of germ theory – that doctors themselves could serve as unwitting disease carriers. As an author Holmes was popular and esteemed; his poem “Old Ironsides” is widely credited with saving the USS Constitution from the scrapheap. This is an extended version of a lecture in which Holmes instructs a new Harvard class of doctors-in-training to discard the dangerous, discredited assumptions of […]

Year 1 – 1861: Lives of the Engineers by Samuel Smiles

Published: London, 1861 4 volumes What better way to begin a journey through the library collections at MIT than with Samuel Smiles’ Lives of the Engineers? Smiles himself had no background in engineering; he trained as a physician, and retained a lifelong interest in social reform. As he contemplated the feats of civil engineering that had transformed his native England during the previous 100 years, he saw hope for the betterment of all humankind. And in the engineers who’d designed the canals, highways, bridges, and railroads that erased distance between places as well as between societies, he saw not mere […]

About this project

Welcome to “150 Years in the Stacks” – a look at MIT through the prism of its library collections. Think of this as a tour through the MIT Libraries’ open stacks and offsite storage areas, with a side trip to its closed-stack rare collections and an occasional glimpse into the vault. The MIT Libraries have been around nearly as long as the Institute itself, and now hold over 3 million printed volumes, another 3 million items in other formats, and over 20 million pages of archival material. It goes without saying that we have some very interesting stuff in there. […]