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Special Collections
Collection
Overview | Selected Resources | Research
Guides | Interdisciplinary Elements of Subject
Area | Formats and Types of Materials | Languages
| Geographic Areas (Subject Approach) | Time
Periods (Subject Approach) | Subject Areas Collected
by Library of Congress Classification Number
Alphabetical Listing of Special Collections
Collection
Overview
The
Honorable John J. Burns Library of Rare Books and Special Collections
houses the University's rare books, special collections, and University archives.
It is located in the magnificently appointed, English collegiate
style Bapst Library building, winner of Interiors magazine's
Ninth Annual Award for Restoration (1988). The Burns Library is
home to more than 150,000 volumes, some 15,000,000 manuscripts, and
important collections of architectural records, maps, art works,
newspapers, photographs, films, prints, artifacts, and ephemera.
These materials are housed in the climate-controlled, secure environment
of Burns either because of their rarity or because of their importance
as part of a special collection. While treated with special care,
these resources are available for use to all qualified students,
faculty, and researchers. Visitors are always welcome, and the Library
features an attractive and ambitious exhibits program.
Though
its collections cover virtually the entire spectrum of human knowledge,
the Burns Library has achieved international recognition in several
specific areas of research, most notably Irish studies; British
Catholic Authors; Jesuitana; fine print; Catholic liturgy and life
in America, 1925-1975; Boston history; Caribbeana, especially Jamaican
studies; Balkan studies; and Congressional archives. It has also
won acclaim for its significant holdings in the studies of nursing,
American detective fiction, Thomas Merton, Japanese prints, Colonial
and early Republic Protestantism, and banking.
The
Library is named in memory of the Honorable John. J. Burns (1901-1957),
one of Boston College's most successful and respected alumni. A
1921 graduate of Boston College, John Burns attended Harvard Law
School, where he excelled as a student and as a faculty member,
rising to the rank of full professor in five short years. In 1931,
at the age of 29, he became the youngest member ever appointed to
the Superior Court of Massachusetts. Three years later he was selected
to become the first general counsel for the Securities and Exchange
Commission. He subsequently established a prominent law firm in
Boston and New York. At the time of his death in 1957 he was the
senior partner in the firm of Burns, Currie, Rich & Rice of New
York. He was one of the founding members and moving forces behind
the establishment of the University's special collections. The plaque
at the entrance to Burns bears the following inscription from the
Book of Wisdom that aptly pertains to Judge Burns: Consummatus
in brevi multa explevit tempora. The Burns Library was founded
in 1986 by Brian Burns of San Francisco to honor the memory of his
father.
Robert
K. O'Neill, Ph.D.
Burns Librarian
1-617-552-8297
E-Mail: robert.oneill.1@bc.edu
Selected Resources
In
the Burns Library:
Rare
Books Collection.
The Burns Library houses an impressive array of bound volumes
from thirteenth-century illuminated codices on vellum to special
limited editions of modern press books. Old and/or rare, fragile,
or valuable volumes that do not fit neatly into discrete subject
collections, e.g., Jesuitana, are grouped into the rare books
collection. Rarities include an early fourteenth-century Franciscan
Antiphonary on vellum with the rhymed Offices of St. Francis and
St. Clare, containing an apparently unrecorded 14-stanza sequence
in honor of St. Francis, plus an extremely rare example of Franciscan
polyphony; a beautifully-illuminated Dutch Book of Hours on vellum
with four exquisite miniatures (ca. 1470); a stunning fifteenth-century
French Book of Hours on vellum with 15 large and 14 small miniatures
with foliated borders; more than thirty incunabula or fifteenth-century
printed books, including the 1473 edition of the Decretales
of Pope Gregory IX, printed in Mainz, Germany by Peter Schoeffer;
significant holdings of early modern European and Latin American
imprints, including a first edition of the two-volume Rheims-Douai
Bible (1582, 1609-10); and a number of important facsimiles, including
the Fine Arts facsimile copy of the Book of Kells. Certain of
the Library's most rare and exciting volumes are to be found,
however, as part of discrete subject collections. For example,
the rare and much coveted Mosada of William Butler Yeats,
the poet's first printed book, is part of the Library's renowned
Irish Collection. See also Named
Collections.
Special
Collections
The Burns Library is home to more than twenty special subject
collections ranging from American detective fiction to Japanese
prints. Traditionally, the Library has been especially well known
for its holdings in the areas of British Catholic authors; Irish
history, life, and culture; Fine print; Jesuitana; and Catholic
liturgy and life. In recent years, the Library has developed strong
research collections in the areas of Balkan studies, American
detective fiction, medical ethics, and nursing. The Special
Collections Listing provides brief descriptions of the
following collections, organized alphabetically.
On
the Web:
-
Boston
Gas Company Photographs. 400 images from over 4500 covering
the period from the 1880's through the 1970's. Useful for the
history of Boston as well as of the Company.
-
Liturgy
and Life Artifacts. About 1200 images of objects including
chalices, statuary, medals, crucifixes, rosaries, and vestments.
The database documents public and private devotional life in
the Catholic Church in America prior to the reforms of the Second
Vatican Council.
-
Thomas
P. O'Neill, Jr. Photographs. A selection of over 100
formal and informal poses of Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr., Speaker
of the United States House of Representatives (1977-1986), most
from his years as Speaker.
Research
Guides
A
research guide to Special Collections provides information about accessing the major groups of special collections in the John J. Burns Library.
Interdisciplinary
Elements of Subject Area
The
collections of the John J. Burns Library offer support to researchers
in a wide variety of fields. The Jesuitana Collection, for example,
affords material useful for historians, philosophers, theologians,
Biblical scholars, linguists, students of the fine arts, sociologists,
educators, musicians, dramatists, students of literature, political
scientists and, geographers, among others. The Irish Collection supports
research in drama, music, graphic arts, sculpture, and the book
arts, as well as in literature (Anglo-Irish and Irish), political
science, education, and history. The Williams Collection, as well
as providing resources for studying the history, geography and religion
of the islands of the Caribbean, provides a rich collection for the
folklorist with its collection of Anansi stories. Its nineteenth
and early twentieth century accounts by Europeans of their travels
in Africa offer rich material for the study of colonial attitudes,
a subject of great interest to literary scholars today. The British
Catholic Authors Collections, while affording rich material to the
student of English literature, can be profitably consulted by historians,
political scientists, and sociologists, as well as economists. Graham
Greene's correspondence, ranging over several continents and including
exchanges with literary and political figures ranging from East
Europe to India and Japan, will reward the student of the Cold War
as well as the scholar exploring Greene as a writer of Catholic
novels. The above are only a few examples of the value of the collections
to a wide variety of interdisciplinary studies.
Formats
and Types of Materials
In
addition to printed materials including books, music scores, pamphlets,
broadsides, maps, and engravings, the Burns Library's rare books
and special collections hold manuscripts (ranging from the fourteenth
century to the present) and include correspondence, literary works,
biography, bank ledgers, sketches, liturgical and other religious
manuscripts, and diaries. Other formats present
in the John J. Burns Collections are stained glass, oil paintings, sculpture
in wood, metal, and stone, video and audio tapes, compact discs and
phonograph records, as well as microfilm.
Languages
The
bulk of the John J. Burns Library holdings are in English but there
are substantial holdings in Latin (particularly in the Jesuitana
and Rare Book Collections). Most of the languages of Western Europe
are represented including the Romance languages and German. Romanian
and Bulgarian are also well represented. Other languages include
classical Greek, Hebrew, and Arabic.
Geographic
Areas (Subject Approach)
Substantial
holdings in the John J. Burns collections originate in Great Britain
and Ireland. The continent of Europe is well represented, particularly
in the Jesuitana and Rare Books Collections. The Congressional Archives
Collections as well as the Bostoniana and Detective Fiction Collections,
and Irish American publications provide a substantial number of
publications and manuscripts originating in the United States.
Romania and Bulgaria are also areas of concentration. The Liturgy
and Life Collection focuses on Catholic devotion and spirituality
in the United States. The Morrissey Collection of Japanese prints
offers researchers insight into an aspect of Japan's culture. The
Williams Collection, although most of its imprints are European
or from the U.S., offers researchers material relating to the Caribbean
and Africa, particularly West Africa.
Time
Periods (Subject Approach)
Collections
in the John J. Burns Library date from the fourteenth century to
the twentieth. The Rare Books and Jesuitana Collections provide
substantial holdings for the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth
centuries while the nineteenth and twentieth centuries are well
represented in holdings in other areas.
Subject
Areas Collected by Library of Congress Classification Number
Because
its collections cover such a wide variety of disciplines the John
J. Burns Library covers the entire range of Library of Congress
Classification numbers.
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Alphabetical Listing of Special Collections
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