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U.S. Library of Congress spotlights its American ‘treasures’


More than just books, the U.S. Library of Congress, the largest in the world, is home to objects as diverse as they are symbolic.
| Photo Credit: AFP

The U.S. Library of Congress houses more than just books, with a new exhibit opening this week highlighting some of the institution’s most diverse and symbolic treasures from the nation’s history.

From the contents of Abraham Lincoln’s pockets the night of his assassination to early Spiderman sketches, a hundred treasures from the United States and beyond are on display from June 13.

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The library, located in a vast and elegant building in the heart of Washington, will showcase, for example, the first map of the newly independent United States compiled, printed and published in America by an American, which was printed in 1784 by engraver Abel Buell.

Starting this week, the exhibition “Collecting memories” shows to the public more than 120 of these “treasures”.

Starting this week, the exhibition “Collecting memories” shows to the public more than 120 of these “treasures”.
| Photo Credit:
AFP

Also on hand are jaw-dropping photos of the first atomic explosion in the New Mexico desert, under the eyes of the “father” of the bomb, Robert Oppenheimer.

“The Library of Congress holds more than 178 million items in its collections, perhaps the most comprehensive collection of human knowledge ever assembled in one place,” said its director, Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden.

U.S. Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden

U.S. Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden
| Photo Credit:
AFP

The exhibit, officially titled “Collecting Memories: Treasures from the Library of Congress,” features only a tiny fraction of the institution’s vast troves of millions of books, audio documents and photographs, as well as objects of all kinds, including numerous musical instruments.

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The library, opened in 1800, is home to the largest collection of flutes in the world, says Carol Lynn Ward Bamford, who takes care of instrument collections in the library’s music division.

However, only one is a part of the exhibition, a crystal flute that belonged to former U.S. President James Madison, who lived from 1751-1836.

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The instrument is particularly symbolic because it was saved from the White House when it was burned by British troops in 1814.

A crystal flute from 1813 made for former U.S. President James Madison by Claude Laurent of Paris

A crystal flute from 1813 made for former U.S. President James Madison by Claude Laurent of Paris
| Photo Credit:
AFP

Entrusted to the library by Mr. Madison’s family, it was exceptionally taken out of storage in 2022 to be played by U.S. hip hop star and classically trained flautist Lizzo.

Glasses and press clippings

Also on display are another President’s belongings — Abraham Lincoln’s glasses, his handkerchief and his wallet, recovered from him following his assassination at a theater in April 1865.

The contents of former U.S. President Abraham Lincoln’s pockets on the night he was assassinated on April 14, 1865

The contents of former U.S. President Abraham Lincoln’s pockets on the night he was assassinated on April 14, 1865
| Photo Credit:
AFP

Stephanie Stillo of the library’s rare book division called the objects “definitely some of the most iconic that we’re going to have in the gallery.”

“There’s kind of a mythology around Abraham Lincoln, and this is all very humanizing, I think in many ways. So we have a glasses case, this little circular object up here is a glasses cleaner,” she went on, enumerating other belongings the 16th president had on him.

He was also carrying glowing press articles about himself, which he always kept with him, Ms. Stillo said. These clippings, which are not part of the exhibit for conservation reasons, could be shown in a few months, she explained.

“Universal Camera” (circa 1892), used by groundbreaking female photographer Frances Benjamin Johnston

“Universal Camera” (circa 1892), used by groundbreaking female photographer Frances Benjamin Johnston
| Photo Credit:
AFP

This hodgepodge of objects on display, above all, embodies the lives of ordinary people through the centuries, she said.

From images filmed during a wedding in 1944 to contemporary testimonies about the Covid-19 pandemic to the story of a Japanese professor who survived the bombing of Hiroshima, the library examines how to preserve individual and collective memories.



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