HOURS | CONTACT US
  
HUL HOME > Orientation >
Welcome Tour, 1 2

"It is our challenge at Howard University to envision the future and to provide the best opportunities for life-long learning, leadership and
service."

H. Patrick Swygert
President, Howard University
  
    
Library
Orientation

  WELCOME TOUR
 
VIRTUAL TOUR
  FOR STUDENTS
  FOR FACULTY

  
  A-Z Index

 

CAMPUS VIRTUAL TOUR

 

Welcome to the
Howard University Library System!     

When Howard University opened in 1867, its library consisted of a small reading room and a few thousand books in the frame building in which classes were held. Today, the University Library System is among the nation's larger academic and research libraries. It consists of a central library group (comprised of the Founders Library/Undergraduate Library and four branch libraries in professional schoolsArchitecture, Business, Divinity, and Social Work); the Moorland-Spingarn Research Center; the Louis Stokes Health Sciences Library; the Law Library; the Ralph J. Bunche International Affairs Center Library; and the Afro-American Studies Resource Center.
        
Together, these facilities contain more than 2.4 million volumes; 12,000 current journal subscriptions; 3.8 million microform pieces; 18,000 manuscripts; and thousands of audio-visual items. Services and traditional collections are greatly enhanced by a rich universe of digital resources and the smart use of information technology.

The Founders Library

The Founders Library, named in memory of the seventeen founders of the University, is the main facility in the University Library System. Opened in 1938, the building was designed by Albert Irvin Cassell (1895-1969), an African American architect from Towson, Maryland.
        
The contiguous Undergraduate Library (UGL) opened in 1983. The Founders Library and UGL house more than half of the books, periodicals, microforms, and other resources held at the University, with comprehensive coverage of disciplines in the behavioral and social sciences, the sciences, engineering, and the arts and humanities.

FIRST FLOOR
 The Browsing Rooma place for quiet study and a meeting room for special events.
 Moorland-Spingarn Research Center
world renowned, non-circulating collection on Africa and people of African descent.
 The Digital Learning Classroom
a computer lab for hands-on library training.
 
Channing Pollock Theatre Collection
a non-circulating collection of materials about the theatre and the performing arts.
 The Howard University Museum
an exhibit of historical documents and artifacts from the Moorland-Spingarn Research Center collections.

SECOND FLOOR
 
Reference Roomprint reference resources and networked facilities to access databases and the Internet. Reference librarians are available to assist you with your research needs. See the Instructional Program.
 Circulation Desk
check out and return books here.
 The Card Catalog and STERLING (the online public catalog, named in memory of Sterling A. Brown) show the holdings of the HU libraries. Use the card catalog for pre-1976 acquisitions; use STERLING for post-1976 purchases.
 Interlibrary Loan Services
borrow books or journals from other libraries.
 
Internet Workstations
access the Web, electronic databases and e-mail.
 Books that may be checked out are located in the stacks. Enter the stacks from the second floor (Stack 5). Follow the signs to go up or down the stairs in the stacks.

THIRD FLOOR
 
The Afro-American Resource Center
a collection of essential materials assembled by the Department of Afro-American Studies.
 
Reference Librarians and Faculty Offices.

^Top    Welcome Tour, Continued »

     HOME | SEARCH / BROWSE | RESEARCH ASSISTANCE | SERVICES | SPECIAL PROGRAMS | ABOUT US  SITE MAP  
© Howard University. All rights reserved.
HOWARD UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES, 500 Howard Place, NW, Washington, DC 20059 - (202) 806-7234
Questions? Comments? - Contacts  - WWW Disclaimer