World libraries: The Library of Congress puts thousands of books on the US history online

29 December 2009
Source: KAZINFORM

The Library of Congress makes available thousands of books on the US history online, announced the press service of the US Embassy on Dec. 29.  

Nearly 60,000 books prized by historians, writers and genealogists, many too old and fragile to be safely handled, have been digitally scanned as part of the first-ever mass book-digitization project of the U.S. Library of Congress (LOC), the world’s largest library. Anyone who wants to learn about the early history of the United States, or track the history of their own families, can read and download these books for free.

“The Library chose books that people wanted, but that were too old and fragile to serve to readers. They won’t stand up to handling,” said Michael Handy, who co-managed the project, which is called Digitizing American Imprints.

“Many of these books cover a period of Western settlement of the United States — 1865–1922 — and offer historians a trove of information that’s otherwise tough to locate,” he said. Books published before 1923 are in the public domain in the United States because their U.S. copyrights have expired.

These and the other digitized books can be accessed through the Library’s catalog Web site (http://catalog.loc.gov/), and the Internet Archive (IA) (http://www.archive.org/), a nonprofit organization dedicated to building and maintaining a free online digital library.

 “The Library’s collections are of unbelievable scope and depth,” said Internet Archive co-founder Brewster Kahle. “Now, with an Internet connection, you can download, print or bind copies of all these books.”