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Showing posts with label 175th anniversary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 175th anniversary. Show all posts

April 21, 2011

Celebrating Our 175th Anniversary: Video

If you missed our anniversary celebration on Wednesday, April 20, you can now watch videos of it online. 

Birthday cake was served, and Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson read a proclamation by Governor Scott Walker recognizing the library's 175 years of continuous service. During Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson's remarks she noted that "with all the change in location and in everything else relating to libraries, the motto and mission of this library has remained the same: service."

Watch or listen to the event at WisconsinEye: Wisconsin Law Library: 175 Years of Service

NBC15 aired an excellent story on the event on April 20th. You can watch it online: NBC15: Oldest Library

We would like to thank everyone who shared the news and helped us celebrate our 175th anniversary.

April 20, 2011

Wisconsin State Law Library Day

Governor Scott Walker issued a proclamation recognizing the library's 175 years of continuous service. April 20, 2011 has been proclaimed as Wisconsin State Law Library Day throughout the State of Wisconsin.

On April 20, 1836 then President Andrew Jackson signed an Act of Congress creating the Territory of Wisconsin, which included all of present day Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota and parts of North and South Dakota. The final provision in the act appropriated funds for the purchase of law books to support the new territorial government, and so the Wisconsin State Library, as it was first called, was established.

The initial collection consisted of congressional documents and debates and "books of a miscellaneous nature" acquired in Washington and Philadelphia. Its first home was a rented room in Burlington, Iowa. After its first legislative session in Belmont, Wisconsin, the territorial government moved to Burlington to await construction of a capitol building in the newly platted "Town of Madison," the site they chose for the permanent capital. The library moved into the new building at Madison in 1841 and resided there - and in each subsequent capitol building - until 1999, when it once again operated out of temporary quarters during the construction of its current home in the Risser Justice Center, completed in 2002.

"We are very proud and excited to celebrate this special milestone," said Jane Colwin, State Law Librarian.

To celebrate our history we have compiled historical information, photos, and articles in a special section of our website, Celebrating 175 Years of Service: 1836-2011.

April 19, 2011

Oldest Library in WI Celebrates 175 Years of Service

April 20 marks the 175th "birthday" of the Wisconsin State Law Library, the oldest library in the state. Library staff and volunteers have been busily researching their old library catalogs, reading articles about the library's history written by former staff, poring over newspaper clippings at the Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau and sifting through materials in the Wisconsin Historical Society archives in order to compile a more complete history of the library.

On April 20, 1836 then President Andrew Jackson signed an Act of Congress creating the Territory of Wisconsin, which included all of present day Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota and parts of North and South Dakota. The final provision in the act appropriated funds for the purchase of law books to support the new territorial government, and so the Wisconsin State Library, as it was first called, was established.

The initial collection consisted of congressional documents and debates and "books of a miscellaneous nature" acquired in Washington and Philadelphia. Its first home was a rented room in Burlington, Iowa. After its first legislative session in Belmont, Wisconsin, the territorial government moved to Burlington to await construction of a capitol building in the newly platted "Town of Madison," the site they chose for the permanent capital. The library moved into the new building at Madison in 1841 and resided there - and in each subsequent capitol building - until 1999, when it once again operated out of temporary quarters during the construction of its current home in the Risser Justice Center, completed in 2002. More historical highlights are in the interactive timeline the staff has developed on the library's 175th anniversary web page.

Their research has also brought the staff closer to identifying books in the collection that were probably among the first ones acquired back in 1836. "We haven’t been able to locate a list of the books purchased with the $5,000 appropriated by the U.S. Congress as part of the organic act establishing the Territory of Wisconsin," explained Colwin. "But we do have a catalog dated December 1840, and research by one of our volunteers has indicated that most of the books in that catalog were very likely part of the original collection." After some research of her own in the library's rare book room, Colwin agrees. "I found books on this list with 'Wisconsin Library' stamped on the leather bindings and hand-written accession numbers on the inside flyleaves."

Today the Wisconsin State Law Library contains approximately 135,000 volumes and is located in the Risser Justice Center, 120 Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd in downtown Madison. The collection includes Wisconsin and federal statutes, regulations and court opinions, laws of other states, practice guides, legal treatises and journals aimed at the practicing attorney, and public computers with databases providing access to both current and historical legal research materials. The library's web site http://wilawlibrary.gov links visitors to free sources of Wisconsin and federal law, as well as information from legal and government information web sites that library staff has reviewed and categorized into over 400 different topics. The staff answers reference questions (but does not give legal advice), fills requests for copies of library materials, selects, orders and processes library materials, maintains the library's web site, and develops, teaches and presents a wide variety of legal research classes and programs for judges, attorneys, librarians, and the public. The State Law Library also manages the legal resource centers located in the Milwaukee and Dane County courthouses.

February 25, 2011

Celebrating Our History: the 1904 Capitol Fire

This year marks the 175th anniversary of the Wisconsin State Law Library. The following is reprinted from our February newsletter

107 years ago this month, in the early hours of February 27, 1904, a freshly varnished ceiling in the Wisconsin State Capitol building's Assembly Post Office was found ablaze by a night watchman. Even though the Capitol building had "one of the most advanced firefighting systems of the day," the fire would spread during the ensuing hours due in part to the Capitol's water reservoirs on the roof of the university's Main Hall having been drained for cleaning that evening – unbeknownst to anyone at the Capitol.

At that time, the State Law Library was located on the second floor of the Capitol's north wing. Thick smoked filled the building, making the stairways impassable. Students from the nearby University of Wisconsin raised ladders to the windows of the library and, once inside, began throwing books haphazardly out the windows to the snow banks below. Upon seeing this, Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice R. D. Marshall organized the salvage brigade into lines to pass the books hand-to-hand to nearby stores and wagons.

By the following day the fire had been extinguished, and the Library's books were eventually returned to their shelves. According to a later account of the fire, only about 100 volumes were lost in the blaze. Still in our collection, a sample of the surviving volumes is pictured in this post.

To learn more about the Wisconsin State Capitol fire of 1904, read Capitals and Capitols in Early Wisconsin.

Sources:
  • "'Save the books,' was the Cry - The Day State Capitol Burned," Wisconsin State Journal, Dec. 20, 1972.
  • "Capitals and Capitols in Early Wisconsin," by Stanley H. Cravens. Feature article in Wisconsin Blue Book, 1983-1984 edition, pages 48, 50.
  • "State Library Will Be 100 Years Old this April," The Milwaukee Journal, Sunday Jan. 19th, 1936.

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