Scholars' Lab Blog //Scholars' Lab Speaker Series: Jeremy Dibbell
Blog //Scholars' Lab Speaker Series: Jeremy Dibbell

Scholars’ Lab Speaker Series: Jeremy Dibbell The Libraries of Early America Project: Bringing Historical Libraries to Life with LibraryThing

On December 4, 2012, Jeremy Dibbell, Rare Books and Social Media Librarian for LibraryThing, discussed the Libraries of Early America Project.

Summary: The Libraries of Early America project is an effort to digitize and make widely available the library collections of American readers from the early colonial period through 1825. Using the online book-cataloging site LibraryThing.com, scholars and volunteers from institutions around the country have begun the process of creating an extensive online database of early American libraries. Current subjects include Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Lady Jean Skipwith, James and Mary Murray, and other early American readers (some well-known, others obscure).

The Libraries of Early America collections through LibraryThing allow users to quickly and easily make comparisons between libraries (what books did John Adams and Benjamin Franklin have in common, for example, or what books were most commonly shared among all the Signers of the Declaration of Independence?), and to search collections which may not exist today in physical form or which are spread across multiple institutions and private collections. Further, LibraryThing’s capabilities allow significant data about each book to be added to the record where known: transcriptions of marginalia, information about acquisition of the title, the binding, correspondence about a given book, or even a ink to a digital scan of the volumes (as with the John Adams collection at the Boston Public Library).

So far, data on more than 1,400 early American libraries has been added, with more information constantly being collected and included. I’ll discuss the origins of the project, sources and methods, and future plans and enhancements, focusing on some of the new things we’ll be doing in the future, including a fascinating look at libraries confiscated from Massachusetts loyalists during the American Revolution.

Speaker Bio: Jeremy Dibbell is the Librarian for Rare Books and Social Media at LibraryThing. He received his B.A. from Union College and M.A./M.L.S. degrees in History and Library Science from Simmons College. In the summers, he can generally be found at the University of Virginia’s Rare Book School, assisting with the school’s weeklong courses. Along with the Libraries of Early America project, Jeremy’s at work on a history of books and printing in Bermuda, writes regular columns for “Fine Books & Collections” magazine, and blogs about books and reading at PhiloBiblos. He can be found on Twitter at @JBD1.

As always, you can listen to (or subscribe to) our podcasts on the Scholars’ Lab blog, or on iTunesU.

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Cite this post: Ronda Grizzle. “Scholars' Lab Speaker Series: Jeremy Dibbell”. Published December 20, 2012. https://scholarslab.lib.virginia.edu/blog/scholars-lab-speaker-series-jeremy-dibbell/. Accessed on .