National Library of Australia
Established | 23 March 1961 |
---|---|
Reference to legal mandate | National Library Act 1960 |
Location | Canberra, ACT |
Coordinates | 35°17′47″S 149°07′46″E / 35.296379°S 149.129448°E |
Collection | |
Items collected | Books, magazines, pictures, photographs, maps, sheet music, manuscripts, websites |
Size | 6.93 million items |
Criteria for collection | Publications made available to the Australian public |
Legal deposit | Digital and hard-copy Australian published materials |
Other information | |
Budget | A$57,800,000 (2015–16) |
Director | Marie-Louise Ayres |
Staff | 400 (2016) |
Website | www |
References: [1][2][3][4] |
The National Library of Australia is Australia's largest reference library. It was started by the National Library Act. The library has to keep and develop a national collection of library material. This includes a broad and complete collection of library material about Australia and the Australian people. It is in Canberra, the capital of Australia.
History
[change | change source]The National Library of Australia, was officially set up with the National Library Act, 1960. It had been working as a National Library, not just a Parliamentary Library, since 1901.
In 1901, a Commonwealth Parliamentary Library was started to help the newly formed Federal Parliament of Australia. From its beginning, the Commonwealth Parliamentary Library began to develop of a truly national collection. In 1907 the chairman of the Joint Parliamentary Library Committee, Sir Frederick Holder, gave the reasons for having the library. Australia should have a great public library, like the famous Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. It would be a home for the literature of the world, for ever.[5]
The library building was opened in 1968.
Collections
[change | change source]The Library's collections of Australian objects has become the nation's single most important collection of materials recording the Australian cultural history. The Library collects Australian materials of all kinds including:
- books
- serials
- newspapers
- maps
- music
- ephemera (small unimportant things that are not usually kept)
- online publications
- unpublished material like manuscripts, pictures and oral histories.
The Library has good collections in the performing arts, including dance. The Library also has big collections of general overseas and rare book materials, as well as world-class Asian and Pacific collections which add to the Australian collections.
The print collections include large collections of microform. The Library keeps the National Reserve Braille Collection. In total, over 5 million items are held. Films and sound recordings are kept in a separate collection run by the National Film and Sound Archive in Canberra.
The Library has digitised over 130,000 items from its collection. The 100,000th was a photo [1]. These digital items can be seen on the Internet. The Library is a world leader in digital preservation techniques.[6] It keeps an Internet archive of selected Australian websites, called the Pandora Archive.
References
[change | change source]- ↑ "NATIONAL LIBRARY ACT 1960 - NOTES". www.austlii.edu.au. Retrieved 31 July 2017.
- ↑ "NLA Annual Report 2015-2016 | National Library of Australia" (PDF). nla.gov.au. Retrieved 25 July 2017.
- ↑ "CDP - How we collect". National Library of Australia. Retrieved 31 July 2017.
- ↑ "National Library of Australia and Surrounds, Parkes Pl, Parkes, ACT, Australia (Place ID 105470)". Australian Heritage Database. Australian Government. Retrieved 22 March 2019.
- ↑ "What We Collect - History of the National Library Collections [to 1980]". www.nla.gov.au. Archived from the original on 2011-06-05. Retrieved 2009-02-21.
- ↑ "PADI - Preserving Access to Digital Information". www.nla.gov.au. Retrieved 2009-02-21.