What’s in a Name?

The Adams Building is often a topic of blog posts at Inside Adams and I thought it was time for a post about the building’s various names.

When the Adams Building was opened to the public in 1939 it was called the Annex.  This was its name until 1976 when it was given a new one – the Thomas Jefferson Building. According to John Cole’s Encyclopedia of the Library of Congress, on Jefferson’s birthday (April 13), President Gerald R. Ford signed the bill into law that renamed the Annex to the Thomas Jefferson Building at a ceremony held at the Thomas Jefferson Memorial.

This new name was fitting, because the South Reading Room is a tribute to Thomas Jefferson and was referred to as the Thomas Jefferson Reading Room.  His image is captured in a lunette overlooking the reading room, and his quotes are included in murals dedicated to the themes of freedom, labor, education, and democratic government.

However, this name was short-lived.  A new name change was in the works with the completion of the Madison Building in 1980.  On June 13, 1980 Congress passed a law that changed the names of both of the older existing Library buildings – the main building was named the Thomas Jefferson Building, while our building became the John Adams Building after the 2nd president, John Adams, who signed the law  that established a library for Congress in 1800.

The Terrific Twos!

INSIDE ADAMS IS TURNING TWO! When we launched Inside Adams on October 30, 2009 we became the second official Library of Congress blog- the first was the LC Blog (launched April 2007).  In the two years since we published our first post “…Never be afraid of a book,” the Library has added 5 more official blogs to …

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Pic of the Week: Itzamna

As we near the end of Hispanic Heritage Month, we are featuring Lee Lawrie’s bas-relief of the Mayan deity Itzamna from the Adams building bronze doors (back in September we featured the Mesoamerican deity Quetzalcoatl). The Maya occupied what are now the countries of Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, and El Salvador; and like the other …

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Quetzalcoatl

Artist Lee Lawrie’s figures on the Adams Building bronze doors provide us with an opportunity to highlight important mythical and heroic figures that helped promote the written word. For Asian-Pacific American Heritage Month we highlighted the figure of Brahma. It seems only fitting that for Hispanic Heritage Month we feature the bronze image of the …

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Pic of the Week: Step Right Up and Don’t Be Shy!

This is the Business Reference Desk in the Science & Business Reading Room.   This is where to find us when you are at the Library if you need help searching for company information, trade data, information on a particular industry, or any other business-oriented topic.  But, if you aren’t in the area or can’t come …

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