Friday, January 24, 2014

Library of Congress Releases Collection and Services Statistics

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
101 Independence Avenue SE
Washington, DC   20540
Phone:  (202) 707-2905
Fax:  (202) 707-9199
Email:  pao@loc.gov

January 24, 2014

The Library of Congress By the Numbers in 2013

The Library of Congress today released statistics for fiscal year 2013. The daily business of being the world's largest library, home of the U.S. Copyright Office and a supportive agency to the U.S. Congress resulted in the Library adding 2.65 million physical items to its permanent collections, registering more than 496,000 copyright claims and responding to 636,000 congressional reference requests in fiscal year 2013.

Some notable items newly cataloged into the Library's collection include the papers of astronomer Carl Sagan; eight rare U.S. city plans; Pope Clement V's Constitutiones, printed in 1476; the Bob Wolff sports broadcasting collection; the collection of Sharon Farmer, the first woman and the first African American to serve as chief White House photographer; and a list of books that Thomas Jefferson asked newspaper publisher William Duane to buy in Paris for the recently established Library of Congress.

The U.S. Copyright Office registered work in fiscal year 2013 from authors in all 50 states. Grammy Award-nominated songs such as "Locked Out of Heaven," registered in November 2012, by Bruno Mars, and such box-office toppers as  "Iron Man 3," registered in April and "Despicable Me 2," registered in June, were among the nearly half-million novels, poems, films, software, video games, music, photographs and other works submitted.

Reference librarians and Congressional Research Service staff responded to more than 1 million reference requests from patrons both on-site and via phone and email – an average of 4,600 every business day. Researchers sought information this year about World War I, trade data, early exploration of the Americas, household management in the ancient world, the timing of the federal fiscal year, family history and how many languages Thomas Jefferson could speak.

In fiscal year 2013, the Library of Congress …

   ■ Responded to more than 636,000 congressional reference requests and delivered to Congress approximately 23,000 volumes from the Library's    collections;

■ Registered 496,599 claims to copyright;

■ Provided reference services to 513,946 individuals in person, by telephone and through written and electronic correspondence;

■ Circulated more than 25 million copies of Braille and recorded books and magazines to more than 800,000 blind and physically handicapped reader accounts;

■ Circulated more than 1 million items for use within the Library;

■ Preserved more than 5.6 million items from the Library's collections;

■ Recorded a total of 158,007,115 physical items in the collections:

     23,592,066            cataloged books in the Library of Congress classification system

     13,344,477            books in large type and raised characters, incunabula (books printed before 1501), monographs and serials, music, bound  newspapers, pamphlets, technical reports and other print material

   121,070,572            items in the nonclassified (special) collections, including:

       3,530,036      audio materials (discs, tapes, talking books and other recorded formats)

      68,971,722      manuscripts

           5,507,706      maps

        16,816,894      microforms

        1,697,513      moving images (film, television broadcasts, DVDs)

        6,751,212      items of sheet music

      14,472,273      visual materials, as follows:

13,728,116       photographs

    104,879        posters

    639,278        prints and drawings

 3,323,216        other (including machine-readable collections)

■ Welcomed more than 1.6 million onsite visitors and recorded 84 million visits and more than 519 million page-views on the Library's web properties. At year's end, the Library's online primary-source files totaled 45.2 million.

            Founded in 1800, the Library of Congress is the nation's oldest federal cultural institution. The Library seeks to spark imagination and creativity and to further human understanding and wisdom by providing access to knowledge through its magnificent collections, programs, publications and exhibitions. Many of the Library's rich resources can be accessed through its award-winning website at www.loc.gov.

PR 14-009
01/24/14
ISSN 0731-3527



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