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Library Company of Philadelphia

Ask    Welcome to the Library Company of Philadelphia's Tumblr page! Founded by Ben Franklin in 1731, we are an independent research library specializing in American history and culture from the 17th through the 19th centuries. This page highlights materials from LCP's extensive collection of rare books, manuscripts, broadsides, ephemera, prints, photographs, and works of art.

We are very much enchanted with this painted vellum binding (and those block printed pastedowns!)

Binding on: Neu-vermehrt-und vollstandiges Gesang-buch. Marburg; Frankfurt: Bey Henrich Ludwig Bronner,1785

— 2 years ago with 149 notes
#BensLibrary  #LCPrarebooks  #SpecialCollections  #Bookbinding  #bindingappreciationpost  #18thcentury  #hearteyes 
By the late 19th century, many African Americans had been elected to public offices in the United States and become community activists. This print commemorates the prominent men who were representatives of the advancement of African American civil...

By the late 19th century, many African Americans had been elected to public offices in the United States and become community activists. This print commemorates the prominent men who were representatives of the advancement of African American civil rights, including Frederick Douglass, senators Blance Kelso Bruce and Hiram Revels from Mississippi, John Brown, and Charles Edmund Nash.

-Jasmine Smith, African American History Subject Specialist. 

Image: Heroes of the colored race [graphic]. Philadelphia: Published by J. Hoover, c1881. Chromolithograph, hand-colored; 56 x 77 cm.

— 2 years ago with 19 notes
#BensLibrary  #LCPprints  #BHM  #LibraryBlackHistory  #BlackHistoryMonth  #LibrariesofInstagram  #ig_libraries  #VOTE 
Happy Mardi Gras! All this festive scene is missing is some king cake!
[Academy of Music trade card] (Philadelphia: 1881). Chromolithograph.
Image depicts several men, a woman, a cherub, and two butterflies celebrating Mardi Gras.

Happy Mardi Gras! All this festive scene is missing is some king cake! 

[Academy of Music trade card] (Philadelphia: 1881). Chromolithograph. 

Image depicts several men, a woman, a cherub, and two butterflies celebrating Mardi Gras. 

— 2 years ago with 19 notes
#BensLibrary  #LCPprints  #SpecialCollections  #IGLibraries  #librariesofinstagram  #MardiGras 
#OnThisDay in 1840, John Quincy Adams began to argue the case of the Amistad in front of the U.S. Supreme Court. The Amistad was a Spanish slave ship bound for Cuba which experienced a mutiny at the hands of the kidnapped Africans who were on board....

#OnThisDay in 1840, John Quincy Adams began to argue the case of the Amistad in front of the U.S. Supreme Court. The Amistad was a Spanish slave ship bound for Cuba which experienced a mutiny at the hands of the kidnapped Africans who were on board. The rebellion led to a series of trials, during which the fate of those who were doomed to be sold into slavery was in question. Quincy eventually convinced the Court to rule in favor of sending the captives back to Mende (which is present-day Sierra Leone).  

Pictured here is a bust-length portrait of Sarah Margru Kinson Green. Green, a child captive onboard the Amistad slave ship and eventually returned to the United States to study at Oberlin College. 

Green, Sarah Margru Kinson (New York, ca. 1850). Engraving. 

— 2 years ago with 29 notes
#BensLibrary  #LCPprints  #BHM  #LibraryBlackHistory  #BlackHistoryMonth  #LibrariesofInstagram  #ig_libraries 
Happy #FinisFriday from this garlanded ram. #27daysuntilSpring
From: Wisdom in Miniature. Worcester: Thomas, Son and Thomas, 1796.

Happy #FinisFriday from this garlanded ram. #27daysuntilSpring 

From: Wisdom in Miniature. Worcester: Thomas, Son and Thomas, 1796.

— 2 years ago with 37 notes
#BensLibrary  #LCPrarebooks  #specialcollections  #18thcentury  #princessleiabuns  #27daysuntilSpring  #FinisFriday 
Last week our friends over at the American Antiquarian Society posted about their love of variants, so we thought we would, too. We think this clutch of binding variants (all embossed leather!) for the 1842 Rose of Sharon is *chef kiss*

Last week our friends over at the American Antiquarian Society posted about their love of variants, so we thought we would, too. We think this clutch of binding variants (all embossed leather!) for the 1842 Rose of Sharon is *chef  kiss* 

— 2 years ago with 140 notes
#BensLibrary  #PublishersBindingThursday  #bookbinding  #LCPrarebooks  #specialcollections  #varietyisthespiceoflife  #whichoneoftheseisnotliketheothers 
The ratification of the 15th Amendment gave African American men the right to vote. However, several southern states took extreme measures to legalize poll taxes and literacy tests to discourage them from doing so. In response, broadsides such as...

The ratification of the 15th Amendment gave African American men the right to vote. However, several southern states took extreme measures to legalize poll taxes and literacy tests to discourage them from doing so. In response, broadsides such as this one were published to express the importance of exercising the right to vote.  

This broadside from L. W. West reassures African American men that their votes matter and that voting will help them gain respect in the United States and abroad:

“Colored voters of Savannah; the time has come when we as voters and property owners must assert our manhood, if we have any, if not close your mouths and stop clamoring about your Rights…Go and perform that important duty at once and then don’t allow yourselves to be bought and sold as cattle or as you were once when under the yoke of bondage.”

-Jasmine Smith, African American History Subject Specialist

Image: West, L. W. Address to the colored men! of Savannah, Georgia. Savannah: Savannah Echo Print, [1880?]. 1 sheet; 23 x 15 cm.

— 2 years ago with 18 notes
#BensLibrary  #LibraryBlackHistory  #BlackHistoryMonth  #BHM  #Vote  #LibrariesofInstagram  #IG_Libraries 
How we’re charging into the week!
O.E. Kirchhoff, photographer (Philadelphia, ca. 1880). Chromolithograph.
Image depicts a child riding on the back of a rabbit and holding up a sign reading “Lead, but never follow”.

How we’re charging into the week!


O.E. Kirchhoff, photographer (Philadelphia, ca. 1880). Chromolithograph.


Image depicts a child riding on the back of a rabbit and holding up a sign reading “Lead, but never follow”.  

— 2 years ago with 46 notes
#BensLibrary  #LCPprints  #SpecialCollections  #iglibraries  #librariesofinstagram 
Happy Presidents’ Day! The Library Company is closed but will reopen to the public tomorrow, February 18th.
Mason Lange, Columbia’s Noblest Sons (New York: Kimmel and Forster, 1865). Lithograph.
Image depicts portraits of George Washington and...

Happy Presidents’ Day! The Library Company is closed but will reopen to the public tomorrow, February 18th.

Mason Lange, Columbia’s Noblest Sons (New York: Kimmel and Forster, 1865). Lithograph.

Image depicts portraits of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln surrounded by scenes from their respective presidencies. The allegorical figure, Columbia, stands in the center of the image.    

— 2 years ago with 8 notes
#BensLibrary  #LCPprints  #SpecialCollections  #IGLibraries  #librariesofinstagram 

Thomas Peterson-Mundy became the first African American to cast a ballot in the United States, one day after the ratification of the 15th Amendment, in Perth Amboy, N.J. 

On May 30, 1884, he received a medal in commemoration of his courage to exercise his right of suffrage. The two-sided medal had an image of Abraham Lincoln and an inscription that read: 

“Presented by citizens of Perth Amboy, N. J., to Thomas Peterson, the first colored voter in the United States under the Fifteenth Amendment, at an Election held in that city, March 31st, 1870.” 

- Jasmine Smith, African American History Subject Specialist


History and proceedings attending the presentation of a medal to Thomas Peterson-Mundy, Decoration Day, May 30th, 1884, in the city of Perth Amboy, N.J.: in commemoration of his having been the first colored citizen in the United States to cast a vote under the Fifteenth Amendment. Perth Amboy, N.J.: The Middlesex County Democrat Print., 1884.

— 2 years ago with 26 notes
#BlackHistoryMonth  #BHM  #BlackLibraryHistory  #FifteenthAmendment  #Vote  #BensLibrary  #LCPrarebooks  #LibrariesofInstagram