History of the John Henrik Clarke Africana Library
Reprinted from: Black Caucus of the ALA Newsletter, vol. XXIV, No. 5 (April, 1996), p. 11.
The John Henrik Clarke Africana Library is a special
library located within Cornell University's Africana Studies and Research
Center. The library is one of nineteen units of the University Library
system, and offers a full range of services. Its collection of [21,100]
volumes focuses on the social and political dimensions of the history
and culture of peoples of African ancestry. It supports the curriculum
of the Africana Studies and Research Center and sustained, independent
study. Included here are basic books, complete collections of works
of important writers, and highly selective research materials that complement
the collections housed in Cornell University's research libraries. The
Africana Library's documentation collection contains valuable primary
source materials, including copies of rare monographs, manuscripts,
newspapers, and journal publications on microfilm and microfiche. Those
resources focus on especially important material on the American civil
rights and Black Power movements.
The Africana Center was founded in 1969 following black student protests
on the Cornell Campus. One notable event involved black students depositing
hundreds of books at the undergraduate library circulation desk and
denouncing them as irrelevant to their experiences. Historically, the
faculty of the Africana Studies and Research Center has always had a
strong commitment towards maintaining its own library. The Africana
Center included a library when it was first established. Later, after
its building was destroyed by arsonists (April 1, 1970), it garnered
funds from the university and local community to replace materials lost
from its library collection. Once it relocated to its present site the
library was prominently established near the building's entrance.
In the late 1970s there was heated debate on campus about relocating
the Africana Center once more. Because it's location was some distance
away from central campus (approximately 20 minutes walking time) and
many of its courses were taught at the Center, some considered the Africana
Studies program too segregated. A number of more central locations were
proposed for relocation. In the end these were rejected because they
entailed substantial reductions in space. Ultimately, the Center's fledgling
library benefited from this consequence. A reduction in space would
have affected collection size and overall growth.
During 1984-85 the Africana Center and University Library reached an
agreement to transfer the library administratively to the University
Library. Faculty of the Africana Studies & Research Center named
the library in honor of Dr. John Henrik Clarke during the summer of
1985. As a distinguished historian, Dr. Clarke was instrumental in establishing
the Africana Center's curriculum in the 1970s and taught courses in
black history at Cornell. Several years later, in 1990, the Africana
Center and University Library collaborated to raise $50,000 to renovate
the library's space and enhance the overall level of service. The John
Henrik Clarke Africana Library now occupies most of the lower level
of the Africana Center's three-story building. A third of this space
is shared with a graduate student lounge and a computer lab. All of
the library's holdings are included in the University Library's online
catalog, and the Africana Library itself houses several online catalog
terminals, a circulation terminal, CD-ROM and various audio-visual equipment,
and has access to numerous locally networked bibliographic databases.*
*Note: The Africana Library has a new location which opened its doors in January 2005. For information on this location, visit: http://www.library.cornell.edu/africana/library.html.



