Browse LA's World Class Libraries

Gutenberg Bible at The Huntington Library | Photo courtesy of The Huntington Library, Flickr

Los Angeles libraries are among the most renowned in the country, featuring incredibly rare editions, important historical archives, and unique collections found nowhere else. Browse these listings and begin your literary journey through some of LA’s best libraries.

 

Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens

The Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens is home to the largest private library in the nation, having surpassed Harvard University in 2010. The Library’s collection of rare books, manuscripts, prints, photographs, maps, and other materials in the fields of British and American history and literature totals more than six million items. Only a tiny portion of this number is on display at any one time, divided between the Main Exhibition Hall and the smaller West Hall. Among the extraordinary items on permanent exhibit: one of only 14 known Gutenberg Bibles in the world; a 15th century edition of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, regarded as one of the very earliest surviving manuscripts of the work; the double-elephant folio edition of Audubon's Birds of America; and an unsurpassed collection of the early editions of Shakespeare's works.

 

Los Angeles Central Library

The Richard Riordan Central Library complex is the third largest public library in the United States in terms of book and periodical holdings. Renamed in 2001 for former Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan, the Central Library is located in Downtown LA in the historic 1926 Goodhue Building, which is a designated Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The Central Library’s Rare Books Department has over 16,000 volumes, dating from the 15th century, with a majority from the 18th and 19th centuries. Core collections include California History, Mexicana, Pacific Voyages, Costumes and more. The Central Library also houses and archives the extensive Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection of over 3 million historic photographs. Many images can be viewed by the public via the online photo collection.

 

Doheny Library and Hoose Library at USC

The Doheny Memorial Library at the University of Southern California (USC) opened in 1932. Located in the center of campus and created as a memorial to Edward L. Doheny Jr. (a USC trustee and alumnus), this landmark building was USC's first freestanding library. The Special Collections numbers 130,000 volumes and includes the American Literature Collection, Cinema Collection, maps, World War II posters and an oral history collection. Also located at USC is Hoose Library, regarded as one of the finest philosophy libraries in the world. Its collection and resources comprise more than 50,000 volumes, with a particularly rich survey of the intellectual history of Western civilization. Hoose Library is housed in the Mudd Hall of Philosophy, a Tuscan-style building with a bell tower that film buffs will recognize as the Notre Dame Cathedral in the 1923 silent movie version of the Hunchback of Notre Dame, starring Lon Chaney.

 

Powell Library at UCLA

The Powell Library Building houses the College Library, the main undergraduate library on the campus of the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). Constructed from 1926 to 1929, Powell Library was one of UCLA’s original four buildings. Like Royce Hall across the quad, the building's exterior is modeled after the Basilica of Sant'Ambrogio in Milan. The College Library provides instructional and supplementary materials including classics, standard works, and textbooks needed by undergraduates in the humanities, the social sciences, and the sciences. Its collection of books and periodicals is specifically designed to meet their study needs. The UCLA library system is among the top 10 academic research libraries in North America and has in its collection over eight million books and 70,000 serials.

 

Ronald Reagan Presidential Library & Museum

Perched atop a hill in Simi Valley with sweeping views of the southland, the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum is one of LA's most beautiful and unique destinations. As a Presidential Library administered by the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), the Reagan Library, under the authority of the Presidential Records Act, is the repository of presidential records for President Reagan's administration. The Library’s holdings include over 60 million pages of documents, over 1.6 million photographs, a half million feet of motion picture film, tens of thousands of audio and video tape, and over 40,000 artifacts.