Country | Canada |
---|---|
Type | Academic library |
Established | 1887 |
Location | Hamilton, Ontario |
Coordinates | 43°15′46″N 79°55′03″W / 43.262836°N 79.917605°WCoordinates: 43°15′46″N 79°55′03″W / 43.262836°N 79.917605°W |
Branches | 3 |
Collection | |
Items collected | books; e-books; journals, newspapers, and other serials; sound recordings, videos, and musical scores; maps;manuscripts and archives. |
Size | 1,933,298 volumes (2013): 1,229,351 books; 510,269 e-books; 88,384 journals, newspapers, and other serials; 59,204 sound recordings, videos, and musical scores; 138,142 maps; 4,453 linear metres manuscripts and archives. |
Other information | |
Budget | C$20,631,665 (all libraries including Health Sciences) |
Director | Vivian Lewis |
Staff | 100 |
Website | library |
McMaster University Library is the academic library system for the faculties of Humanities, Social Sciences, Engineering, Science, as well as the Michael DeGroote School of Business at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. McMaster also has a Health Sciences Library administered by the Faculty of Health Sciences.
McMaster University Library consists of three locations with distinct subject specialities: Mills Memorial Library (Humanities and Social Sciences), Innis Library (Business), and the H.G. Thode Library of Science and Engineering. The University Library also provides library services at McMaster's Ron Joyce Centre in Burlington, Ontario, Canada.
The library was established as part of McMaster University in 1887 and was originally located in McMaster Hall in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. When the university and library moved to Hamilton in 1930, the library resided in University Hall, one of the University’s five original buildings.
In May 1951, the library moved to the newly constructed Mills Memorial Library, named after David Bloss Mills, whose foundation, the Davella Mills Foundation, funded the construction. Mills was extended to the east in stages during the 1960s and 1970s, and underwent a major renovation from 1990-1994.The renovation won the Ontario Library Association 1996 Building Award for Best Academic Library Project. The original Mills Memorial Library building now houses the McMaster Museum of Art.