Books in Tolerable Supply: College Libraries in North Carolina from 1795 to the Civil War
Author
Valentine, Patrick M.
Abstract
Abstract: The historical role of college libraries has seldom been investigated on a regional or state level in the United States, but such studies are valuable in explaining the cultural infrastructure of education and print culture. State and regional studies also set the context for further research on individual libraries and colleges as well as histories on a larger level. This work examines how college libraries developed in North Carolina from 1800 to 1860 and illustrates the growth and ambience of education and print culture during a formative period of the antebellum South.
Subject
Date
2007
Citation:
APA:
Valentine, Patrick M.. (January 2007).
Books in Tolerable Supply: College Libraries in North Carolina from 1795 to the Civil War.
North Carolina Libraries,
65(3/4),
62-
69. Retrieved from
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/1115
MLA:
Valentine, Patrick M..
"Books in Tolerable Supply: College Libraries in North Carolina from 1795 to the Civil War". North Carolina Libraries.
65:3/4. (62-69),
January 2007.
December 11, 2023.
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/1115.
Chicago:
Valentine, Patrick M.,
"Books in Tolerable Supply: College Libraries in North Carolina from 1795 to the Civil War," North Carolina Libraries 65, no.
3/4 (January 2007),
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/1115 (accessed
December 11, 2023).
AMA:
Valentine, Patrick M..
Books in Tolerable Supply: College Libraries in North Carolina from 1795 to the Civil War. North Carolina Libraries.
January 2007;
65(3/4):
62-69.
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/1115. Accessed
December 11, 2023.
Collections
Publisher
East Carolina University; http://www.nclaonline.org/NCL/ncl/NCL_65_3-4_Fall-Winter2007.pdf