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GENERAL SOCIETY OF MECHANICS AND TRADESMEN LIBRARY

Look around you, New Yorkers. What do you see, in the most literal way? Bricks, of course! We live in a city made out of bricks. These humble little rectangles of baked earth – red, yellow, or glazed into unnatural colors – constitute the visual signature of New York. Until the grand old 19th and 20th century buildings are replaced by the glass and aluminum cereal boxes poking straight up, they remain the single most dominant building cladding material and gives the city the warm earth-tone glow of the old industrial city it once was.

brick wall

But no one thinks too much about the poor, humble brick except maybe architects, bricklayers, designers and the people who actually create them. For the curious among us, who need to know the whats and wherefores of even common objects, brick might be a candidate for a morning’s research – where do they come from? How are they made? Why is New York so full of brick and not pine or plastic or Vermont granite?

If you are so inclined to add another brick to your wall of learning, the next stop would be find some expertise on the subject. And that is what brings us to the remarkable 200-year old General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen Library at 20 West 44th Street in Manhattan. This subscription library, which is open to the public for a small fee, offers a 100,000+ volume collection of urban construction information that is a builders’ dream. You want to know about bricks? Here’s a sample of what their catalog offers on the subject.

Library at the General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen

The headquarters is stunning inside, with a soaring skylight and enough turn-of-the-century oak details that make you think CorneliusVanderbilt himself is about to drop off his overdue books on railroad construction and engineering. And a little odd bit of interest: the library houses a collection of more than 400 rare and unusual locks. The society hosts a lecture series, curtailed now because of the Covid, but check back in when life returns to whatever will be the closest to normal we can muster. You can use the locksmithing collection to practice your safecracking skills or simply brush up on the finer points of designing supertall plumbing risers.

Details on the Society’s library, services, fees and hour are here.

GET SMARTer EXTRA CREDIT!

CCNY Libraries

There’s no place like home.

Covid-19 may have closed the doors on City College’s libraries, but it hasn’t shut down the services

Campus may be all but inaccessible until at least Fall 2021, but the libraries are still serving faculty and students remotely.

Best yet, you can use the enforced isolation of the current lockdown to learn more about what the library can do for you. Get to know this invaluable resource.

First things first. This is not a public library, so you will need to login with your CCNY credentials to access the catalog and ask questions of the reference librarians.

Login here:
https://library.ccny.cuny.edu/

THE DIVISIONS

At City College, there is no single library, but different divisions each featuring collections that serve the research and study needs of different groups of students and professors.

The Morris R. Cohen Library
https://library.ccny.cuny.edu/cohenlibrary

Morris Cohen

When most CCNY students think of “the library,” what they have in mind is the main library in the NAC, the Morris R. Cohen Library, which specializes in the humanities and social sciences and serves as the primary library for the college.

The Music Library
https://library.ccny.cuny.edu/musiclibrary

For jazz fans, it offers a brilliant collection of jazz recordings, plus scores, 12,000 books and videos. It’s in Shepard Hall.

Architecture Library
https://library.ccny.cuny.edu/architecturelibrary

When you need a blueprint for study of buildings, green construction, design or other guidance on the built environment, see the master information builders at the Architecture Library in the Bernard and Anne Spitzer School of Architecture building

Archives and Special Collections
https://library.ccny.cuny.edu/archives

Wait no longer to explore these extensive archives, where the singular collection offers details on the storied City College of New York – they sometimes call Harvard the CCNY on the Charles – and its remarkable Hatch-Billops oral histories of prominent African-Americans collected between 1970 and 1974.

GENERAL SOCIETY OF MECHANICS AND TRADESMEN LIBRARY

Look around you, New Yorkers. What do you see, in the most literal way? Bricks, of course! We live in a city made out of bricks. These humble little rectangles of baked earth – red, yellow, or glazed into unnatural colors – constitute the visual signature of New York. Until the grand old 19th and 20th century buildings are replaced by the glass and aluminum cereal boxes poking straight up, they remain the single most dominant building cladding material and gives the city the warm earth-tone glow of the old industrial city it once was.

brick wall

But no one thinks too much about the poor, humble brick except maybe architects, bricklayers, designers and the people who actually create them. For the curious among us, who need to know the whats and wherefores of even common objects, brick might be a candidate for a morning’s research – where do they come from? How are they made? Why is New York so full of brick and not pine or plastic or Vermont granite?

If you are so inclined to add another brick to your wall of learning, the next stop would be find some expertise on the subject. And that is what brings us to the remarkable 200-year old General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen Library at 20 West 44th Street in Manhattan. This subscription library, which is open to the public for a small fee, offers a 100,000+ volume collection of urban construction information that is a builders’ dream. You want to know about bricks? Here’s a sample of what their catalog offers on the subject.

Library at the General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen

The headquarters is stunning inside, with a soaring skylight and enough turn-of-the-century oak details that make you think CorneliusVanderbilt himself is about to drop off his overdue books on railroad construction and engineering. And a little odd bit of interest: the library houses a collection of more than 400 rare and unusual locks. The society hosts a lecture series, curtailed now because of the Covid, but check back in when life returns to whatever will be the closest to normal we can muster. You can use the locksmithing collection to practice your safecracking skills or simply brush up on the finer points of designing supertall plumbing risers.

Details on the Society’s library, services, fees and hour are here.

GET SMARTer EXTRA CREDIT!

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