(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
PEM | Library
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20100329104224/http://www.pem.org:80/library/

Library

Phillips Library

The beautiful Phillips Library welcomes visitors and researchers.

Welcome to the Phillips Library, the research and documentation division of the Peabody Essex Museum. As one of New England’s older libraries, the library has an international reputation as a major resource for maritime history and art, New England life and culture, American decorative arts, Asian art and culture, Native American history and art, the art and culture of Oceania, natural history and genealogy.

The library provides researchers, curators, and the general public access to 400,000 printed volumes, over a mile in linear feet of manuscripts, and an extensive collection of ephemera, broadsides, pamphlets, and a substantial run of periodicals. Located in two architecturally noted structures, the John Tucker Daland House and Plummer Hall, the research facility provides wireless Internet access to all researchers.

What’s New

2010 Art Museum Libraries Symposium
Save the Date - September 23 and 24, 2010
Released: October 22, 2009

The Phillips Library will host an Art Museum Libraries Symposium on Thursday and Friday, September 23 and 24, 2010, to discuss issues of concern to museum professionals, art librarians and archivists working at art libraries in a museum setting. Topics of discussion include data unity, the role of libraries and archives in an art museum, fundraising and future trends relating to both. For more information please contact Andrew French at andrew_french@pem.org.

Library Access To JSTOR
Released: March 09, 2009

Onsite Library patrons now have access to JSTOR, an interdisciplinary digital archive of scholarly journals and selected monographs in humanities, social sciences, and science. Located on the library kiosks, patrons can utilize JSTOR to facilitate their research and print articles found or email PDF files to their personal email accounts.

View Frank Cousins’ Salem Streets Collection
Released: March 01, 2009

Frank Cousins, known for his architectural studies, was one of Salem’s most famous photographers. Active in the early 1880s to the early 1920s, Cousins is known for his views of buildings and street blocks. To view a listing of images photographed on Salem streets View Frank Cousins’ Salem Streets Collection (PDF Format)