North Carolina State University Libraries - D.H. Hill Library
D. H. Hill Library from Hillsborough Street

North Carolina State University Libraries - D.H. Hill Library

2700 Hillsborough St.
Raleigh, NC 27695-7111

United States

(919) 515-3364; librefncsu.edu

Web site: http://www.lib.ncsu.edu

Events: http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/news/

Catalog URL: http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/catalog/…

Amenities: wifi, food/drink

Description: The first library at NC State was housed on the second floor of the first and only building on campus at the time, Holladay Hall. In 1926, Brooks Hall, an impressive building with a gleaming white marble portico and imposing dome, was built to serve as the official campus library. However, a larger library was needed and the D.H. Hill Library opened in 1953, while Brooks Hall became the home of the School of Design.

The library was built in four stages: the east wing first, the Erdahl-Cloyd Student Union or west wing second, the old bookstack tower third, and the new bookstack tower fourth. When the Erdahl-Cloyd wing was built in 1954, its purpose was to extend the present library and house the Student Union. However, ten years later, the University Student Center opened, and the union was transferred to the new building. The Erdahl-Cloyd wing was used over the next five years for a number of different departmental classes and offices. Today the ground floor of the wing is referred to as The Atrium and houses dining services; the other floors are used primarily for library services and offices.

D.H. Hill Library was still in need of expansion, so an eleven-story bookstack tower was built and dedicated on October 3, 1972 in conjunction with the celebration of the 83rd anniversary of the University. This bookstack tower provides space for one million volumes. In 1990, another bookstack was added, allowing space for half a million more volumes, along with new study and lounge areas. The new addition also provides entrance ramps for greater accessibility, as well as a new room on the first floor that houses equipment for the visually impaired.

The library honors Daniel Harvey Hill (1859-1924), the son of a lieutenant general in the Civil War. Hill was vice-president of NC State from 1905 to 1908, and succeeded President Winston in office in 1908. He began his career at the University as a professor of English and part-time librarian when NC State first opened, and was one of its first five faculty members. Hill taught bookkeeping and wrote several books and pamphlets, including North Carolina Troops in the Civil War, General Greene's Retreat, Agriculture for Beginners and Young People's History of North Carolina. After retirement, he devoted himself to writing The History of North Carolina in the Civil War.

Added by: KCGordon.  Contacted: Not contacted.  Venue ID: 3613

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Upcoming events

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Past events

Spring 2009 Friends of the Library Event: Ann Ross (February 4 at 4:00pm)
Ann Ross.
Ann Ross, associate professor of forensic anthropology, will speak on the role of a forensic anthropologist in human rights and genocide cases. The presentation will be based on Ross’s personal experiences in Bosnia and the Republic of Panama. This event is part of the ongoing NCSU Libraries Fabulous ... (more)Faculty Series. Free refreshments will be served. Assembly Room, Second Floor (East Wing), D. H. Hill Library
Interested: guyalice Added by guyalice.
Spring 2009 Friends of the Library Event: Dan Ariely (February 12 at 7:00pm)
Dan Ariely, author of Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions, will speak on behavioral economics. The Union Activities Board Ideas and Issues Committee and the NCSU Friends of the Library are cosponsoring this event. Please contact Rick Gardner at (919) 515-5918 for more information.
Event location: Poe Hall, Room 216
Added by guyalice.
Spring 2009 Friends of the Library Event: Michael Walden (February 18 at 4:00pm)
Michael Walden reads from North Carolina in the Connected Age.
Michael Walden, William Neal Reynolds Distinguished Professor & Extension Economist, will speak on his new book, North Carolina in the Connected Age (UNC Press), and the condition of the current North Carolina economy. This event is part of the ongoing NCSU Libraries Fabulous Faculty Series. Free refreshments ... (more)will be served. Assembly Room, Second Floor (East Wing), D. H. Hill Library
Interested: guyalice Added by guyalice.
Spring 2009 Friends of the Library Event: Sylvia Nasar (March 11 at 7:00pm)
Sylvia Nasar, author of the bestselling biography, A Beautiful Mind, will speak at NCSU. Trained as an economist, Professor Nasar has written for the New York Times, Fortune, U.S. News & World Report, The New Yorker, Newsweek and The London Telegraph among numerous other publications. She has lectured ... (more)frequently on topics ranging from globalization and economics to mental illness and mathematics. She is currently writing a narrative history about 20th-century economic thinkers. Professor Nasar is the first Knight Professor of Business Journalism and co-directs the M.A. program in business journalism at Columbia University. The Union Activities Board Ideas and Issues Committee and the NCSU Friends of the Library are cosponsoring this event. Please contact Rick Gardner at (919) 515-5918 for more information.
Event location: Stewart Theatre, Second Floor, Talley Center
Added by guyalice.
Spring 2009 Friends of the Library Event: Annie Antón (March 18 at 7:00pm)
Annie Antón discusses Why Privacy Matters.
Annie Antón, professor of computer science, a Senior Research Ethics Fellow and a member of the NCSU Cyber Defense Lab will speak on Why Privacy Matters. Properly protecting information is in all our best interests, but it is a complex undertaking. Antón and her colleagues have been working on technologies ... (more)to make this task simpler. In this talk, she will describe some of the research she has been conducting to address these problems. The results of this work and her other studies pose interesting ethical questions for industry and society at large, and help illustrate the complexity of the problems. This event is part of the ongoing NCSU Libraries Fabulous Faculty Series. Free refreshments will be served. Assembly Room, Second Floor (East Wing), D. H. Hill Library
Added by guyalice.
Friends of the Library present Tracy Kidder (September 30 at 7:30pm)
Quail Ridge Books & Music and the NCSU Friends of the Library present Tracy Kidder, winner of the Pulitzer Prize and author of many bestsellers including Mountains Beyond Mountains, will read from his new book Strength in What Remains. At NC State's McKimmon Center, at 7:30 (doors open at 6:30). Admission ... (more)is $5 or free with purchase of Strength in What Remains from Quail Ridge Books & Music.
Event location: McKimmon Center - NC State University - 1101 Gorman Street - Campus Box 7401 - Raleigh, NC 27695
Interested: DellaPenna Added by guyalice.
Fabulous Faculty Series: Sara Ash (October 15 at 4:00pm)
Sara Ash.
Sarah Ash will explain our way of eating today by examining social, economic, and scientific factors that existed during the mid-nineteenth through the early twentieth century. Thursday, October 15, 2009 4:00 p.m. Assembly Room (2nd Floor, East Wing) of NCSU’s D. H. Hill Library This event is co-sponsored ... (more)by NCSULA. Samples of popular foods from the 30’s through the 80’s will be available for tasting. “The expression ‘gobble, gulp, and go’ was used to describe the American diet (by disapproving Europeans) as early as the late eighteenth century and not much has changed since then, except for improvements in the drugs to treat the resultant dyspepsia.” Sarah Ash is an Associate Professor in the Department of Food, Bioprocessing, and Nutrition Sciences, and the coordinator of the undergraduate Nutrition Program. She teaches over 1,000 students a year in a wide variety of classes, including one on US food history. She is the recipient of numerous teaching awards including the NCSU Alumni Distinguished Professor Award and the USDA Food and Agriculture Sciences Excellence in Teaching Award.
Interested: guyalice Added by guyalice.
Dr. Marcia Thibeault: This Doc Makes Horse Calls (November 13 at 1:00pm)
Marcia Thibeault reads from I Make Horse Calls.
Dr. Marcia Thibeault--vet, professor at Midway College, and author of I Make Horse Calls and More Horse Calls--will read from her latest book at D. H. Hill on Friday, November 13. Often compared to James Herriot, Dr. Thibeault writes wise and amusing collections of true, heartwarming, not heartbreaking, ... (more)stories from equine veterinary practice. The event is co-sponsored by the NCSU Hunt Seat Equestrian Club and the William Rand Kenan, Jr. Library of Veterinary Medicine.
Added by guyalice.

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