Mudd closed, Reopens 7pm on 3/31

Due to SIP work. The branches are open and Ask a Librarian is online.

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Today’s Hours:

All Hours & Directions

Terrell Main Library

Closed due to lack of power

Circulation Desk

Closed due to lack of power

Research Help Daytime

10 - noon and 1:30 - 5pm Chat (Ask a Librarian)

Research Help Evening

Closed

Libraries Administrative Office

Closed due to lack of power

Azariah's Cafe

Closed

CIT Help Desk

Writing Center Daytime

Closed

Writing Center Evening

Closed

Speaking Center

Directions:

Location:

Mary Church Terrell Main Library
148 W College St. Oberlin, OH 44074-1545

Parking:

The main visitor lot is the east Service Building lot, and the south row of the Carnegie Building lot for visitors to offices within that building.

Terrell Main Library Floor Plans

Floor Plans

Other Libraries Hours & Directions

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The Oberlin College Archives contains a rich and varied collection of rare, original, and reproduced materials in print, photographic, artistic, electronic, 3-D, media and digital formats.

Department-based and student research projects often involve use of the Archives. Its rich collection of original historical materials offers insight and documentation of Oberlin's involvement in many of the significant social, religious, civil rights, and political movements of our time. Oberlin has been associated with such movements as antislavery, African Americans in higher education, coeducation, missions, women's suffrage, temperance, diversity, and ecology and the environment.

Students seated in an Archives classroom with an archivist giving a presentation.

The Archives holds the permanently valuable records of the institution as well as those of individuals, families, and organizations affiliated with the college, the Conservatory of Music, and the city of Oberlin. We have records on the 15 college presidents beginning with Asa Mahan in 1835 to the present. Other records offer details about student life and student government, master plans, art and architecture, and much more. These are described in over 500 finding guides, each consisting of a biographical sketch or administrative history, a description of the scope of the collection, and an inventory.

In addition, we have select personal papers of faculty, graduates, and other Oberlin-related individuals; municipal government records of the town of Oberlin and of Russia Township; format-specific collections such as maps, architectural records, posters, sound recordings, and moving images; and more than 300,000 photographs of the college and the town.