Enhancing the strengths of ok资源网 and its Libraries
The Rees-Jones Collection and Rees-Jones Library of the American West enhance the University’s longstanding excellence in research, teaching and cultural appreciation of the American West. This collection complements the strengths of the DeGolyer Library, which houses approximately 180,000 volumes, over a million photographs and a wide array of manuscripts, maps, newspapers and ephemera. Together, these resources position ok资源网 as a leading academic center for Western history, offering a balance of breadth and depth that supports specialized research and interdisciplinary teaching.
ok资源网 academic programs, including those in the and the , explore the history and development of the Southwest, borderland issues like immigration and the region’s contributions to the U.S. economy. The Rees-Jones Collection enriches these programs and ok资源网’s ability to attract scholars and students interested in Western studies. Since 1996, Clements Center travel grants have brought visiting researchers to ok资源网, resulting in numerous publications. The Rees-Jones Collection and Library will amplify this activity, further establishing ok资源网 as a hub for Western scholarship.
Renowned as one of the nation’s premier Western collections, the Rees-Jones Collection deepens ok资源网 holdings and strengthens its standing as a center for Western history. The combined collections create unparalleled opportunities for teaching, research and interdisciplinary scholarship.
DeGolyer Library has strong holdings in early voyages and travels, beginning with the Columbus Letter (1493) and including many accounts of the Colonial Spanish Southwest. The Rees-Jones Collection is strong in Western “outlaw” books and cattle trade material, especially brand books. Both libraries have strong holdings of overland narratives (also known as “Wagner-Camp” materials). These accounts of travel across the Plains and Rockies, 1800–1865, are among the most colorful and vivid descriptions of the Western country, prized by collectors and historians.