University of Virginia Library


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EQUIPMENT.

The University Library, originally selected and arranged by Mr.
Jefferson, and since much enlarged by purchases and donations, now contains
about 50,000 volumes. Students are allowed the use of the books
under the usual restrictions, and the Librarian is present in the library for six
hours daily to attend to their wants. Persons at a distance who may desire to
consult the library by correspondence, can do so on payment of a small
charge, proportioned to the time and labor expended on the research required,
the copying of titles or passages from authors, etc. A letter on this subject,
addressed to James B. Baker, Librarian, will receive attention.

The Lewis Brooks Museum contains collections illustrating the
main sub-divisions of Natural History. Each of the collections is arranged
so as to exemplify the principles of the science, and at the same time offers
a large variety of subjects for advanced study. In Geology the specimens
show all the different kinds of rocks, classified according to mineral character
and the formations in which they occur; the collection of fossils, plaster
casts, maps, etc., is exceptionally fine, and fully illustrates Historical Geology.
In Mineralogy the principles of the science are made plain by well-chosen
suits of specimens, models of crystals, etc.; the general collection of minerals
contains all the important minerals, and many of the rarer ones, in
good specimens. Zoology is well illustrated by a fine and large collection
of mounted skeletons, stuffed animals, dried specimens, plaster casts, etc.
In Botany the collections contain charts, papier-maché models of flowers and
fruits, sections of wood, etc.; the bulk of the collection is in the form of
an herbarium selected from the most important and interesting botanical
regions of the world. In addition to the above, a beginning has been made
of a collection to illustrate the geology and mineralogy of the State of Virginia,
and this will be increased as rapidly as possible.

The Astronomical Observatory is situated upon an elevation known
as Mount Jefferson, which furnishes an unobstructed horizon. The principal
building is a rotunda, forty-five feet in diameter, and contains the great
Clark refractor of twenty-six-inch aperture. The building and instrument
are the gift of Leander J. McCormick, Esq., of Chicago. The computing
rooms are adjoining and contain clock, chronograph, etc., and a working
library. In a smaller building are a three-inch Fauth transit and a four-inch
Kahler equatorial.


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The Chemical Laboratory is a building planned and erected for the
purpose. It is completely fitted with the most approved appliances, and
stocked with apparatus, models, materials and specimens. The commodious
lecture room, with work and store-rooms attached, is provided with every
convenience for exhibiting a complete series of experiments illustrating the
lectures on General Chemistry. The large room assigned to Analytical
Chemistry will accommodate fifty working students, and is furnished with
work-tables, gas, water, and all proper laboratory fixtures; smaller rooms
are devoted to weighing, evaporations, assaying, etc., and all requisite
apparatus, chemicals, minerals, materials for analysis, etc., are kept constantly
supplied by home purchase and importation.

The Museum of Industrial Chemistry, contained in the same building,
consists of a very large number of specimens, collected at much expense
and pains in this country and abroad, to illustrate the products and processes
of Chemistry applied to the arts and manufactures, and is so arranged as to
be a most valuable aid to the student of Industrial Chemistry.

The Physical Laboratory consists of four connected rooms, one of
which is also used as a lecture-room. One of them is permanently darkened,
and in two others the light may be excluded at pleasure. A fourth apartment
is so supported on massive piers as to be practically insulated as regards
sensible tremors. The needful appliances, in the way of fixtures and apparatus
for physical experiment and research, have been so far supplied as to
furnish ample opportunities in laboratory work for undergraduates, and valuable
facilities for the advanced student in Practical Physics.

The Biological Laboratory is well provided with instruments for the
gross and minute dissection of animals and plants; microscopes, microtomes,
reagents, and materials for the staining and mounting of preparations;
apparatus for photography and microphotography, and other necessary appliances,
not only for student work, but for investigation and research as well.
In addition to the large and valuable collections of the Brooks Museum,
an abundant supply of other necessary specimens and material is furnished.
A library of reference is attached to the Laboratory, and students have access
to a number of leading biological and agricultural journals, thus acquiring
practice in the intelligent use of current literature.