VIKTORIA HALLIKAAR , Spectrum News 1; Upstate public library one of few to house rare book collection
"The resources you can find at public libraries seem to be ever-growing. One collection is keeping an eye on the future by preserving the past.
Deep in the stacks of the Buffalo & Erie County Public Library is a massive collection of books.
“We're contemporary. We're of the moment,” explained Heather Gring, the rare book curator for Buffalo & Erie County Public Library.
But these books aren’t your standard page-turners.
“The oldest thing in our collection is 4,000 years old, and the most contemporary is local press that has been made this year,” said Gring.
Spectrum News 1 was given a rare look inside the rare book vaults.
“The difference between an old book and a rare book is who wants to buy it,” Gring explained.
Cameras, locks and key codes are trying to not repeat the mistakes of the past.
“This collection is worth, collectively, millions of dollars,” said Gring. "The way the Rare Books department was even started was because of a theft in the 1930s. [...] They worked with the FBI, and they did successfully retrieve almost all of the books that had been stolen.”
Keeping these treasures safe doesn’t mean keeping them hidden. This is one of only about 25 rare book departments in the country to be housed in a public library."
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