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Special Collections Library

Special collections branch423 Central Ave. NE (corner of Edith and Central
Albuquerque, NM 87102 [locator map]
(505) 848-1376
Email questions to SpecialCollections@cabq.gov

Library Hours:
Tuesday through Saturday- 10 AM -6 PM
Closed on Sundays, Mondays and holidays.


The Special Collections Library of the Albuquerque/Bernalillo County Library System houses research collections on genealogy and New Mexico history and culture. The 1925 Pueblo/Spanish Revival-style building is a registered Albuquerque landmark in the historic Huning-Highlands neighborhood. As a research library, materials are available for in-house use only. Photocopiers are available. Parking is available on Edith and other residential streets, and in the parking garage by Old Albuquerque High School on Arno NE.

What you will find @ Special Collections:

Exhibits:

Albuquerque: A History in Postcards: View postcards online

 

EXHIBITS (July-Sept)

Water Conservation in a High Desert Environment

by Water Utility Authority & NM State Environmental Agency

 

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Special Events

Saturday 10/3- 1:30-3:00 PM

Greeks in Albuquerque: 1896-1952-presented by Katherine Pomonis

Katherine Pomonis grew up in Santa Fe, the daughter of Greek immigrants who owned the Mayflower Cafe. She will discuss the first generation of Greeks in Albuquerque during the first half of the 20th century and the build up of the Greek community in Albuquerque. By the time she finishes “It will be all Greek to you!”

 

  1. Genealogy Collection Highlights

Home to New Mexico's largest genealogical collection, Special Collections has nearly 22,000 genealogy books, over 16,000 microforms, approximately 2,500 compact discs and almost 300 current periodical titles. The collection is particularly strong in New Mexico genealogy, but the library also holds substantial records and resources from other states. The Library has immigration and ships' passenger lists, the Periodical Resource Index (PERSI), and a large assortment of family genealogies. Donations of individual family histories are welcomed.

Lineage books from the Daughters of the American Revolution, Daughters of Founders and Patriots, Daughters of American Colonists, the Mayflower Society, and other major resources from the American Colonial and Revolutionary War periods are available.

Federal census records for the entire United States from 1790 through 1930 are available. There are partial censuses for New Mexico from the Spanish and Mexican periods and special censuses for Native Americans of the Southwest, including the Dawes Rolls from Oklahoma.  

Several computers are available for public use. Two library computer terminals provide Internet access using the Library System's SmartCard. Four dedicated genealogy computers feature CD-ROM databases of census records and other valuable resources.  Local volunteers have compiled databases such as indexed vital records in Albuquerque newspapers, 1888-1896; indexed obituaries from the Albuquerque Journal for most years from 1908 to the present, scanned texts of Albuquerque Journal obituaries from 1930 to the present; the New Mexico Death Index from 1899-1945, and a partial statewide cemetery index.

Three important genealogy databases are available only at Special Collections Library with your Library SmartCard: Ancestry Library Edition, Heritage Quest Online and Origins Network Database.

The Library has a comprehensive collection on New Mexico genealogy, including the Spanish Archives of New Mexico, the Mexican Archives of New Mexico, Land Grant Records, and the Territorial Archives on microfilm. Civil War pension records for New Mexico and county records for the Territorial period are also available.  All publications of the New Mexico Genealogical Society are owned, as are the works of Fray Angelico Chavez. The Dreesen files provide information on the original settlers of the Rio Abajo prior to 1900. There are newspapers from the Territorial period, and Albuquerque city directories dating back to the 1880s. A collection of 16th century Spanish passenger lists, Pasajeros a las Indias, is available on microfilm.

The library has a complete collection of the Archives of the Archdiocese of Santa Fe. These records extend as far back as 1678 and as recent as 1956 for some areas. Localresearchers have extracted many of these records and published them in book format.

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Genealogical Societies

The New Mexico Genealogical Society Leaving www.cabq.gov, click for disclaimer, oldest of the three, meets monthly on the third Saturday at 10:30 AM.  

The Albuquerque Genealogical SocietyLeaving www.cabq.gov, click for disclaimer meets at 10:30 AM on the second Wednesday of each month.

The Hispanic Genealogical Research Center of New MexicoLeaving www.cabq.gov, click for disclaimer meets on the first Saturday of the month at 10:30 AM. 

These groups offer a variety of workshops and special-interest research groups.   All meetings are open to the public with program and other information available from their websites. Volunteers from these organizations are often available at the Library to assist new researchers.

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New Mexico Collection Highlights

The New Mexico Collection features nine thousand books on New Mexico history and culture, with an emphasis on the Albuquerque area. Supplementary resources include over 200 regional periodicals (current and defunct), a complete set of topographical maps for the state, other historic maps, City of Albuquerque documents, pamphlets, postcards, and biographical information. Special files include archival materials on Ernie Pyle and Professor Dorothy Cline, and a centennial history of the Albuquerque Public Library. Periodic exhibits feature local history materials from our collection and from other sources.

Center for the Book

Special Collections also houses the Center for the Book, a working classroom on the history of books, writing and printing. It features working replicas of early printing presses, late-Nineteenth and early-Twentieth Century presses and examples of ancient and modern books, including clay tablets, papyrus, miniature books and illuminated manuscripts. For information about tours, call 848-1376.

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