skip navigation
  • Ask a LibrarianDigital CollectionsLibrary Catalogs
  •  
The Library of Congress > Information Bulletin > April 1998
Information Bulletin
  • Information Bulletin Home
  • Past Issues
  • About the LCIB

Related Resources

  • News from the Library of Congress
  • Events at the Library of Congress
  • Exhibitions at the Library of Congress
  • Wise Guide to loc.gov

Early Congress Online
Records Document Nation's Founding

A look at the first Congresses of the United States, which began meeting in 1789, will soon be available from a new online collection from the Library.

"A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U.S. Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774-1873" will provide unprecedented easy access to these historic records. Using a combination of images and searchable text, Americans will be able to explore the development of the nation in the words of the first members of Congress.

A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation

The new Web site is a project of the Library of Congress's Law Library and National Digital Library Program.

"The Law Library is proud to present these seminal documents to the American people in a form that anyone with access to the Internet can use," said Rubens Medina, Law Librarian of Congress. "We hope that users of our Web site enjoy researching these documents that will bring them closer to the early days of America."

The first part of the collection, containing approximately 4,400 items, covers the years 1789-1793. Additional years will be made available until the entire collection is online through 1873, the 42nd Congress. The site will also offer documents of the Continental Congress and constitutional debates, as well as links to related sites and will contain more than 355,000 items.

The Law Library of the Library of Congress houses one of the most complete collections of U.S. congressional documents in their original format. Plans for the second online release include the Journals of the Continental Congress, the records of the Constitutional Convention and the subsequent debates over the adoption of the Constitution. Further releases will bring the records of the U.S. Congress up to 1873, the year in which the Government Printing Office assumed the publication of the proceedings of Congress in the Congressional Record. In addition, the final collection will include the United States Statutes at Large from 1789 to 1873 and the American State Papers, 1789-1838, legislative and executive documents published by Congress.

Back to April 1998 - Vol 57, No. 4

Stay Connected with the Library All ways to connect »

Find us on

PinterestFacebookTwitterYouTubeFlickr

Subscribe & Comment

  • RSS & E-Mail
  • Blogs

Download & Play

  • Podcasts
  • Webcasts
  • iTunes U 
About | Press | Jobs | Donate | Inspector General | Legal | Accessibility | External Link Disclaimer | USA.gov | Speech Enabled Download BrowseAloud Plugin