(Redirected from National Archives of Canada)'Library and Archives Canada' (in
French: '''Bibliothèque et Archives Canada''') is a
Canadian federal government department responsible for the collection and preservation of the documentary heritage of Canada through
texts,
pictures and other
documents relevant to the
culture of Canada and the
politics of Canada. Archival and library material are acquired from government departments, national groups or organizations, private donors, and
legal deposit. Located in
Ottawa,
Ontario, its director with the rank of deputy head of a department is known as the ''Librarian and Archivist of Canada''. The first holder of this title is the former National archivist
Ian E. Wilson.
The department was created by the Parliament of Canada in 2004 (S.C. 2004, c.11), when it merged the Public Archives of Canada (founded in 1872) and the National Library of Canada (founded in 1953). After the merger there are now slightly more than 1,100 employees in the Library and Archives.
National Library
The National Library Building is located at 395
Wellington Street,
Ottawa,
Ontario, near other significant buildings such as
Parliament Hill, the
Supreme Court of Canada and others. Built for a cost of
$13,000,000, the building has five floors and covers 52,600
square metres. It was opened on
June 20,
1967 by
Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson with 400,000 volumes of information which has grown to over 18,000,000. It is now designated as a heritage building.

The Secret Bench of Knowledge
Located at the front of the building is a
sculpture named ''
The Secret Bench of Knowledge'' by
Lea Vivot.
The administrative units, including the sections responsible for acquisitions (gifts, purchases, and legal deposit), cataloguing,
ISBN numbering, conservation and other matters, have long ago overflowed from the main building to several other venues on or around Wellington Street. Starting in autumn 2004 the 600 or 700 employees in these units have been gradually consolidated in a building in
Gatineau, Quebec, across the road from the Gatineau Preservation Centre.
Gatineau Preservation Centre
The Gatineau Preservation Centre ("GPC") opened on
June 4,
1997 after years of planning. It is a massive hangar-like building with external glass walls and opaque internal cement walls housing specially constructed preservation vaults for some of the most fragile documents of the Archives. It has three stories of windowless vaults with a top story for preservation laboratories and offices. The Gatineau Preservation Centre is located at 625, boulevard du Carrefour, about 12 km north-east of downtown Ottawa, in Gatineau, Quebec.
Former National Librarians
★ 1953–1967 William Kaye Lamb (1904–1999)
★ 1968–1983
Guy Sylvestre (1918– )
★ 1984–1999 Marianne Scott
★ 1999–2004
Roch Carrier
Former National Archivists
★ 1872–1902
Douglas Brymner (1823–1902)
★ 1904–1935 Sir
Arthur George Doughty (1860–1936) (A statue of Doughty is located on the north side of the Library and Archives building.)
★ 1937–1948
Gustave Lanctot
★ 1948–1968
William Kaye Lamb (1904–1999)
★ Wlfrid I. Smith (1919–1998)
★ 1985–1997
Jean-Pierre Wallot
★ 1997–2004
Ian E. Wilson
Related legislation
★ Library and Archives of Canada Act
[1]
★ National Archives of Canada Act (repealed)
★ National Library Act (repealed)
See also
★
Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec
★
Ontario Public Libraries
★
Saskatchewan Archives Board
External links
Library and Archives Canada official websites
★
English
★
French
Provincial archives
★
Nova Scotia
★
Ontario
★
Quebec
★
Saskatchewan