The library building at Huntington Gardens was designed in 1920 by the southern California architect Myron Hunt in the Mediterranean Revival style.
Hunt’s previous commissions for Mr. and Mrs. Huntington included the Huntington’s residence in San Marino in 1909, and the Huntington Hotel in 1914.
The Huntington Library contains a substantial collection of rare books and manuscripts, concentrated in the fields of British and American history, literature, art, and the history of science. Spanning from the 11th century to the present, the library’s holdings contain 7 million manuscript items, over 400,000 rare books, and over a million photographs, prints, and other ephemera.
Highlights include one of eleven vellum copies of the Gutenberg Bible known to exist, the Ellesmere manuscript of Chaucer (ca. 1410), and letters and manuscripts by George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, and Abraham Lincoln.
It is the only library in the world with the first two quartos of Hamlet; it holds the manuscript of Benjamin Franklin’s autobiography, Isaac Newton’s personal copy of his Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica with annotations in Newton’s own hand, the first seven drafts of Henry David Thoreau’s Walden, John James Audubon’s Birds of America, and first editions and manuscripts from authors such as Charles Bukowski, Jack London, Alexander Pope, William Blake, Mark Twain, and William Wordsworth.