The Bentley Historical Library will be getting a new website on July 16th, 2026! Please note that paths to resources and materials may change.
Use the U-M Library Search to explore the Bentley's collections.
Hours:
Monday: Closed
Tuesday: 9:30 AM – 4:30 PM
Wednesday: 9:30 AM – 7:00 PM
Thursday: 9:30 AM – 4:30 PM
Friday: 9:30 AM – 4:30 PM
Saturday: 9:30 AM – 1:30 PM
1150 Beal Avenue
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2113 U.S.A.
734-764-3482 (voicemail only)



Did you know there’s a Summer Game badge for exploring Ann Arbor’s Japanese History?
As you explore Ann Arbor for the @aadlgram Summer Game, discover how Japanese emigrants and their descendants, known as Nikkei, have been an essential part of the Ann Arbor community for decades.
Around World War II, the University of Michigan hired Nikkei employees to staff places like the Michigan Union. But during that same time period, U-M also excluded the majority of Nikkei from becoming students here. The U-M Center for Japanese Studies and Bentley Historical Library have teamed up to put together some clues to help you learn more about this chapter of Japanese-Ann Arbor history with this web-based badge.
Take a moment to explore this local history, and claim this badge with your newfound knowledge!
Check out this URL to learn about the badge, and sign into your Ann Arbor District Library account to see clues: https://aadl.org/node/671037
New to the Summer Game? Visit aadl.org/play to learn more!
#SummerGame #AADL #Nikkei #AnnArbor
Did you know there’s a Summer Game badge for exploring Ann Arbor’s Japanese History?
As you explore Ann Arbor for the @aadlgram Summer Game, discover how Japanese emigrants and their descendants, known as Nikkei, have been an essential part of the Ann Arbor community for decades.
Around World War II, the University of Michigan hired Nikkei employees to staff places like the Michigan Union. But during that same time period, U-M also excluded the majority of Nikkei from becoming students here. The U-M Center for Japanese Studies and Bentley Historical Library have teamed up to put together some clues to help you learn more about this chapter of Japanese-Ann Arbor history with this web-based badge.
Take a moment to explore this local history, and claim this badge with your newfound knowledge!
Check out this URL to learn about the badge, and sign into your Ann Arbor District Library account to see clues: https://aadl.org/node/671037
New to the Summer Game? Visit aadl.org/play to learn more!
#SummerGame #AADL #Nikkei #AnnArbor
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#TBT to Nickels Arcade in the 1930s!
Imagine walking through Nickels Arcade back when this photo was taken! You can spot some changes here between the early arcade and the arcade you know today.
The shape of the glass skylight has changed, and the lollipop-shaped "penny scale" that used to stand at the entryway, against the central column, is no longer there.
In the 1930s, passers-by would insert a penny into that penny scale to get a printed card with their fortune, an estimate of their weight (this particular scale was known for being highly inaccurate), and a printed photo of a movie star.
While some things have certainly changed, some remain the same; you can still spot the same stone-colored terracotta decorations on the walls, and the same decorative brickwork!
Nickels Arcade has become a beloved local building since the first business opened inside it in 1915. You can find this photo, and others like it, in the Ivory Photograph collection at the Bentley, which is digitized and available online for anyone to explore!
#AnnArbor #NickelsArcade #LocalHistory #1930s
#TBT to Nickels Arcade in the 1930s!
Imagine walking through Nickels Arcade back when this photo was taken! You can spot some changes here between the early arcade and the arcade you know today.
The shape of the glass skylight has changed, and the lollipop-shaped "penny scale" that used to stand at the entryway, against the central column, is no longer there.
In the 1930s, passers-by would insert a penny into that penny scale to get a printed card with their fortune, an estimate of their weight (this particular scale was known for being highly inaccurate), and a printed photo of a movie star.
While some things have certainly changed, some remain the same; you can still spot the same stone-colored terracotta decorations on the walls, and the same decorative brickwork!
Nickels Arcade has become a beloved local building since the first business opened inside it in 1915. You can find this photo, and others like it, in the Ivory Photograph collection at the Bentley, which is digitized and available online for anyone to explore!
#AnnArbor #NickelsArcade #LocalHistory #1930s
...
Meet research fellow Frank Cirillo! As a historian who specializes in anti-slavery research, Frank is deeply interested in the impacts of the anti-slavery movement, known as abolitionism.
He is fascinated by the ways that abolitionist language shaped later groups, such as the suffrage movement!
Building on his previous book, "The Abolitionist Civil War," Cirillo visited the Bentley`s reading room to explore how other progressive movements reused anti-slavery rhetoric for their own ends, between the Gilded Age and World War I.
His project looks at "how abolitionist leaders were co-opted, their methods copied, and their words quoted to support different causes," in his own words.
The peace, temperance, and suffrage movements all interest Cirillo for that reason, showcased in collections like the Jabez Thomas Sunderland papers, the Rebecca Shelley papers, and more, from the archives here!
Cirillo intends to use his latest research to write about the crucial impacts of the anti-slavery movement on later social reform!
#Archives #AntiSlavery #Abolitionism #MichiganHistory #ResearchFellow
Meet research fellow Frank Cirillo! As a historian who specializes in anti-slavery research, Frank is deeply interested in the impacts of the anti-slavery movement, known as abolitionism.
He is fascinated by the ways that abolitionist language shaped later groups, such as the suffrage movement!
Building on his previous book, "The Abolitionist Civil War," Cirillo visited the Bentley`s reading room to explore how other progressive movements reused anti-slavery rhetoric for their own ends, between the Gilded Age and World War I.
His project looks at "how abolitionist leaders were co-opted, their methods copied, and their words quoted to support different causes," in his own words.
The peace, temperance, and suffrage movements all interest Cirillo for that reason, showcased in collections like the Jabez Thomas Sunderland papers, the Rebecca Shelley papers, and more, from the archives here!
Cirillo intends to use his latest research to write about the crucial impacts of the anti-slavery movement on later social reform!
#Archives #AntiSlavery #Abolitionism #MichiganHistory #ResearchFellow
...
Happy Fourth of July from the archives! This photo of an early Fourth of July parade was taken #OTD over 100 years ago in Manchester, Michigan.
At the time, buildings on the parade route were decorated with ribbons, draped fabric, and American flags. You can see a marching band, including a tuba and a large drum, parading on the right side of this image!
If you look closely, you can also spot a child who appears to be holding his father’s hand while they watch the parade together, near the center of the photo.
You can find this 1896 parade photo, and other early images of Michigan, in the Sam Sturgis photograph collection at the Bentley.
We hope you have a wonderful Independence Day! 🎆
#4thOfJuly #MichiganHistory #IndependenceDay
Happy Fourth of July from the archives! This photo of an early Fourth of July parade was taken #OTD over 100 years ago in Manchester, Michigan.
At the time, buildings on the parade route were decorated with ribbons, draped fabric, and American flags. You can see a marching band, including a tuba and a large drum, parading on the right side of this image!
If you look closely, you can also spot a child who appears to be holding his father’s hand while they watch the parade together, near the center of the photo.
You can find this 1896 parade photo, and other early images of Michigan, in the Sam Sturgis photograph collection at the Bentley.
We hope you have a wonderful Independence Day! 🎆
#4thOfJuly #MichiganHistory #IndependenceDay
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Hours:
Monday: Closed
Tuesday: 9:30 AM – 4:30 PM
Wednesday: 9:30 AM – 7:00 PM
Thursday: 9:30 AM – 4:30 PM
Friday: 9:30 AM – 4:30 PM
Saturday: 9:30 AM – 1:30 PM
1150 Beal Avenue
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2113 U.S.A.
734-764-3482 (voicemail only)