HUNTINGTON LIBRARY, ART GALLERY, AND BOTANICAL GARDENS


Meaning of HUNTINGTON LIBRARY, ART GALLERY, AND BOTANICAL GARDENS in English

library and cultural institution created in 1919 at San Marino, Calif., near Los Angeles, by Henry E. Huntington and left as a public trust upon his death. Huntington, a railroad tycoon, began collecting books early in the 20th century, and the library is rich in rare books and manuscripts, mostly English and American. The library also contains collections of incunabula and an outstanding collection of portraits and landscapes by such English painters as Thomas Gainsborough, Sir Joshua Reynolds, Sir Thomas Lawrence, and George Romney. During his lifetime, Huntington purchased, among others, the entire collections of the E. Dwight Church Library of Americana and the Wilberforce Eames collection of 12,000 early American imprints. The library and the mansion in which it is housed were deeded to the American public in perpetuity.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.