Saturday, May 30, 2026

Sterling Memorial Library

In the heart of Yale's central campus, Sterling Memorial Library is the university’s largest library and one of its most iconic buildings.  It is built in the Collegiate Gothic style to resemble a European cathedral. 

Completed in 1930, it houses more than 2.5 million volumes, with a focus on humanities and area studies.  Designed by architect James Gamble Rogers (Yale Class of 1889) and later named for its benefactor, John William Sterling (Yale Class of 1864), 

The main entrance, known as the Nave, has a 60-foot ceiling, cloisters, clerestory windows, side chapels, and a circulation desk altar.  

Stained glass windows throughout the building—3,300 in all—were designed by artist G. Owen Bonawit. 


One of the grand spaces in Sterling Memorial Library is the Starr Main Reference Room.  It features medieval-style stained-glass windows, hand-carved details, and a wood-coffered ceiling.

One of the portraits in the Nave is of Edward Alexander Bouchet, a physicist and educator.  Boucher was the first African American graduate of Yale College and the first African American awarded a Ph.D. in the United States.

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