Thomas G. Carpenter Library Facts
Library Fact Sheet
| Original Building |
Opened October 1, 1980 Helman Hurley Charvat Peacock/Architects |
| Addition/Renovation |
May 2004 - December 2005 Rink Design Partnership Inc./Architects Turner Construction, General Contractor
Images and history in University Archives.
|
| Size: |
199,000 square feet |
| Seating Capacity: |
2,000 |
| Carrels: |
37 |
| Group Study rooms |
18 |
| Computer workstations |
352 public workstations |
| Computer connections |
Entire building is wireless |
| Library Management System |
Ex Libris ALEPH |
Holdings: All statistics current as of April 2012. |
864,706 volumes 23,942 audio (CD/LP) units 11,321 videos (cassettes, discs) 37,138 electronic journals
781 print journal subscriptions
58,497 electronic books purchased
71,000 electronic books leased
12,008 maps 1.5 million microform units
|
| Library Staff: |
Library Faculty: 19 Library Support Staff: 24.5 |
| Revised 5/24/13 |
|
Thomas Glenn Carpenter
Dr. Thomas G. Carpenter, founding President of the University of North Florida, accepted the challenge of building a new university in 1969. While gathering together a seasoned team of educators and administrators, he also personally directed the physical development of the University of North Florida campus on 1,000 acres of virgin timberland. In October 1972, the University opened to the charter class of 2,000 students.
Dr. Carpenter earned his B.A. degree in business from Memphis State University in 1949 and his M.A. in economics from Baylor University in 1950. Coming to Florida in 1954, Dr. Carpenter enrolled in the doctoral program at the University of Florida, earning his Ph.D. in economics in 1963. Dr. Carpenter began his educational career in 1957 with an appointment as an economics instructor at the University of Florida. He subsequently accepted appointments at Florida Atlantic University and the University of West Florida. After 11 years as President of the University of North Florida and with the University firmly established, Dr. Carpenter decided to return to his alma mater, Memphis State University, as its President. He remained there until 1991 when he retired with his wife, Oneida, to Blowing Rock, N.C.
While supervising and coordinating the development of academic programs and an expanding campus, Dr. Carpenter instilled in UNF's faculty and staff a strong sense of community involvement by personal example. He served on numerous community agencies and other boards and encouraged members of the University community to be similarly involved. A devout believer in the necessity of a strong university library as a cornerstone in the educational process, Dr. Carpenter was an advocate of the UNF Library and saw it develop during his tenure into one of the finest to be found within the Florida State University System (SUS), the state, and the region. Because of his long and faithful service to the state of Florida and the SUS, it is both fitting and proper that the University of North Florida Library bear the name of Thomas G. Carpenter. For more detailed information and images of Dr. Carpenter, see the online Guide to Campus Buildings from University Archives.