About the Library
Mission
In keeping with the University's nature as a church-related, liberal arts institution,
Riley-Hickingbotham Library's mission is to be an integral part of the academic program
by providing excellent service through bibliographical, physical, and intellectual
access to recorded knowledge and information and, insofar as possible, sharing resources
with individuals and institutions in the larger scholarly community.
Facilities and Remote Access
Riley-Hickingbotham Library serves Ouachita and the community as a learning center,
supporting the educational process with varied types of media. It accomplishes that
task through the main library - which offers a Technology Enhanced Collaborative (TEC)
study room, group study rooms, individual study space, PCs, and WiFi - and through
the music library in Mabee Fine Arts Center. All users may access the library’s resources
on campus. Remote access is limited to current Ouachita students and employees.
Collections and Services
The main library provides access to a wide range of resources. The main book collection
has approximately 170,000 volumes and thousands of ebook titles among its holdings.
The periodicals collection provides digital and print access to numerous journals,
magazines, and newspapers. Many titles are accessible in the EbscoHost, ProQuest,
and JSTOR databases. The library also subscribes to general and subject-specific reference
databases. Among the microform collections are the Educational Resource Information
Center (ERIC) File, the American Culture Series (pre-1874 American publications),
the Black History Collection, the Literature of Theology and Church History in North
America, the University Music Editions reprint series, and the Eastman School of Music’s
collection of early music writings.
Special Collections include those of the Arkansas Baptist State Convention, Clark
County Historical Association, University Archives, and Rare Books section of the
main library. A growing collection of political papers - including those of the late
Senator John L. McClellan, the District’s two most recent Congressmen, and former
Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee - is likewise part of Special Collections.
The library’s discovery catalog facilitates searching all of the library’s holdings simultaneously and expanding
searches to include neighboring libraries and libraries worldwide.
Ouachita's Scholarly Commons is the online repository of the scholarship, creative
works, and historical record of Ouachita Baptist University. This service represents
the institution's commitment to the preservation, organization, open access, and dissemination
of these resources, produced by the faculty, students, staff, and alumni of the university.
Current Ouachita students and employees may access materials beyond the library's
holdings via interlibrary loan service with libraries nationwide and reciprocal borrowing
agreements with Henderson State University's Huie Library and the ArkLink Library Consortium.