

Penn Dental Medicine is one of the oldest dental schools in the nation. Dr. Thomas W. Evans, a Philadelphia native who became the dentist to the courts of Europe and confidant of Napoleon III during France’s Second Empire, left his estate in 1897 to create and maintain a dental school that would be “second to none.” Dr. Evans’ collection did not though fund the formation of a dental library; that was left to future generations.
Today, the Leon Levy Dental Medicine Library, as it is now known, is home to a few rare dental tomes and artifacts, many of which came from the third Dean of the Dental School, Dr. Edward Cameron Kirk. Kirk’s donation of his personal collection of 3,000 to 4,000 books lead to the first incarnation of the Dental Library, then called the Evans Dental Library. One of the rarest books in the collection is by Drs. Evans and Crane, the Fall of the Second Empire (1884) a tome about the French Emperor and Empress. The one existing copy is held by Dental Library, as Dr. Evans destroyed all others at the request of the Empress. Dr. Evans also bequeathed the Dental School his collection of Bibles. The Penn Libraries catalog lists more than 400 titles in the Thomas Evans Bible Collection. The Evans Bible Collection includes Roman Catholic and Protestant texts and texts to assist Biblical understanding.
The Dental Library has one of the finest collections of about 1,500 rare dental books and journals in the world. Among those books included two monumental firsts:
Additionally, the Dental Library holds the early works of French, German, English and American dentists including 150 works published before 1815.
1. Friedländer, Max J.: Der Holzschnitt. Berlin 1926