The release date included the Nixon, Kennedy, and LBJ Libraries, and the Archives office in College Park, Maryland.
Red River was later renamed Campus Drive, and the current thoroughfare designated as Red River Street is a block farther east, on the other side of the LBJ Library.
In 2012, the LBJ Library underwent a multi-million dollar redesign, during which most of the exhibits were closed.
The LBJ Library provides year-round public viewing of its permanent historical, cultural, and temporary exhibits to approximately 125,000 visitors each year.
Transcript, Hale Boggs Oral History Interview, 3/13/69, by T. H. Baker, Internet Copy, LBJ Library.
The LBJ Library, named for the 36th President, is a highlight of any visit to Austin.
I Map History buffs aren't the only ones who can find something of interest at the LBJ Library & Museum.
Documents from LBJ Library and other archives.
Transcript, Robert S. McNamara Oral History, Special Interview I, 3/26/93, by Robert Dallek, Internet Copy, LBJ Library.
In 1976, Carpenter returned to Austin: "Family roots, the love for Texas and the University of Texas and the LBJ Library brought me back home."