'', Chile's first newspaper, is kept at the Biblioteca Nacional. The Biblioteca Nacional is, together with the
Instituto Nacional and a small number of institutions, one of the first institutions created by the newly formed Republic of Chile in the
Patria Vieja period. In the newspaper
El Monitor Araucano, a
Proclama de Fundación ("Proclamation of Foundation") of the Biblioteca Nacional was published on August 19, 1813. With this vision, a call was made to all the citizens to submit their books for the formation of one great public library. As with other republican institutions, the library was closed after the
Disaster of Rancagua, in which the national troops were defeated by the army of the
realistas. With the victorious
Battle of Chacabuco, it was reopened and supported by the government, and started to receive important collections. The
Supreme Director of Chile,
Bernardo O'Higgins, named professor
Manuel de Salas as the first director of the Biblioteca Nacional. In 1822 Friar
Camilo Henríquez (director of the
Aurora de Chile newspaper) was named as the second head librarian. Since its creation, the library had been a dependency of the
Universidad de San Felipe and its successor, the
Universidad de Chile, until it gained autonomy in 1852. In 1913, upon its 100th anniversary, the Biblioteca Nacional acquired the
Monasterio de Santa Clara, located on the Alameda de las Delicias on present-day
Cerro Santa Lucía. At the creation in 1929, the library was made into a dependency of the
Dirección de Bibliotecas, Archivos y Museos. == Location ==