Library Daylight
Tracings of Modern Librarianship, 1874-1922
Editor: Rory Litwin
Price: $25.00
Published: December 2006
ISBN: 978-0-9778617-4-3
264 pages
Library Daylight is an eclectic collection of thirty-six articles about libraries and librarianship published between 1874 and 1922. These items, most of which will be new even to those most well-versed in American library history, cover topics that are hotly discussed today: library education, women’s issues, library technology, the image of librarians, copyright, the tension between libraries as educational institutions and libraries as popular centers, the nature of library service, the public sphere, library PR, librarians and political activism, and visions of the future. The sources of these articles include early ALA conference proceedings, early issues of Library Journal and other library periodicals, daily newspapers, and popular magazines. Authors range from still-well-known leaders in the field to anonymous journalists. This will be rewarding reading for anyone interested in how our present-day issues are connected to the library past.
Table of Contents
Germantown Quakers Check the Spread of Novel Reading
From the 1874 annual report of a small public library established by Quakers in Germantown, Pennsylvania. Published in The Nation
A Librarian’s Work
By John Fiske, 1876
Boston Medical Library Dedicatory Address
By Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. (The physician and poet, not the jurist O. W. Holmes, Jr.), 1878
Brief item in The Nation on copyright in Germany, 1880
The Father of the American Libraries
By Bunford Samuel, 1883
Women in Libraries: How They are Handicapped
By Melvil Dewey, 1886
Columbia Library School
By Melvil Dewey, 1887
Proceedings of the Fourteenth American Library Association Conference, Lakewood: The Woman’s Meeting, 1892
Librarianship as a Profession for Women
By Miss Richardson, 1894
Improper Books
By George T. Clark, 1895
Hear the Other Side – ALA President’s Address
By ALA President John Cotton Dana, 1896
The Telegraph in the Library
By Richard Garnett, 1899
Library Cooperation
By Lodilla Ambrose, 1901
On George Iles’ plea for a headquarters for ALA
The Nation, 1903
Wild Flower Show at the Free Library
From The San Francisco Call, March 27, 1904
The Library: Its Past and Future
By Guido Biagi, 1904
The Library as Social Centre
by Miss Gratia Alta Countryman, 1905
Phones Installed in Free Library
In The San Francisco Call, April 7, 1912
Letter to the Editor of The Nation on “The librarian who reads is dead”
Published Nov. 7, 1912
The Heyday of Librarians
The Nation, July 3, 1913
Note on 1913 ALA Annual Conference in The Dial
The Region of the Unromantic
The Dial, December 1, 1913
First Aid to the Enquiring Reader
The Dial, June 1, 1914.
Some Old-Time Old-World Librarians
By Theodore W. Koch, 1914
The People’s Share in the Public Library
By Arthur E. Bostwick, 1915
Women Assistants and the War
By M.F., 1915
How Far Should the Library Aid the Peace Movement and Similar Propaganda?
By George F. Bowerman, 1915
The Libary’s Primary Duty
President’s Address, ALA Annual Conference. By Hiller C. Wellman, 1915
Some Tendencies of American Thought
By Dr. Arthur E. Bostwick, 1915
Librarianship: A Profession
W. E. Henry, 1916
The Larger Publicity of the Library
By Joseph L. Wheeler, 1916
“Human Interest” in the Public Library
By Marilla Waite Freeman, 1917
Great Reasons to Go to the New SF Main Library
San Francisco Examiner, Feb 18, 1917
Libraries Should Provide for the Reader Who Smokes
San Francisco Examiner, February 20, 1919
Ankles of Library Girls Seized as They Stack Books
San Francisco Examiner, December 5, 1920, p. 90.
Copyright and the Publishers: A Review of Thirty Years (and Reply)
By M. L. Raney, 1922.