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        <p>North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />Spring 1998<lb /><lb />way 2 § 1998<lb /><lb />EAST CAROLINA<lb />UNIVERSITY<lb /><lb />: 73 : Gumant if Nm<lb />real. or oven by lhe Mincster<lb /><lb />» Being 1 Jtrivat Ovkorbahen be aft<lb />rhond be bade Care a har Seules.<lb /><lb />... innovation comprises a rearticulation « '<lb />of the libraryTs essential role in society,<lb />respect for a great deal more in life<lb /><lb />than the bottom line of the budget,<lb /><lb />or obeisance to the conventions of<lb />Byzantine terminology meant to impress<lb />administrators by its obscurity ...<lb /><lb />"James V. Carmichael, Jr.<lb />Page 24.<lb /><lb />" North Carolina Library Innovators: Lessons Learned from the Past<lb /></p>
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          <lb />a<lb /><lb />With the variety of databases available<lb />today, why should yours contain<lb />redundant articles " articles that are<lb />clones? That won't happen with SIRS full-<lb />len text reference databases. All<lb /><lb />eee: the articles in SIRS<lb /><lb />~al folate<lb /><lb />are in<lb /><lb />Discoverer®, SIRS Government<lb /><lb />YO U Cr Reporter® and SIRS Renaissance®<lb /><lb />pass a rigorous selection process that<lb /><lb />refe re Nn ce d atabases? eliminates redundancy and duplication.<lb /><lb />Our experienced research team of edu-<lb />cators and library professionals selects<lb />only relevant, useful, compelling articles<lb />" those that comprehensively describe<lb />all aspects of an issue. Once selected,<lb /><lb />articles are categorized and indexed by<lb /><lb />expert professionals.<lb /><lb />We work hard to bring you the best<lb />collection of full-text articles, so that your<lb />patrons donTt have to work hard to find<lb />them. SIRS databases are the highest<lb />quality available and thatTs why SIRS<lb /><lb />information works for you.<lb /><lb />SrS SIRS<lb /><lb />.<lb />Information that works�"�<lb /><lb />Call 1-800-232-SIRS, or visit www.sirs.com<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Volume 96, Number 1<lb />ISSN 0029-2540<lb /><lb />gues =NORTH CAROLINA LIBRARY INNOVATORS:<lb /><lb />11<lb />16<lb /><lb />19<lb /><lb />23<lb />28<lb /><lb />36<lb /><lb />i<lb /><lb />Advertisers: Broadfoot's, 44;<lb />Checkpoint, 46;<lb /><lb />Current Editions, 42;<lb /><lb />Ebsco, 10;<lb /><lb />Mumford Books, 9;<lb />Neal-Schuman Publishers, Inc. 27;<lb />Quality Books, 22;<lb /><lb />SIRS, front cover;<lb /><lb />UNC Press, back cover.<lb /><lb />39<lb />40<lb />48<lb /><lb />50<lb />53<lb />54<lb />55<lb /><lb />Cover:<lb /><lb />IDRARIES ©<lb /><lb />Spring 1998<lb /><lb />Lessons LEARNED FROM THE PAST<lb />Guest Editors, Plummer Alston Jones, Jr. and Thomas Kevin B. Cherry<lb /><lb />Saved: The Gambold Collection of Moravian Devotional Books, Rose Simon<lb /><lb />Alexandre VattemareTs System of International Exchanges in North Carolina,<lb />Maurice C. York<lb /><lb />Bringing Boston Books to the Carolina Mountains: Charles Hallet Wing and<lb />the Good-Will Free Library at Ledger, Robert G. Anthony, Jr.<lb /><lb />oIn My Mind ITm Going to Carolina...�: Bruce CottenTs Passion for North<lb />Caroliniana, Eileen McGrath<lb /><lb />Mollie Huston Lee: Founder of RaleighTs Public Black Library, Patrick Valentine<lb /><lb />Innovation in Library Education: Historical X-Files on Technology, People,<lb />and Change, James V. Carmichael, Jr.<lb /><lb />Newfangled &amp; Highfalutin: North Carolina Library Innovations Over the<lb />Decades, Plummer Alston Jones, Jr. and Thomas Kevin B. Cherry<lb /><lb />ERAS URS Gagner a ees asone sn ape aSee OeNeA RE RPE TED I RIS<lb /><lb />From the President<lb />Wired to the World: Java and the Web, Ralph Lee Scott<lb />North Carolina Books<lb /><lb />Lagniappe: Learning WhatTs New from Library Newsletters: A Selected List of<lb />North Carolina Resources, Gillian M. Debreczeny<lb /><lb />NCLA Minutes<lb />About the Authors<lb />Executive Board<lb /><lb />Editorial Board<lb /><lb />In December 1700, the Colony of North Carolina received its first catalog of books,<lb /><lb />which was intended for the use of the inhabitants of Bath, then called Pamplico. This first<lb />public library collection was housed at St. Thomas Church. The original catalog is held by<lb />the North Carolina Collection at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.<lb /><lb />Photos courtesy of this collection.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries is the official publication of the North Carolina Library Association.<lb />Art direction and design by Pat Weathersbee of TeamMedia, Greenville, NC.<lb /></p>
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        <p>~Prom the President<lb /><lb />Beverley Gass, President<lb /><lb />eems to me that it is important to begin at the beginning when becoming president of an<lb /><lb />organization such as NCLA. And where is the beginning? Is it where the last president<lb /><lb />left off? Is it a totally new place where the Association has never been before? This is a<lb /><lb />rather foolish question in some respects since NCLA, its new executive board, and<lb /><lb />president are all clearly part of a continuum of events, conferences, issues of a journal,<lb />projects, and members making it impossible to consider just starting over. Being a new<lb />president, then means picking up and going from where NCLA is, doesnTt it?<lb /><lb />It is a time of reflection, of reviewing the purpose of NCLA and making sure that the<lb />purpose still fits and applies. It is a time for asking questions " a time for wondering about<lb />everything we do and how we do it. Starting a term as president should mean a time of<lb />planning for the biennium and maybe even beyond that. It is a time for renewal and refur-<lb />bishing. It is a time when a president sets a direction for the Association with a clear vision<lb />for the future.<lb /><lb />With those things in mind, therefore, the new Executive Board members gathered at the<lb />Public Library of Charlotte/Mecklenburg County on January 22-23 for a retreat/planning<lb />session and first board meeting for 1998-99. Consultant and librarian Lea Wells led us<lb />through a series of processes designed to assist us in developing a vision statement and<lb />objectives for the biennium. The vision statement and objectives are printed below. As you<lb />read the vision statement be aware that it is a draft based upon ideas for the next eight to ten<lb />years. The draft was written at the retreat and has not been reviewed by anyone as of this<lb />writing. The objectives are the ones that the Executive Board developed for the biennium<lb />with designations of time lines, groups responsible, and action plans omitted here, since not<lb />all objectives have yet been completed at the same level of detail.<lb /><lb />Vision for NCLA<lb /><lb />= We are a member-focused organization<lb /><lb />Provision of services for members is based on continuous input from our members. We develop services and ac-<lb />tivities to meet membersT needs. Membership in NCLA is strong and vigorous. The membership count is more<lb />than 3,005 by 2005. All members belong to at least one section and a significant majority of members attend<lb />conferences and workshops and clamor for more member services from the Association. Everyone in North Caro-<lb />lina who works in any library is a member of NCLA. Membership in NCLA is required for employment within<lb />every library in the state. Many of our members, in fact, are librarians. We have a simplified and unified organi-<lb />zation with ample staff to perform the work of NCLA and its sections and round tables.<lb /><lb />" We are the association of choice for information professionals<lb /><lb />NCLA is recognized and respected outside of the library/information community and is the leading voice for all<lb />types of libraries. Leaders of the association are spokespersons for all major information issues within the state.<lb />NCLA uses media outlets as a means to deliver the message to the citizens of North Carolina in a manner that<lb />garners support for libraries and information professionals.<lb /><lb />" We are committed to continuing education and the professional development of our members<lb /><lb />Sections and round tables consistently cooperate to plan and deliver continuing education programs. We con-<lb />tinue to deliver excellent continuing education workshops and seminars. Our biennial conference is the premier<lb />membership event for the Association. In the non-conference year, we hold an oevent� for the Association where<lb />several sections and round tables have a common site and time for their professional development activities. The<lb />NCLA Leadership Institute provides a reservoir of leaders for the Association and the profession. We partner with<lb />the State Library of North Carolina, the constituent representative organizations where librares are located in-<lb />cluding the North Carolina Community College System, the North Carolina Council of Independent Colleges<lb />and Universities, the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction, the University of North Carolina, and other<lb />affiliated agencies, associations, and corporations to provide leadership in professional development for all who<lb />are engaged in the delivery of library and information services.<lb /><lb />" We use information and communications technology to serve our members effectively and efficiently<lb /><lb />We are committed to maintaining a large virtual Association and an active electronic outreach program for our<lb />members and our profession. We maintain an active Web site where members can conveniently locate all kinds<lb />of information about NCLA. We provide leadership in the use of technology and cyperspace for communicating<lb />among the members. We use videoconferencing and other technologies to make continuing education more ac-<lb />cessible to all who seek it in the field of library and information services.<lb /><lb />" We are a fiscally robust organization<lb />Financial matters are no longer a concern within NCLA. We look beyond membership dues and operation of NCLA<lb />for support for our initiatives. We seek funding through an active and robust program of Association develop-<lb /><lb />2 " Spring 1998 North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />ment. We have strong partners and allies with business and corporate North Carolina. We have built a sizable<lb />endowment fund, a foundation, and Friends of NCLA that support many of the new and ongoing programs of<lb />NCLA including our award-winning journal and the Leadership Institute. We are proactive in our support of li-<lb />brary and information technologies issues and have been instrumental in achieving increased funding from the<lb />North Carolina General Assembly for all types of libraries within the state.<lb /><lb />Objectives for NCLA 1998-99<lb />1. Increase membership in NCLA through an increased perception of worth and benefit in belonging<lb />to NCLA<lb />1.1 Publish a bi-monthly newsletter in which all sections and round tables publish news.<lb />1.2 Expand and revise Web site to provide extensive information about the Association<lb />1.3 Actively recruit library school students<lb />1.3.1 Change dues structure for students to reflect their student status<lb />1.3.2 Work with library educators to encourage library students to join the Association.<lb />1.3.3. Create a section for library school students<lb />1.4 Create a mentoring program for 1st year librarians who are NCLA members<lb />2. Continue advocacy of and education for the principles of intellectual freedom<lb />2.1 Create model policies<lb />2.2 Review existing collection/selection policies to include new technologies<lb />2.3 Conduct staff development/workshops on intellectual freedom issues<lb />2.4 Educate the public about the Freedom of Information Act through public service announcements, a<lb />speakers bureau, a Web page, and a series of press releases to North Carolina media outlets<lb />2.5 Form coalitions with other local, regional, state, and national organizations to promote intellectual<lb />freedom issues.<lb />2.5.1 Identify groups " PTA, NCAE, ACLE, ASCD &amp; SELA<lb />2.5.2 Join/co-sponsor events and publications<lb />3. Provide access to the Internet for all populations served by the library<lb />3.1 Secure grants for hardware and access to the Internet<lb />3.2 Develop outreach programs<lb />4. Expand continuing education programming<lb />4.1 Increase accessibility of continuing education to all members<lb />4.1.1 Repeat workshops across the state<lb />4.1.2 Use technology, when appropriate, to deliver programs<lb />4.1.3 Schedule programs at times most ouser friendly� for members<lb />4.2 Market and promote continuing education opportunities effectively<lb />4.2.1 Obtain planning data " osurvey with specific workshop topics�<lb />4.2.2 Market affordability of workshops through a oContinuing Education Newsletter� or an NCLA<lb />newsletter (of all opportunities provided by all sections and round tables)<lb />4.3 Identify and maximize continuing education resources<lb />4.3.1 Canvas membership for specialized knowledge and skills<lb />4.3.2 Promote cooperative ventures among sections and round tables<lb />4.3.3 Develop funds for project grants<lb />4.4 Encourage administrators to promote continuing education<lb />4.4.1 Establish minimum standards for staff development<lb />4.4.2. Develop an NCLA oaccreditation� process for libraries<lb />4.4.3 Lobby legislators on behalf of schools and community colleges<lb />4.4.4 Establish grants for continuing education in cooperation with the Department of Public<lb />Instruction<lb />5. Communicate with members using electronic means<lb />5.1 Provide a list of free e-mail providers to new and renewal members<lb />5.2 Subscribe all new and renewing members to NCLA-L (list serve)<lb />5.3 Request e-mail addresses on all membership applications (all formats)<lb />5.4 Survey memberships connectivity (e-mail and/or Web vs. snail mail) " ask for e-mail addresses; home<lb />or work access; possible volunteer(s) for virtual mentor to Ist year librarians<lb />5.5 Develop an electronic newsletter to include news of continuing education activities, advocacy<lb />opportunities, legislation, committee/round table/section minutes and announcements, new releases<lb />and jobs<lb />5.6 Charge committees, round table, section chairs with using NCLA-L<lb /><lb />We invite you to review and react to the draft vision statement and objectives. Let us hear<lb />what you think. It is as simple as writing, calling, or e-mailing me or any member of the<lb />executive board. The full list of executive board members is at the end of this issue (page 54).<lb />Better yet, post your reactions to NCLA-L. If you do not belong to NCLA-L, send an electronic<lb />mail message to listserv@ils.unc.edu Do not enter anything in the subject line. In the body of<lb />the letter type SUBSCRIBE NCLA-L yourfirstname yourlastname<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries Spring 1998 " 3<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Saved:<lb /><lb />The Gambold Collection of Moravian Devotional Books<lb /><lb />he box contained a couple<lb />dozen small, unmistakably old<lb />volumes. A few had paper covers;<lb />some wore leather bindings; most<lb />had cardboard covers with thin<lb />leather spines and corners. The<lb />pages were in good condition; the<lb />font a precise, exotic Fraktur type<lb />that varied only in size from volume<lb />to volume, an occasional word on a<lb />title page printed in red instead of<lb />black. The imprints listed unfamiliar,<lb />faraway places and printers: Barby,<lb />Gotha, Hirschberg, oZu finden in den<lb />Briidergemeinen.� The years of publi-<lb />cation ranged from 1724 to 1818. The<lb />only duplicates were copies of a title<lb />printed by Henrich Miller in Philadel-<lb />phia in 1769 " the sole non-European<lb />imprint.<lb /><lb />It did not take a sophisticated com-<lb />mand of German to discern that these<lb />were religious titles: a New Testament in<lb />LutherTs translation; ReichelTs Ghostly<lb />Hymns and Songs; a biblical concor-<lb />dance; GregorTs Prayers and Meditations<lb />in Verse for all the Days of the Year;<lb />RislerTs Historical Excerpts from the Books<lb />of the Old Testament; SpangenbergTs Life<lb />of Nicholas Lewis, Count and Lord of<lb />Zinzenberg and Pottendorf (Part IV).<lb />These were not merely eighteenth<lb />century German devotional books;<lb />they were Protestant " specifically,<lb />Moravian " devotional books. Their<lb />connection to Salem College (founded<lb />by Moravians in 1772) was certain.<lb />First, they were a gift from a Salem<lb />alumna whose family once had lived at<lb />Salem and had kept the books for over<lb />150 years. Second, an inscription in<lb />one of the books shows that it was<lb />given at Salem, on the 7th of Septem-<lb />ber 1805, by Carl Gottlieb Reichel (fu-<lb />ture Inspector of the Salem GirlsT<lb /><lb />4 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />by Rose Simon<lb /><lb />Boarding School) to John and Anna<lb />Rosina Gambold.<lb /><lb />Inscriptions are plentiful in this<lb />little collection, and indicate that it<lb />was part of the personal library of Anna<lb />Rosina. Of the 23 volumes (20 titles) in<lb />the Salem Gambold Collection, eight<lb />bear her name, often with her maiden<lb />name, Kliest. Three more bear her<lb />fatherTs name. Two are inscribed to<lb />both John and Anna Rosina. Four bear<lb />the name of John Gambold, albeit not<lb />in his own handwriting. Only three<lb />volumes have no inscriptions at all.<lb /><lb />Within the history of the<lb />Moravian Church in America, John<lb />and Anna Rosina Gambold are rela-<lb />tively familiar figures, for they were the<lb />principal Moravian missionaries to the<lb />Cherokee nation. Ten days after the<lb /><lb />presentation of ReichelTs gift, the<lb />Gambolds embarked from Salem on<lb />the 400-mile journey to Springplace in<lb />northwest Georgia. They were accom-<lb />panied to a place near Pilot Mountain!<lb />by a group of girls and teachers from<lb />the recently established Boarding<lb />School. Presumably, the Gambolds<lb />took ReichelTs gift (the Ghostly Hymns<lb />and Songs� book compiled by his father,<lb />Carl Rudolph Reichel, in 1798) with<lb />them. Did all the volumes in the<lb />Gambold Collection go with the mis-<lb />sionaries to Springplace? What other<lb />books did they have at Springplace,<lb />and how did the books printed after<lb />their departure from Salem come to be<lb />part of the collection? How did it come<lb />about that these particular volumes<lb />were preserved and brought back to<lb /><lb />Hymnals with printed music were not the norm in the eighteenth century. Several different<lb /><lb />sets of lyrics could be applied to the same tune.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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        <p>Salem? The answers to these questions<lb />are interwoven with the story of the<lb />Gambolds themselves, their friends<lb />and supporters, and the nature and fate<lb />of the Cherokee mission.<lb /><lb />The Moravian Church? traces its<lb />origins back to the followers of the<lb />early Protestant martyr, John Hus (d.<lb />1415). The Unitas Fratrum, as these<lb />believers were known, were largely sup-<lb />pressed for the next three centuries,<lb />and emerged again among those Prot-<lb />estants (many from Moravia, in what is<lb />now the Czech Republic) who took ref-<lb />uge on the Saxony estate of Nicholas<lb />Lewis, Count von Zinzendorf, in the<lb />early eighteenth century. Zinzendorf<lb />became an active patron of the group<lb />as it defined itself anew, emphasizing a<lb />commitment to serving the unfortu-<lb />nate throughout the world. This was<lb />the first Protestant sect oto declare the<lb />evangelization of the heathen the duty<lb />of the Church.� As early as 1732, two<lb />Brethren sailed to the Danish West<lb />Indies to work among the slaves. Then<lb />came a mission to the Inuit peoples of<lb />Greenland. Moravian migration to the<lb />American colonies was undertaken<lb />with the clear intention of establishing<lb />missions to the Indians. In the north-<lb />ern colonies, the Delaware were served<lb />by the noted Moravian missionary,<lb />David Zeisberger, and his assistant John<lb />Heckewelder.® In the southern colo-<lb />nies, there was some preliminary work<lb />among the Indians which had to be<lb />abandoned in 1740, when the<lb />Moravians were compelled to leave<lb />eastern Georgia for Bethlehem, Penn-<lb />sylvania. The Revolutionary War and<lb />its turbulent aftermath fostered Chero-<lb />kee hostility towards American settlers,<lb />precluding significant mission work<lb />before the end of the century.<lb /><lb />Finally, in 1799, the Cherokees in-<lb />dicated that they were willing for the<lb />Moravians to come to the Cherokee<lb />Nation® to set up schools for teaching<lb />English and other skills needed in deal-<lb />ing more successfully with the white<lb />culture. The missionaries, on the other<lb />hand, gave highest priority to impart-<lb />ing salvation, without which education<lb />was deemed to be of little value. Their<lb />vision was that as the Indians con-<lb />verted, they would join the established<lb />Moravian community, and their chil-<lb />dren would then be educated as mem-<lb />bers of that community. Consequently,<lb />the first Moravian missionaries concen-<lb />trated their efforts on building the<lb />means of establishing and sustaining<lb />the physical community " houses,<lb />barns, fields " while allowing Indians,<lb />slaves, and other interested parties to<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />attend their worship services.<lb /><lb />In 1803, and again in 1804, the<lb />Cherokees noted with impatience that<lb />the Moravians had not yet established<lb />a boarding school at Springplace, and<lb />should leave. Negotiators (for the Indi-<lb />ans) and carpenters (for the missionar-<lb />ies) were dispatched from Salem.<lb />Meanwhile, a school established by the<lb />Presbyterians was opened at Hiwassee<lb />in eastern Tennessee, only 60 miles<lb />northwest of Springplace. A new, De-<lb />cember 1804, deadline for an operating<lb />school was set and barely met. One of<lb />the two couples at the mission now<lb />asked to be released from their assign-<lb />ment. The survival of the mission<lb />seemed to depend on the careful selec-<lb />tion of their replacements. The<lb />Gambolds proved to be a good choice.<lb /><lb />Of the two Gambolds, more is<lb />known of Anna Rosina,T owing largely<lb />to her 17 years as an exceptionally tal-<lb />ented and popular teacher at the<lb />Bethlehem Female Seminary. Born in<lb />Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, in 1762, she<lb />was the daughter of the locksmith<lb />Daniel Kliest and Anna Felicitas<lb />Schuster (who died in 1765). At the age<lb />of 26, this Single Sister began her teach-<lb />ing career at the Seminary. Her range of<lb /><lb />Leben<lb /><lb />des<lb /><lb />Herren<lb /><lb />Nicolaus Ludwig<lb /><lb />Grafen und Herrn<lb />pon<lb /><lb />Sinzendorf<lb /><lb />und<lb /><lb />Potcendore,<lb /><lb />befchvieben<lb /><lb />von<lb /><lb />Nuguit Gottlies Spangenberg.<lb /><lb />Vierter Theil,<lb /><lb />Wu te<lb />WON Ue :<lb />ae<lb /><lb />AIRC CARH CMR CAIRN \<lb /><lb />. Bu finden<lb />in den Briidergeneinen,<lb />17-73.<lb /><lb />Above: Part IV of SparngenbergTs<lb />biography of Count von Zinzendorf,<lb />patron of the Brethren, survived the trip to<lb />Springplace; it is quite possible the<lb />Gambolds did not own the other parts.<lb /><lb />Right: The sole American imprint in the<lb />Gambold collection is The History of the<lb />Days of the Son of Man from Martyr<lb />Week to His Ascension (Philadelphia,<lb />1769). The book first belonged to Anna<lb />RosinaTs father, Daniel Kliest.<lb /><lb />+ Die<lb /><lb />ee<lb /><lb />interests included the natural sciences<lb />as well as literature, and she wrote<lb />verse (English as well as German) for<lb />student recitations and other special<lb />occasions. She was imaginative, ener-<lb />getic, and clever"dqualities often<lb />masked by the sober reports, diaries,<lb />and letters that make up the official<lb />record of her years at Springplace. In<lb />1803, she accompanied George Henry<lb />Loskiel and others on a trip to<lb />ZeisbergerTs mission at Goshen on the<lb />Muskingum River in Ohio. Her per-<lb />sonal interest in fulfilling the core<lb />Moravian commitment to serving the<lb />American Indian coincided with the<lb />expressed desire of John Gambold,<lb />hatter and leader of the Single Broth-<lb />ers at Salem, to serve in the recently<lb />established Moravian Mission to the<lb />Cherokees.<lb /><lb />In 1802, Gambold had been se-<lb />lected to travel from Salem to<lb />Springplace to bring news and instruc-<lb />tions to Jacob and Dorothea Byhan, the<lb />couple then serving alone at the Mis-<lb />sion. He remained with them for six<lb />very satisfying weeks. He returned still<lb />willing and eager to serve the Chero-<lb />kee, and willing servants were badly<lb />needed; but the Lot, to which the<lb />Moravians referred as an indication of<lb />divine will, determined that this was<lb />not the time for John Gambold to go to<lb />Springplace. Instead, he became assis-<lb />tant vorsteher (warden) at Salem, and<lb />married Catherina Lanius.§ Within two<lb />years, John was called to serve as pas-<lb />tor in nearby Friedberg, where both he<lb />and his wife were stricken with a severe<lb />fever. He recovered; Catherine died on<lb /><lb />October 30, 1804.<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />GSefdhbidte<lb /><lb />) der<lb /><lb />TUGE<lb /> Menkoen-SoHues<lb /><lb />von<lb /><lb />Der Marter-Wode at<lb /><lb />bis<lb /><lb />ar Seinee Hinrmelfabrt.<lb /><lb />ans pes<lb /><lb /> e<lb />Lee Rize x<lb />Ko Awe ©<lb />Pee<lb />4 fat ha<lb /><lb />Philadelphia, Gedrudt im Nahr i769.<lb />Bey Henrid Milter yw haben, mit obey ohne<lb />Wilcoks Gonig-Tropien<lb /><lb />ec Skliret.<lb /><lb />7<lb /><lb />4<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 7<lb /></p>
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        <p>John Gambold was at last ap-<lb />proved in early 1805 for his Cherokee<lb />mission"provided that he remarry. He<lb />promptly set out for Bethlehem, Penn-<lb />sylvania, and for the accomplished<lb />schoolteacher, Anna Rosina Kliest.?<lb />They were married in May, and set out<lb />for Salem soon thereafter.<lb /><lb />It is easy enough to picture Sister<lb />Gambold packing up as many as pos-<lb />sible of her possessions, including<lb />books and pictures. Both parents were<lb />dead, and at the age of 43, she was<lb />marrying for the first time; she was<lb />leaving the community into which she<lb />had been born, and heading out for the<lb />frontier to serve the Lord and the<lb />Cherokee. She labored at Springplace<lb />for 16 years, following her close friend<lb />Peggy Crutchfield (the GamboldsT first<lb />convert) in death by four months.<lb /><lb />The Moravians were meticulous<lb />record-keepers, and consequently the<lb />GamboldsT reports, diaries, and letters<lb />to their friends and supervisors back at<lb />Salem have been preserved.!° Regretta-<lb />bly, the correspondence that was sent<lb />to Springplace, like the GamboldsT<lb />many books, has disappeared.<lb />The Moravian missionaries who<lb />survived the Gambolds (John<lb />died in 1827) were forced to<lb />leave Springplace in 1831 for re-<lb />fusing to swear allegiance to the<lb />state of Georgia, one more dis-<lb />graceful aspect of the govern-<lb />ment policies associated with<lb />the infamous removal of the<lb />Cherokees from their lands in<lb />the East.<lb /><lb />While at Springplace, the<lb />Gambolds drew up two listings<lb />of the books they had with<lb />them. One of these, oBooks in<lb />the Possession of John &amp; Anna<lb />R. Gambold at Springplace<lb />Cherokee Country,� is preserved<lb />among the manuscripts in the<lb />American Philosophical Society<lb />in Philadelphia." It is written in<lb />the same handwriting as the in-<lb /><lb />RosinaTs ownership of selected<lb /><lb />books now in the Salem<lb /><lb />Gambold Collection. While there has<lb />been speculation that some of the reli-<lb />gious books on the list might have be-<lb />longed to John Gambold, it is at least<lb />as likely that all of the books on this list<lb />belonged to the veteran schoolteacher<lb />rather than to the hatter/minister.'�<lb />The books are listed in subject catego-<lb />ries: Religious Works (15 titles), On Sci-<lb />ences (13), On Education (4), Miscella-<lb />neous Works (8), Poetry (11), and<lb />School Books (11). The most notable<lb /><lb />6 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />Surgical instruments of the eighteenth<lb />century were illustrated in RichterTs<lb /><lb />scriptions that establish Anna The Rudiments of Surgery (7782).<lb /><lb />thing about these books is that all 79<lb />titles are in English. This is not entirely<lb />surprising, as the Gambolds were bi-<lb />lingual; despite the closeness of the<lb />German-speaking community in<lb />Bethlehem and Salem, both had been<lb />born and raised in the American colo-<lb />nies. Anna Rosina had taught most, if<lb />not all, of her classes at Bethlehem<lb />Female Seminary in English, and her<lb />fluency in English is clearly evident in<lb />her verse.<lb /><lb />The titles on the oPossession� list<lb />include authors and titles still familiar<lb />to the well-read English major: Joseph<lb />AddisonTs Evidences of the Christian Reli-<lb />gion; John BunyanTs Grace Abounding to<lb />the Chief of Sinners; Works of the late Dr.<lb />Benjamin Franklin; John GerardTs Medi-<lb />tations; The Book of Common Prayer of the<lb />Protestant Episcopal Church in the U.S.;<lb />Gilbert BurnetTs Abridgement of the Ref-<lb />ormation of the Church of England and his<lb />Some Account of the Life &amp; Death of John,<lb />Earl of Rochester; Samuel JohnsonTs Lives<lb />of the English Poets; James ThomsonTs<lb />The Seasons; Robert BurnsTs Poems; John<lb />GayTs Fables; Edward YoungTs Night<lb /><lb />Thoughts; John MiltonTs Paradise Lost;<lb />William CowperTs The Task; Thomas<lb />CampbellTs The Pleasures of Hope. Three<lb />of the titles listed under Education<lb />clearly reveal Anna RosinaTs profes-<lb />sional concerns at Bethlehem Female<lb />Seminary: Hannah MoreTs Strictures on<lb />the Modern System of Female Education;<lb />Charlotte SmithTs Rural Walks; and Les-<lb />sons of a Governess to her Pupils. So, too,<lb />do the books On Sciences, including<lb />Daniel FenningTs A New and Easy Guide<lb /><lb />to the Use of the Globes; Joseph MoxonTs<lb />A Tutor to Astronomie and Geographie;<lb />and James FergusonTs Astronomy Ex-<lb />plained Upon Sir Isaac NewtonTs Prin-<lb />ciples. This large selection of moral but<lb />secular titles casts some light on the<lb />fact that among the books in the Salem<lb />Gambold Collection are three titles!<lb />that are not part of the Moravian devo-<lb />tional canon.<lb /><lb />The publishing history of these<lb />titles in English'* confirms the possibil-<lb />ity that most of these books came with<lb />Anna Rosina from Bethlehem to<lb />Springplace in 1805. Those listed under<lb />oSchoolbooks,� written in slightly<lb />larger, neater script than the other cat-<lb />egories and titles, may have come from<lb />Bethlehem with Anna Rosina and/or<lb />from more than one source. In August<lb />1808, for example, the reading material<lb />for the school was supplemented by a<lb />gift: oa boat from Major Anderson ar-<lb />rived here and brought various needed<lb />articles ... for each of our brown chil-<lb />dren as a present, a whole lot of use-<lb />ful " and what is the most important<lb />for us " very religiously written books<lb />for our school.�!5<lb /><lb />The Springplace Diary and letters<lb />reveal that distant as it was from<lb />Salem, the mission<lb />was not cut off from<lb />travelers and area<lb />friends, White and<lb />Native American,<lb />who delivered pack-<lb />ages and bundles<lb />and even casks of<lb />documents and<lb />gifts. Gambold al-<lb />ways speaks of the<lb />delight and grati-<lb />tude with which<lb />| these materials, in-<lb /><lb />_ cluding books, were<lb />| received " grati-<lb />tude for the materi-<lb />als, and gratitude<lb />_ for their actual ar-<lb />rival, which could<lb />never be guaran-<lb />teed. At least once,<lb />the delivery of a<lb />packet to Springplace was delayed for<lb />some ten weeks at the home of people<lb />who could not read, and therefore<lb />could not determine to whom the<lb />packet should go.'® Another delivery<lb />(containing a $100 bill) was set aside<lb />en route in a place owhere the mice are<lb />playing post-master and wanted to for-<lb />ward it, but found it too large for their<lb />mail and reduced it to many small<lb />parts, of diverse shapes, perhaps like<lb />plots of land.� The parts were discov-<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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        <p>ered some weeks later, with the address<lb />gone, and eventually made their way<lb />to the missionaries " with the bill<lb />odamaged only a little and can pass at<lb />full worth.�!7 Some documents, usually<lb />reports of developments at various<lb />Moravian congregations, had to be<lb />sent on to others located in distant<lb />outposts; documents often had to be<lb />returned because it was too trouble-<lb />some to make and disseminate mul-<lb />tiple copies. Titles drifted in and out of<lb />Springplace.<lb /><lb />At times, the demands of securing<lb />food and shelter precluded the writing<lb />of letters to Salem; at other times, the<lb />letters and diaries mentioned the desire<lb />for more reading material:<lb /><lb />If there should be space left in<lb />the little chest, then you might<lb />find something useful for us, as<lb />for instance the last volume of<lb />MilnerTs Church History. N. B.<lb />the first three volumes are in<lb />the Mission Archives. (DonTt be<lb />alarmed over this large effort, it<lb />is only in Diminutivo), and the<lb />first 4 volumes of the same<lb />work were given to us by a<lb />friend in Pennsylvania. Perhaps<lb />It would be best, if I would<lb />include here the catalog of<lb /><lb />the Springplace Archive,<lb /><lb />which we would indicate in<lb />the best way what might be<lb />sent to us when there is a<lb /><lb />good opportunity. !®<lb /><lb />Gambold did indeed draw up<lb />such a catalog, listing English titles<lb />on one side of the page, and Ger-<lb />man titles on the other. What is<lb />truly revealing about this document<lb />is the extent to which it does not<lb />correlate with the titles in the Salem<lb />Gambold Collection or with the<lb />titles on the oPossession� list. Very<lb />little overlap exists among the<lb />three. Two titles, Elements of Useful<lb />Knowledge 2 vols. and The American<lb />Young ManTs Best Companion, on the<lb />oArchives� list appear on the oPos-<lb />session� list, and three other oAr-<lb />chives� titles (Pastor ReichelTs<lb />Ghostly Hymns and _ Songs,<lb />Zinzendorf's Thoughts Concerning<lb />Various Evangelical Truths, and<lb />GregorTs Prayers and Meditations in<lb />Verse for All the Days of the Year) are<lb />represented in the Gambold Collec-<lb />tion, which also includes the<lb />BrethrenTs Hymn Book. (The oAr-<lb />chives� list also includes a standard<lb />hymn book and its supplement.)<lb />Both lists " one by Anna Rosina<lb />and one by John " may have been<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />drawn up around 1816; they suggest<lb />that the Gambolds made a clear dis-<lb />tinction between their personal books<lb />and those belonging to the mission.<lb />Busy as they were in their work,<lb />the Gambolds obviously were eager to<lb />receive reading material as well as the<lb />official publications needed for hold-<lb />ing services. The GamboldsT work "<lb />teaching as well as preaching " was all<lb />conducted in English, meaning that<lb />the German books in their possession<lb />mostly were read privately, perhaps pro-<lb />viding the basis of ad hoc translation<lb />for use in public services. The letters<lb />and diaries reveal that the services and<lb />devotions, including Singstunden,!�<lb />they observed were carried out much as<lb />they would have been back in Salem or<lb />Bethlehem, albeit in English, and re-<lb />quired the use of standard materials.<lb />An important Moravian devotional<lb />volume was the oLosungsbuch,�?°<lb />which established the framework and<lb />theme for daily worship. The Gambolds<lb />were always especially grateful to re-<lb />ceive a copy of the next Daily Text book<lb />from friends in Bethlehem or Salem,<lb />and great satisfaction when enough<lb />copies arrived to give each member of<lb />the mission his own.?! The Gambolds<lb /><lb />te seagl vchen<lb /><lb />oShe sings so beautifully!� " one of four<lb />ohistorical engravings� from Suvarov and the<lb />Cossacks in Italy (1800), one of the few non-<lb />devotional volumes in the Gambold collection.<lb /><lb />held a second daily service in which<lb />they frequently incorporated a prayer<lb />or meditation from oGerhard� " most<lb />likely the oGerardTs Meditations 1635"<lb />on the oPossession� list. Another fre-<lb />quently cited source for this second<lb />service was ZinzendorfTs The Harmony<lb />of the Four Gospels, which appears on<lb />the oArchives� list, as was the case with<lb />onews of the visit of the blessed Brother<lb />John ... read from the mission history<lb />of Greenland.��� Use of the German<lb />titles in the Gambold collection is con-<lb />siderably less evident.<lb /><lb />Despite the late date at which the<lb />two lists of books were drawn up, they<lb />do not include all the titles the<lb />Gambolds had at Springplace. In<lb />March 1818, they wrote friends in Sa-<lb />lem, oIn the evening we are reading<lb />together the History of the Missions of<lb />the Propagation of the Gospel among the<lb />Heathen Since the Reformation by Will-<lb />iam Brown, with particular pleasure.��°<lb />This title appears on neither of the sur-<lb />viving lists nor among the surviving<lb />books. Yet it is a significant title, repre-<lb />senting core professional reading for<lb />these missionaries. Similarly, in report-<lb />ing on the personal injuries and ill-<lb />nesses that befell the missionaries far<lb />too often, the Gambolds refer to a<lb />medical book (EwellTs Medical Compan-<lb />ion)** not listed in the surviving docu-<lb />mentation. The titles they did have,<lb />however, are of interest. William<lb />BuchanTs Domestic Medicine (on the<lb />oPossession� list) bears a revealing sub-<lb />title: A Treatise on the Prevention and<lb />Cure of Diseases by Regimen and Simple<lb />Medicines: with An Appendix Containing<lb />a Dispensatory for the Use of Private Prac-<lb />titioners, to Which are Added Observa-<lb />tions on the Diet of the Common People,<lb />Recommending a Method of Living Less<lb />Expensive and More Conducive to Health<lb />than the Present.2° The Gambolds were<lb />living inexpensively.<lb /><lb />The German medical volume that<lb />is part of the Gambold Collection, on<lb />the other hand, is a chilling reminder<lb />of the missionariesT remove from pro-<lb />fessional medical help. It is volume<lb />one of the Rudiments of Surgery, and its<lb />engravings provide pictures of some<lb />singularly wicked-looking tourniquets<lb />and instruments. The Gambolds were<lb />more prone to the ailments of arthri-<lb />tis, and oneurasthenia.� John<lb />Gambold reported in 1817, for ex-<lb />ample, that oLittle Mother Anna Rosel<lb />has to suffer with all kinds of pain, in<lb />particular with arthritic attack, for sev-<lb />eral weeks already, the thumb of her<lb />left hand has been quite lamed and 4-<lb />5 days her walking has been made dif-<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 7<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>ficult by similar pains in her right<lb />leg.�26 Indeed, the letters of the<lb />Gambolds reveal increasingly frequent<lb />allusions to the physical limitations of<lb />these hard-working and unmistakably<lb />aging people. Anna Rosina died<lb />(opassed over�), in GamboldTs arms, in<lb />early 1821, as they were packing to<lb />move to a new mission outpost in<lb />Oochgelogy, Georgia.�<lb /><lb />The bereaved widower went on to<lb />Oochgelogy, and then returned to Sa-<lb />lem for a period of recovery; but he did<lb />not ask to be excused from his service<lb />to the Cherokee. The mission board de-<lb />termined that he clearly needed help at<lb />his new post, and so he was married to<lb />the Widow Anna Maria Grabbs Schultz,<lb />who left her two daughters at the Sa-<lb />lem GirlsT Boarding School, and accom-<lb />panied Gambold to Oochgelogy in<lb />1823. Anna Maria was perhaps less<lb />prepared than her predecessor for mis-<lb />sion work (which included establishing<lb />a school for both Cherokee girls and<lb />boys, the school at Springplace having<lb />become a boysT school in 1819); but<lb />with experience, she grew into the job.<lb />Gambold himself died at Oochgelogy<lb />in 1827, and yet she remained " un-<lb />married " with the other Moravian<lb />missionaries in Georgia until they all<lb />finally were expelled by the state gov-<lb />ernment in 1831.<lb /><lb />What happened to the books that<lb />had been in the possession (whether<lb />listed or not) of John and Anna Rosina<lb />at Springplace? Most of the books, in-<lb />cluding those inherited by Anna<lb /><lb />Dr. Martin LutherTs Christly Precepts for All the Days of the Year (1817) was one of the<lb /><lb />Rosina from her father Daniel, would<lb />have been inherited by John Gambold<lb />in 1821. Some or all of them might<lb />have returned with him to Salem in<lb />that year. It is far more likely that they<lb />remained in Georgia. They might have<lb />been divided between Springplace and<lb />Oochgelogy, but " especially given the<lb />sort of distinction made between the<lb />Mission Archive and the personal pos-<lb />sessions of the Gambolds " it is more<lb />likely the library was moved in toto to<lb />the latter. When Anna Maria returned<lb />to Salem, she probably brought her late<lb /><lb />husbandTs library with her.<lb /><lb />By 1831, the extent to which Ger-<lb />man was the preferred tongue among<lb />the Moravians was probably diminish-<lb />ing. It is probable that the German<lb />books in the Gambold library were be-<lb />coming increasingly appreciated as<lb />quaint artifacts by Anna MariaTs de-<lb />scendants, while the books in English<lb />would have remained oin circula-<lb />tion� " more ordinary, more easily re-<lb />placed, and less likely to be preserved<lb />over the years. It is possible that the in-<lb />scription of John GamboldTs name in<lb />the three volumes of RislerTs Historical<lb />Excerpts from the Books of the Old Testa-<lb />ment was written by Anna Maria or one<lb />of her daughters; it appears to be the<lb />same hand that wrote oSister<lb />Gambold� in two of Anna RosinaTs vol-<lb />umes. Yet another hand, probably later<lb />but also probably within the family,<lb />wrote o(Anna MariaTs husband)� next<lb />to John GamboldTs name in one of the<lb />Risler volumes. We do know that Anna<lb /><lb />many titles published to celebrate the tricentennial of the'beginning of the Protestant<lb />Reformation. The title page proudly explains that the engraving is based on the Cranach<lb /><lb />portrait of Luther.<lb /><lb />8 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />MariaTs daughter Dorothea married the<lb />book binder David Clewell in 1839,<lb />and through their descendants the<lb />German books that now constitute the<lb />Salem Gambold collection survived.<lb /><lb />It is in this light that we look at the<lb />last book to be added to the Gambold<lb />Collection during Anna RosinaTs life-<lb />time, Dr. Martin LutherTs Exegesis of<lb />the Fifteenth Chapter of St. John.<lb />(Neudietendorf: 1818). The inscription<lb />shows it to be a gift to Anna Rosina<lb />from Elisabeth Horsfield, almost cer-<lb />tainly the Eliza M. Horsfield who had<lb />taught with her at the Bethlehem Fe-<lb />male Seminary some twenty years be-<lb />fore.�® Like an earlier gift�? from their<lb />friends, Christian and Maria Schaaf,<lb />this book was part of the wave of<lb />Luther celebrations that came with the<lb />tricentennial of the Reformation. The<lb />Horsfield gift is an 1818 edition of a<lb />German text originally printed in<lb />1538"an early Reformation text. That<lb />is the point: for these spiritual descen-<lb />dents of John Hus, LutherTs triumph is<lb />ultimately their triumph.<lb /><lb />The Springplace grave of Sister<lb />Anna Rosina Kliest Gambold was, and<lb />is yet, unmarked. A small part of her<lb />personal library is preserved in the Sa-<lb />lem College Library, a memorial to her,<lb />and to her remarkable fulfillment of<lb />the ideals of her faith.<lb /><lb />The author gratefully acknowledges the<lb />assistance of Ms. Martha Giles, Techni-<lb />cal Services Librarian; Ms. Susan Taylor,<lb />Public Services Librarian; Mr. Adam<lb />Stiener, Associate Professor of German;<lb />and Dr. Craig Atwood, Chaplain and<lb />Assistant Professor of Religion, all of<lb />Salem College; Dr. C. Daniel Crews, Mr.<lb />Richard Starbuck, and Mrs. Grace<lb />Robinson of the Moravian Church Ar-<lb />chives of Winston-Salem; Dr. Nola<lb />Knouse of the Moravian Music Founda-<lb />tion, Winston-Salem; Mr. J]. Thomas<lb />Minor, Library Director at Moravian<lb />College, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania; and<lb />Mr. Scott DeHaven of the American<lb />Philosophical Society, Philadelphia,<lb />Pennsylvania.<lb /><lb />References<lb /><lb />! The best route from Salem to<lb />Springplace went north over the Blue<lb />Ridge Mountains to a place near<lb />Abingdon, Virginia. They followed the<lb />valley from Bristol to Knoxville, and<lb />then took the more difficult road to<lb />Springplace. Frances Griffin, Less Time<lb />for Meddling A History of Salem Academy<lb />and College 1772-1866 (Winston-Salem,<lb />NC: John F. Blair, 1979), 59, observes<lb />that this field trip was an unusually<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>distant venture for the students.<lb /><lb />2 At this time, hymnals contained<lb />words, but not the notes, staffs, and<lb />other representations of the music that<lb />we are used to finding in modern hym-<lb />nals. Dr. Nola Knause of the Moravian<lb />Music Foundation and Dr. C. Daniel<lb />Crews of the Moravian Church Ar-<lb />chives, have explained that very differ-<lb />ent verses (songs) with a common<lb />meter could be sung to the same tune.<lb />That is, a given set of words did not<lb />belong exclusively to a given tune.<lb />Joint interview, Winston-Salem, De-<lb />cember 4, 1997.)<lb /><lb />3 The Moravian Church maintains a<lb />very informative Web page (http://<lb />www.moravian.org). The basic histories<lb />of the Moravian Church include E. A.<lb />DeSchweinitz, History of the Church<lb />Known as Unitas Fratrum (Bethlehem,<lb />PA: Moravian Publications Office,<lb />1885); J. E. Hutton, A History of the<lb />Moravian Church 2d ed. (London:<lb />Moravian Publications Office, 1909);<lb />and J.T. and K.G. Hamilton, History of<lb />the Moravian Church: The Renewed<lb />Unitas Fratrum 1722-1957 rev. ed.<lb />(Bethlehem, PA: Interprovincial Board<lb />of Christian Education, Moravian<lb />Church in America, 1967).<lb /><lb />4 Muriel Wright, Springplace Moravian<lb />Mission and the Ward Family of the<lb />Cherokee Nation (Guthrie, OK: Co-op-<lb />erative Publishing Co., 1940), 34. The<lb />standard history of the Springplace<lb />Mission is the Rev. Edmund Schwarze,<lb />History of the Moravian Missions Among<lb />Southern Indian Tribes of the United States<lb />(Bethlehem, PA: Times Publishing<lb />Company, 1923) Transactions of the<lb />Moravian Historical Society, Special Series.<lb />Vol. I. Wright borrowed extensively<lb />from Schwarze.<lb /><lb /> HeckewelderTs daughter Polly was<lb />reportedly the first White child born in<lb />Ohio, and a student at the Bethlehem<lb />Female Seminary in the first years of<lb />Anna RosinaTs tenure there. One of the<lb /><lb />¢ Over 21,000 Current &amp; Backlist Titles<lb /><lb />¢ 19 Years of Service<lb /><lb />* oHands On� Selection<lb /><lb />¢ Pre-School Through Adult<lb /><lb />* Discounts up to 70% Off<lb /><lb />¢ Now Two Adjacent Warehouses<lb />¢ Sturdy Library Bindings<lb /><lb />¢ 100% Fill<lb /><lb />+ Cataloging/Processing Available<lb /><lb />volumes in the Salem Gambold Collec-<lb />tion, Some of the Last Discourses of the<lb />Blessed Count Nicholas Lewis von<lb />Zinzendorf (Barby, 1784), is a gift from<lb />Polly to her former teacher inscribed,<lb />oJohanna Maria Heckewelder to A. RO.<lb />G.� The book might have been pre-<lb />sented just before Anna RosinaTs 1805<lb />departure from Bethlehem, or it might<lb />have been sent out to Springplace at<lb />any time up to 1821.<lb /><lb />6 William G. McLoughlin, Cherokees<lb />and Missionaries, 1789-1839, (New Ha-<lb />ven: Yale University Press, 1984). This<lb />and the next paragraph are drawn from<lb />McLoughlinTs chapter, oThe Cherokees<lb />and the Moravians, 1799-1803,� pp.<lb />35-53. In general, the books by<lb />McLoughlin and Schwarze provide the<lb />basis for the general summary of the<lb />Moravian Mission to the Cherokees in<lb />this paper.<lb /><lb />7 Daniel L. McKinley provides a<lb />splendid biography of the Gambolds in<lb />oAnna Rosina (Kliest) Gambold (1762-<lb />1821), Moravian Missionary to the<lb />Cherokees, with Special Reference to<lb />her Botanical Interests,� Transactions of<lb />the Moravian Historical Society 28 (1994):<lb />59-99.<lb /><lb />8 Adelaide Fries, trans. and ed.,<lb />Records of the Moravians in North Caro-<lb />lina. 13 vols. (Raleigh: State Depart-<lb />ment of Archives and History, 1927-47;<lb />reprinted 1970), v. 6, 2688. I have<lb />made extensive use of this invaluable<lb />resource in this paper.<lb /><lb />9 Anna Rosina and John had both in-<lb />habited the small Moravian commu-<lb />nity of Bethlehem from 1773 to 1782<lb />and from 1785 to 1790. JohnTs age dur-<lb />ing those periods would have been 13<lb />to 22 and 25 to 30 years; Anna Rosina<lb />would have been two years younger. In<lb />short, they would have made one<lb />anotherTs acquaintance, however sepa-<lb />rate their lives must have been as<lb />Single Brother and Single Sister.<lb />(Moravians were divided into ochoirs,�<lb /><lb />or social groups based on age and mari-<lb />tal status.)<lb /><lb />10 The GamboldsT letters and other<lb />documents are preserved in the Ar-<lb />chives of the Moravian Church in<lb />America, Southern Province, Winston-<lb />Salem, NC. In 1802, Salem received of-<lb />ficial oversight of the Cherokee mission<lb />activities. Gambold addressed letters (as<lb />well as reports) to his supervisors in the<lb />Diacony and General Helpers Confer-<lb />ence there. The letters have been trans-<lb />lated into English by the late Elizabeth<lb />Marx of the Moravian Church Archives.<lb />Three years (1815-1817) of the<lb />Springplace Diary have been translated<lb />and edited by Rowena McClinton, The<lb />Moravian Mission Among the Cherokees at<lb />Springplace, Georgia. (Ph.D. Dissertation.<lb />University of Kentucky, 1996).<lb /><lb />11 oBooks in the Possession of John<lb />and Anna Rosina Gambold at<lb />Springplace Cherokee Country,� Mis-<lb />cellaneous Manuscripts Collection<lb />(MLS-3), American Philosophical Soci-<lb />ety, Philadelphia. The list itself has sur-<lb />vived by an extraordinary stroke of<lb />luck. It is accompanied by a note ex-<lb />plaining that in 1934 the list had been<lb />ofound on the street by a passerby and<lb />brought in, thinking that it belonged<lb />to the American Philosophical Soci-<lb />ety.�<lb /><lb />12 Daniel McKinley has written a de-<lb />tailed analysis of the English titles on<lb />this list, The Books of John and Anna<lb />Rosina Gambold (S.1.: n.p., n.d.) 47 pp.<lb />Two copies are in the Moravian Collec-<lb />tion of Reeves Library at Moravian Col-<lb />lege, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.<lb /><lb />13 These are Fruits of my Nightwatches<lb />in Cayenne, originally in French,<lb />(Gotha, 1799) and a play, Rinaldo<lb />RinaldiniTs Suvarov and the Cossacks in<lb />Italy (Leipzig, 1800). The latter includes<lb />an engraved portrait of the Russian<lb />general Suvarov and four ohistorical<lb />engravings� "i.e., illustrations of the<lb />text; one portrays the next best thing<lb /><lb />MUMFORD<lb /><lb />RELIABLE WHOLESALER SINCE 1977<lb />. North Carolina Representative " Phil May<lb /><lb />oNothing like seeing<lb />for yourself.T<lb /><lb />MUMFORD LIBRARY BOOKS, SOUTHEAST, INC.<lb />7847 Bayberry Road ¢ Jacksonville, Florida 32256<lb /><lb />(904) 737-2649<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />FAX: (904) 730-8913<lb /><lb />1-800-367-3927<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 9<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />to ColeridgeTs damsel with a dulci-<lb />mer " a genuine image of the Roman-<lb />tic era. The third non-devotional title<lb />is a medical book.<lb /><lb />14 A title and/or author check of the<lb />list entries in the LOCIS databases,<lb />PREM and BKSA, confirms that edi-<lb />tions of most were in print before 1805.<lb />Two exceptions are Christian<lb />Correspondence ... the late Rev. John<lb />Wesley &amp;c. to the Late Mrs. Eliza Bennis<lb />(1809) and Elias BoudinotTs Memoirs of<lb />the Life of the Rev. William Tennent, Late<lb />Pastor of the Presbyterian Church at Free-<lb />hold in New Jersey , which first saw print<lb />in 1806. McKinley, The Books, provides<lb />a thorough study of the titles on this<lb />list.<lb /><lb />IS August 22, 1808. Gambolds to<lb />Brother Benzien. Moravian Church Ar-<lb />chives, Winston-Salem M411:6:22. All<lb />following letter citations are abbrevi-<lb />ated to date, writer, and addressee.<lb />They are found in boxes M411 and<lb />M412. While the oPossessions� list has<lb />a School books category, the books re-<lb />ceived in this gift may never have been<lb />listed separately. In his oArchives� list,<lb />Gambold gives these gift items a single<lb />entry, odifferent Schoolbooks pre-<lb />sented by Col Meigs and Col. Anderson<lb />&amp; others,� while also entering two<lb />other titles that appear on the oPosses-<lb /><lb />IN<lb /><lb />10 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />INTEGRATED<lb /><lb />sions� list.<lb /><lb />16 February 28, 1808. Gambolds to<lb />Brother Benzien. This had happened<lb />some 18 months before, when the<lb />Gambolds had been at Springplace for<lb />less than a full year.<lb /><lb />17 July 8, 1816. Gambolds to Brother<lb />van Vleck.<lb /><lb />18 July 1, 1816. Gambolds to Brother v.<lb />Schweinitz.<lb /><lb />19 oSingstunde� means an hour of<lb />singing. This was a form of worship ser-<lb />vice that was based on selecting a series<lb />of hymns that developed a particular<lb />theme. Otto Dreydoppel, Jr. and C.<lb />Daniel Crews, oMoravian Meanings A<lb />Glossary of Moravian Terms,� http://<lb />www.moravian.org/meanings.htm.<lb /><lb />20 Dreydoppel and Crews,. oLosung�<lb />means watchword, in this case a se-<lb />lected Bible verse for the day. Count<lb />von Zinzendorf began the practice of<lb />sending out a daily watchword to the<lb />Moravians at Hernnhut in 1732. The<lb />Daily Text books are annual compila-<lb />tions of these verses, selected by lot<lb />and in advance, and translated into<lb />over 40 languages around the world.<lb />21 April 22, 1816. Gambolds to<lb />Brother Van Vleck.<lb /><lb />2 Diary, January 7, 1816; McClinton,<lb />pp. 369-70.<lb /><lb />?3 March 23, 1818. John and A. R.<lb /><lb />INFORMATION SERVICES<lb /><lb />INFORMATION<lb /><lb />Gambold to Brother and Sister Stoz.<lb /><lb />24 June 11, 1818. Gambolds to Brother<lb />Van Vleck.<lb /><lb />*S This title is an early North Carolina<lb />imprint: Halifax, NC: Printed and sold<lb />by Abraham Hodge, 1801.<lb /><lb />76 August 17, 1817. Gambolds to Jacob<lb />Van Vleck.<lb /><lb />27 Schwarze, p. 143.<lb /><lb />*8 William C. Reichel, A History of the<lb />Rise, Progress, and Present Condition of<lb />the Bethlehem Female Seminary with a<lb /><lb />- Catalog of its Pupils, 1785-1858 (Phila-<lb /><lb />delphia: J. B. Lippincott &amp; Co., 1858),<lb />294.<lb /><lb />29 Dr. Martin LutherTs Christly Precepts<lb />for All the Days of the Year...Also a Me-<lb />mento of Thankful Remembrance of his<lb />Service in Having Begun the Reformation<lb />of the Church 300 Years Ago. With<lb />LutherTs Picture After the Original Paint-<lb />ing by Lucas Cranach ... (Neudietendorf,<lb />1817). The Schaafs moved from<lb />Bethlehem and arrived in Salem on<lb />May 20, 1819. Two months later, John<lb />Gambold wrote that the Schaafs oshall<lb />have a loving kiss in spirit for their love<lb />that they have brought something for<lb />us from Bethlehem as far as Salem and<lb />have turned it over for further send-<lb />ing.� (July 24, 1819. John Gambold to<lb />Brother Van Vleck.)<lb /><lb />MANAGEMENT<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />Alexandre VattemareTs<lb />System of International Exchanges<lb />in North Carolina<lb /><lb />he power of eloquence spurred<lb />legislators in 1849 to authorize<lb />North CarolinaTs participation in<lb />an innovative international ex-<lb />change program that led to a brief,<lb />but interesting, sharing of informa-<lb />tion. That year Nicolas Marie<lb />Alexandre Vattemare, a French ventrilo-<lb />quist, impersonator, and philanthro-<lb />pist, came to North Carolina to gain<lb />support for his system of literary and<lb />scientific exchanges. Inspired by his ide-<lb />als and persuasive manner, the General<lb />Assembly added the state to a roster of<lb />countries and American states that had<lb />already begun to exchange publications<lb />and artifacts in an effort to promote<lb />good will and understanding. After a<lb />flurry of activity, North Carolinians lost<lb />interest in the program, even though<lb />the State Library had received consider-<lb />ably more material than the state sent<lb />to VattemareTs agency in Paris. The ex-<lb />change program, which dwindled in<lb />importance prior to VattemareTs death<lb />in 1864, had little impact on the people<lb />of North Carolina. The programTs sig-<lb />nificance lies not in what North Carolina<lb />gained through exchange, but in the<lb />light it sheds on the state and its people<lb />at a progressive moment in history.<lb />Alexandre Vattemare (November 8,<lb />1796-April 7, 1864), was born in Paris<lb />and grew up on his fatherTs small estate<lb />in Normandy, where he discovered his<lb />talent as a ventriloquist. He studied at<lb />a seminary and at lTHospital Saint-<lb />Louis, but ultimately chose to pursue a<lb />career as a ventriloquist and imperson-<lb />ator. Monsieur Alexandre, as he called<lb />himself, entertained commoners and<lb />kings throughout Europe. During his<lb />travels, Vattemare visited libraries and<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />by Maurice C. York<lb /><lb />museums. He noticed that many of<lb />them held duplicate books, documents,<lb />art objects, and artifacts. Considering<lb />this wasteful, he conceived the idea of<lb />an international exchange program and<lb />garnered support for it in Europe.!<lb /><lb />Encouraged by the Marquis de<lb />Lafayette and other prominent support-<lb />ers, Vattemare promoted his exchange<lb />program in the United States during a<lb />performing tour that began in 1839. In<lb />19 months he visited many American<lb />cities, extolling the virtue of his idea<lb />while advocating the development of<lb />public libraries. VattemareTs hard work<lb />and eloquence bore fruit. Many Ameri-<lb />cans signed petitions and wrote testi-<lb />monials in favor of his plans. In re-<lb />sponse to a memorial Vattemare pre-<lb />pared late in 1839, Congress in 1840<lb />authorized the librarian of Congress,<lb />under the supervision of the Joint Com-<lb />mittee on the Library, to exchange<lb />documents and duplicate books.� The<lb />legislatures of several states quickly<lb />voted to participate in the program.<lb />Louisiana appropriated $3,000 in March<lb />1840, and New York joined the effort in<lb />May. In March 1841, Maine agreed to<lb />print and distribute 50 extra copies of<lb />its public documents.*<lb /><lb />Vattemare returned to France in<lb />1841 with tangible evidence of his suc-<lb />cess " as he put it, o... upwards of 1,800<lb />volumes of books, 500 engravings, 250<lb /><lb />The programTs significance lies not in what North Carolina<lb />gained through exchange, but in the light it sheds on the<lb /><lb />original drawings, many specimens of<lb />natural history and mineralogy, (among<lb />them a piece of native iron, weighing<lb />2,500 lbs.) and several interesting relics<lb />of the aborigines.�* His commitment to<lb />the exchange program thus strength-<lb />ened, he distributed the materials and<lb />convinced the French government in<lb />1846 to provide limited financial sup-<lb />port. Various French agencies provided<lb />him with additional publications to dis-<lb />tribute. It was during this time that<lb />Vattemare formally created a central<lb />agency for exchanges in Paris, with<lb />himself as agent and with the assistance<lb />of his son and son-in-law.°<lb /><lb />Seeking additional participation<lb />from Congress and individual states,<lb />Vattemare returned to America in 1847.<lb />He brought with him a collection of<lb />books, prints, and medals valued at<lb />$80,000, which he expected to use to<lb />attract support for his program. The<lb />energetic Frenchman made a second<lb />appeal to Congress in February 1848.<lb />Accordingly, in June Congress enacted<lb />legislation that fostered VattemareTs ef-<lb />forts by appointing him agent, appro-<lb />priating $1,500 for the exchange<lb />agencyTs expenses, and allowing ex-<lb />changes to enter the country free of<lb />duty. It also granted franking privileges.<lb />Congress required Vattemare to stamp<lb />exchanges with the name of the pro-<lb />gram and to ship packages in care of the<lb /><lb />state and its people at a progressive moment in history.<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 11<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>collector of customs at the port of des-<lb />tination.T� Later that year, Vattemare<lb />published Report on the Subject of Inter-<lb />national Exchanges, which he used to<lb />account for his activity as agent of<lb />five states and to encourage other states<lb />to support his endeavors. He also ad-<lb />dressed legislatures as they met. By<lb />the time Vattemare left for France in<lb />December 1850, 17 states had made<lb />commitments to assist him in some<lb />fashion.®<lb /><lb />Vattemare appears to have con-<lb />tacted North CarolinaTs governor, Will-<lb />iam Alexander Graham late in 1848.°<lb />On December 11, Graham wrote the<lb />General Assembly to recommend that<lb />legislators appropriate a small sum for<lb />use by the governor to facilitate the<lb />stateTs participation in the program of<lb />o... Mr. Alexander Vattemare, a distin-<lb />guished citizen of the French Republic,<lb />for a system of International Exchanges,<lb />of Works of Literature and Science, and<lb />of the products of Nature and of Art in<lb />different Countries.� Graham attached<lb />a pamphlet describing the program and<lb />suggested that the governor be autho-<lb />rized to exchange copies of the revised<lb />statutes and other public documents.!°<lb />That Graham would take VattemareTs<lb />proposal seriously is not surprising.<lb />During his two terms as governor, he<lb />had served as a trustee of the State Li-<lb />brary, located in the State Capitol " it-<lb />self a monument to the stateTs progres-<lb />sive mood " and was aware of the<lb />libraryTs long-standing practice of ex-<lb />changing printed documents with Con-<lb />gress and with other states. He had<lb />played a key role in developing the State<lb />LibraryTs well-selected collection by<lb />overseeing the efforts of Joseph Green<lb />Cogswell to collect in America and Eu-<lb />rope such notable works as John James<lb />AudubonTs Birds of America.'!<lb /><lb />The timing of VattemareTs contact<lb />with North Carolina was fortuitous,<lb />too, because of the progressive spirit<lb />prevalent at that time. Beginning in<lb />1835, the Whig Party had dominated<lb />the General Assembly, which supported<lb />the development of railroads, public<lb />schools, and a school for the deaf and<lb />dumb, among other improvements.<lb />The stateTs economy advanced during<lb />the 1840s. Scientific farming methods,<lb />promoted in journals and by local soci-<lb />eties, assisted some farmers in enhanc-<lb />ing their yields. Fisheries contributed<lb />significantly to the economy of eastern<lb />North Carolina. The importance of gold<lb />mining in the state had led in 1837 to<lb />the establishment of a branch of the<lb />United States Mint at Charlotte. Iron<lb />mining was carried out successfully, but<lb /><lb />12 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />on a small scale, in the Piedmont. Tur-<lb />pentine distilleries in the southeastern<lb />counties and a fledgling textile industry<lb />flourished. Although North CarolinaTs<lb />cultural achievements did not rival<lb />those of some states in the North, the<lb />development of the University of North<lb />Carolina and a few private colleges, the<lb />appearance of newspapers throughout<lb />the state, and the publication of books<lb />and pamphlets of varying types were<lb /><lb />M. FABI QVINTILIANI<lb />Oratoris cloquentiffimiInft- Wl<lb /><lb />TYTIONVM 0: ORIARVM LIBRI Xi,<lb /><lb />~ / poft omnes omnium editiones Gognlari cum ftodio<lb />7 se eye e cam judi.<lb /><lb />PARISIUIS: ~<lb />bs  ove oe<lb />ee eu LY se: &amp; Sig nace Wleus do Panedins<lb />Cum priuilegio fupremi é<lb />SENATVS AD TRIENNIVM:<lb /><lb />Title page from book 12 of Institutio<lb />oratoria, by Marcus Fabius Quintilianus<lb />(c. AD 35-after 96), an important<lb />contribution to the field of rhetoric. This<lb />volume is one of the few gifts of<lb />Vattemare still in the State LibraryTs<lb />collection. Note the official stamp of the<lb />Systeme DTEchange International at the<lb />bottom of the page. Courtesy of the<lb />State Library of North Carolina and the<lb />North Carolina Division of Archives and<lb />History, Raleigh.<lb /><lb />evidence of a growing interest in educa-<lb />tion and reading. A survey published in<lb />1851 noted that the State Library in<lb />Raleigh contained 3,000 volumes and<lb />briefly described libraries associated<lb />with the University of North Carolina,<lb />Davidson College, Wake Forest College,<lb />oFayette Academy� in Salem, and a mis-<lb />sion school at Valle Crucis, although<lb />other libraries certainly existed.!�<lb />Actions of the General Assembly of<lb />1848-1849 epitomized this forward-<lb />looking mood. During the session leg-<lb />islators incorporated the North Caro-<lb />lina Railroad Company and authorized<lb />the development of a hospital for the<lb /><lb />insane. They gave their blessing also to<lb />many private academies and institutes,<lb />including Plymouth Academy. The<lb />Mecklenburg Agricultural Society was<lb />incorporated, as was the Williamston<lb />Library Association, founded to support<lb />a library in the town of Williamston.'4<lb /><lb />The General Assembly lost little<lb />time in responding to Governor<lb />GrahamTs recommendation. On motion<lb />of William Nathan Harrell Smith of<lb />Hertford County, the Senate voted on<lb />January 6, 1849, to send a message to<lb />the House of Commons proposing that<lb />a joint select committee of eight be<lb />formed to consider the adoption of<lb />VattemareTs plan. The House of Com-<lb />mons promptly concurred.'*<lb /><lb />The appointment of a remarkable<lb />group of legislators foreshadowed sup-<lb />port for the exchange program. The<lb />Senate chose Smith, a graduate of Yale<lb />College who later would serve in the<lb />United States House of Representatives<lb />and as chief justice of the North Caro-<lb />lina Supreme Court; William Henry<lb />Washington, a founder of the New Bern<lb />Literary Society; and William D. Bethell<lb />of Rockingham County.<lb /><lb />The House of Commons selected<lb />five members. Hamilton Chamberlain<lb />Jones, a lawyer and journalist, had pub-<lb />lished the Carolina Watchman , an anti-<lb />Jackson weekly newspaper in Salisbury.<lb />Rockingham CountyTs Daniel William<lb />Courts served as state treasurer both<lb />before and after his tenure in the House<lb />of Commons. James Cochran Dobbin,<lb />whose impassioned support insured the<lb />passage of legislation creating North<lb />CarolinaTs hospital for the insane, rep-<lb />resented Cumberland County. Later he<lb />served as Franklin PierceTs secretary of<lb />the Navy. An avid Whig who served<lb />terms in the United States House of Rep-<lb />resentatives and, in 1862, a stint as<lb />Abraham LincolnTs military governor of<lb />North Carolina, Edward Stanly repre-<lb />sented Beaufort County. Kenneth<lb />Rayner, a planter from Hertford County<lb />who had served in the United States<lb />House of Representatives from 1839 to<lb />1845, was elected chairman of the com-<lb />mittee. It is possible that Rayner ac-<lb />cepted this role because he had served<lb />in Congress when Vattemare first ad-<lb />dressed that body.'®<lb /><lb />On January 8, the committee in-<lb />vited Vattemare, who had arrived in<lb />Raleigh on January 4 to gain support for<lb />his system, to address both houses of<lb />the General Assembly and the public<lb />oon the subject of that noble and phil-<lb />anthropic purpose, to which you are<lb />devoting the labors of your life.� The<lb />Raleigh Register heralded the arrival of<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />othis distinguished French gentleman�<lb />and informed the public that he would<lb />deliver on the evening of January 9 a<lb />lecture in Commons Hall of the State<lb />Capitol.'°<lb /><lb />VattemareTs reputation attracted a<lb />ocrowded and intelligent audience,�<lb />which responded enthusiastically to his<lb />eloquent and very lengthy speech.� In<lb />it Vattemare told about the libraries he<lb />had visited and the duplicate or un-<lb />wanted books and manuscripts he had<lb />seen in them. He boasted of his success<lb />in promoting exchanges in the old<lb />world:<lb /><lb />Within the last twenty years<lb />more than 500,000 exchanges<lb />have taken place; thousands of<lb />volumes have been withdrawn<lb />from darkness and the dust, and<lb />countless libraries enriched by<lb />these exchanges, while nobody<lb />has been taxed, nobody empov-<lb />erished; missing volumes have<lb />been supplied, mutilated series<lb />made perfect .... Exchanges have<lb />taken place between Moscow<lb />and Lisbon, Madrid and London,<lb />Rome and Constantinople " Paris<lb />and the rest of the old world.!<lb /><lb />The Frenchman described the oexalted<lb />approbation� of emperors, cardinals,<lb />and bishops. He reveled in his passage<lb />through the otribunal from whose judg-<lb />ment there is no appeal� " England<lb />and France.�<lb /><lb />After describing his accomplish-<lb />ments, Vattemare lamented AmericaTs<lb />shortcomings " its lack of libraries ac-<lb />cessible to the public and the state of its<lb />museums, which he found to be ode-<lb />graded raree shows.� He told the audi-<lb />ence that state libraries were the insti-<lb />tutions most suited to rectifying<lb />AmericaTs literary shortcomings.<lb />Vattemare believed that most state li-<lb />braries consisted chiefly of legal works<lb />intended for the use of legislators and<lb />thus of little interest to the public. He<lb />envisioned them becoming a cultural<lb />resource for scholars and laymen alike:<lb />oThis would be a true intellectual de-<lb />mocracy " the best books, selected to<lb />suit the wants of all classes and profes-<lb />sions, freely thrown open to the use of<lb />all.��° His system of exchanges, admin-<lb />istered through state libraries, could<lb />help effect this metamorphosis.�!<lb /><lb />Realizing that Americans could not<lb />match the literary resources available in<lb />Europe for exchange, he suggested ap-<lb />propriate alternatives, including public<lb />documents. He urged his listeners to<lb />compile detailed responses to a series of<lb />15 questions designed to provide infor-<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />mation about the natural history,<lb />people, government, economy, educa-<lb />tional institutions, religious denomina-<lb />tions, charitable institutions, and litera-<lb />ture of their localities. He also provided<lb />a copy of printed instructions outlining<lb />the best methods for collecting, preserv-<lb />ing, and transporting objects of natural<lb />history.2�<lb /><lb />Vattemare augmented his oratory<lb />with a tangible expression of his com-<lb />mitment to working with North Caro-<lb />lina. He presented the State Library over<lb />50 books, pamphlets, and issues of pe-<lb />riodicals, most of which had been pub-<lb />lished in France during the 1840s. Prac-<lb />tical in nature, they pertained to such<lb />agricultural topics as silk culture, irriga-<lb />tion, horse breeding, and the diseases of<lb />the lungs of cattle. Crowning the gift<lb />was an engraving, oSir Walter Raleigh<lb />spreading his Cloak at the feet of Queen<lb />Elizabeth,� given to the General Assem-<lb />bly on behalf of the engraver, Mr.<lb />Girard.�<lb /><lb />Impressed by VattemareTs speech<lb />and gifts, public officials and the press<lb />responded enthusiastically. Kenneth<lb />Rayner, Edward Stanly, Daniel Coutts,<lb />and James Dobbin, as well as North<lb />Carolina Supreme Court Chief Justice<lb />Thomas Ruffin and former United<lb />States Senator Robert Strange, ospoke<lb /><lb />Pencil drawing of Alexandre Vattemare (n.d.) by William<lb />Walcutt (b.1819), portrait painter and sculptor from<lb />Columbus, Ohio, who studied art in Paris in the early<lb />1850s and later worked in New York City. Original in the<lb />Print Collection, Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Division of Art,<lb />Prints and Photographs, The New York Public Library, Astor,<lb />Lenox and Tilden Foundation.<lb /><lb />with animation and force� on the im-<lb />portance of VattemareTs mission. The<lb />editor of the Raleigh Register declared<lb />that oIt would argue a deplorable state<lb />of barbarity among us, if this proposi-<lb />tion of the distinguished Frenchman,<lb />were met by a niggardly and stupid par-<lb />simony.� William Woods Holden, pub-<lb />lisher of the North Carolina Standard,<lb />also endorsed North CarolinaTs support<lb />of the exchange program.�*<lb /><lb />Legislators acted swiftly and deci-<lb />sively. During the evening session of<lb />January 9, Kenneth Rayner reported a<lb />resolution and bill in favor of<lb />VattemareTs work, and they were or-<lb />dered to be printed. RaynerTs report as<lb />chairman of the joint select committee<lb />appointed to consider the exchange<lb />program was dated January 10. In flow-<lb />ery language equal to that of the<lb />Frenchman himself, the legislator from<lb />Hertford County praised Vattemare and<lb />the fruits of his work. He felt that the<lb />ostupendous� program belonged oem-<lb />phatically to this age of rapid improve-<lb />ment and discovery, in which destiny<lb />has cast our lot.� He emphasized the<lb />positive effects the program would have<lb />on the development of art, science, lit-<lb />erature, and a spirit of conciliation<lb />among peoples of the world. In return<lb />for the orich stores of the intellect and<lb /><lb />genius of Europe,� Rayner<lb />suggested that the state con-<lb />tribute its laws, legislative<lb />journals, and court decisions,<lb />which reflected well on this<lb />countryTs mastery of the osci-<lb />ence� of government.�<lb />Despite this outpouring<lb />of support, Vattemare re-<lb />mained in Raleigh while the<lb />General Assembly pondered<lb />the matter. State librarian<lb />James Fauntleroy Taylor in-<lb />vited Vattemare to his home<lb />several times during this pe-<lb />riod. Taylor told University<lb />of North Carolina president<lb />David Lowry Swain on Janu-<lb />ary 20 that oWe have found<lb />him a perfect specimen-avis<lb />rara.� Vattemare, who knew<lb />the most distinguished men<lb />in Europe, entertained Taylor<lb />with numerous anecdotes.�°<lb />Final passage of the reso-<lb />lutions and law in support of<lb />the system of international<lb />exchanges took place four<lb />days later. The resolutions<lb />expressed appreciation for<lb />VattemareTs work and for his<lb />gifts to the State Library. Leg-<lb />islators authorized the gover-<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 13<lb /></p>
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          <lb />nor to insure that Vattemare be given<lb />six copies each of several legal publica-<lb />tions and histories of the state written<lb />by William Henry Foote, Joseph Seawell<lb />Jones, Francois-Xavier Martin, and<lb />Hugh Williamson. The Frenchman also<lb />was to receive six copies each of<lb />Denison OlmstedTs geological survey of<lb />North Carolina, oall the papers and pro-<lb />ceedings relating to the Mecklenburg<lb />Declaration of Independence,� and<lb />Fordyce Mitchell HubbardTs biography<lb />of William Richardson Davie. Two cop-<lb />ies of the latest state map and five cop-<lb />ies of Indexes to Documents Relative to<lb />North Carolina during the Colonial Exist-<lb />ence of Said State were to be included in<lb />the gift. In the future, the governor<lb />would oversee the transmittal to<lb />Vattemare of six copies of all state docu-<lb />ments, including laws, journals, and<lb />court reports.?�<lb /><lb />The act to provide for the support<lb />of the exchange system contained addi-<lb />tional instructions. The sum of $300<lb />was to be appropriated annually to de-<lb />fray expenses of the central agency in<lb />Paris. Lawmakers authorized the gover-<lb />nor to appoint a person to serve as the<lb />stateTs agent in Paris, and to transfer<lb />appropriated funds to the agency after<lb />it had been officially established. An-<lb />nual reports of the agent were to be sub-<lb />mitted to the governor, who would re-<lb />port biennially to the General Assem-<lb />bly. The act called for the printing of<lb />1,000 copies of the proceedings of the<lb />General Assembly on the subject of in-<lb />ternational exchanges, which were to<lb />be distributed to legislators, academic<lb />institutions in North Carolina, and the<lb />governors of each state.�8<lb /><lb />The state and individual legislators<lb />acted promptly to fulfill commitments.<lb />Governor Charles Manly appointed<lb />Vattemare the stateTs agent and gave<lb />him $300 for the 1850 calendar year.<lb />On January 26, 1849, Manly instructed<lb />state librarian James F. Taylor to procure<lb />multiple copies of books and docu-<lb />ments for the exchange program. He<lb />asked Henry D. Turner, a bookseller in<lb />Raleigh, to obtain books and send them<lb />to Paris.2? Some of the works specified<lb />by the General Assembly and a few ad-<lb />ditional titles probably were given to<lb />Vattemare before he left Raleigh; others,<lb />including those obtained and shipped<lb />by Turner, were lost when the packet<lb />Oneida sank off the coast of England in<lb />February 1850.°°<lb /><lb />In response to VattemareTs request<lb />during his speech and personal contacts<lb />he made while waiting for the General<lb />Assembly to act, at least ten legislators<lb />and a few other men wrote descriptions<lb /><lb />14 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />of their counties or legislative districts.<lb />In general, they reflect the writersT pride<lb />in the natural resources and economic<lb />conditions of their localities, as well as<lb />appreciation of the value of sharing<lb />such information with others. Some of<lb />the accounts shed light on the progres-<lb />sive spirit of the period. Alexander<lb />Murchison noted that there were 45<lb />saw mills, seven cotton factories, and<lb />two turpentine distilleries in<lb />Cumberland County. Seven steamboats<lb />owned by citizens of the county plied<lb />the Cape Fear River to transport lumber<lb />and turpentine. Senator William<lb />Albright of Chatham County men-<lb />tioned the specimens of bituminous<lb />coal and iron ore he had given<lb />Vattemare. Other accounts touched on<lb />iron forges in Catawba, Lincoln, and<lb />Gaston counties, osheep walks� in Ma-<lb />con County, commerce in the town of<lb />Washington, and the potential eco-<lb />nomic impact of the North Carolina<lb />Railroad. Of particular importance are<lb />Samuel Finley PattersonTs description of<lb />gold mining in Burke and McDowell<lb />counties, Kader BiggsTs account of the<lb />vast fisheries of the Albemarle Sound<lb />region, and an exposé on the Roanoke<lb />River Valley by Henry King Burgwyn.*!<lb /><lb />This flush of enthusiasm did not<lb />last long. Despite the fact that<lb />Vattemare supplied two shipments of<lb />books in 1850, North Carolinians, like<lb />exchange participants elsewhere, lost<lb />interest in the program. The state ap-<lb />pears not to have contributed addi-<lb />tional volumes for exchange, and no<lb />further payments were made. In De-<lb />cember 1850, the General AssemblyTs<lb />Joint Select Committee on the Library,<lb />which had studied the matter, reported<lb />a bill to repeal the act in support of the<lb />system of exchanges. Legislators ratified<lb />the bill on January 28, 1851.°* The<lb />French government had withdrawn fi-<lb />nancial support in 1848, and Congress<lb />rescinded its legislation in 1852. New<lb />York, Massachusetts, and a few other<lb />states contributed to the program<lb />longer, but most governments ceased<lb />their support because the expenses in-<lb />volved outweighed the value of the<lb />books Vattemare supplied, and because<lb />the Frenchman was unable, with lim-<lb />ited assistance, to organize the program<lb />efficiently.*8<lb /><lb />Vattemare refused to acknowledge<lb />failure. Although he appears to have re-<lb />ceived no official correspondence from<lb />North Carolina after 1850, the deter-<lb />mined philanthropist submitted annual<lb />reports in 1851 and 1852. He made two<lb />or three shipments of books and docu-<lb />ments in 1851. Such actions were typi-<lb /><lb />cal of his optimistic relationship with<lb />other governments prior to his death in<lb />1864.*4<lb /><lb />VattemareTs failed experiment had<lb />little lasting impact on North Carolina.<lb />The State Library acquired at least 165<lb />publications through exchange. Rang-<lb />ing in date from 1526 to 1850, they<lb />pertained to such subjects as agricul-<lb />ture, criminology, geography, history,<lb />and religion. Most of them were written<lb />in French or Latin, however, and it is<lb />doubtful that they were heavily used by<lb />the libraryTs patrons. Some multi-vol-<lb />ume sets were incomplete when they<lb />were sent to the State Library, a fact that<lb />lessened their utility. Today, only a<lb />handful of the titles remain in the State<lb />LibraryTs collection.*®<lb /><lb />Yet the episode is significant for<lb /><lb />several reasons. It provides further evi-<lb />dence of a charismatic cosmopoliteTs<lb />burning desire to foster cultural devel-<lb />opment and a cooperative spirit among<lb />the peoples of the world. Reflecting the<lb />optimism of the times, it reveals the<lb />desire of broad-minded leaders to try<lb />something new in an effort to enhance<lb />the value of the State Library " one of<lb />the stateTs principal literary resources.<lb />Finally, through the thoughtful re-<lb />sponses of legislators to VattemareTs re-<lb />quest for information about their locali-<lb />ties, it provides valuable insight into<lb />how educated men viewed the natural<lb />resources, economic conditions, and<lb />potential of their state during a time of<lb />relative prosperity.<lb /><lb />References<lb /><lb />1 Dictionary of American Biography, s.v.<lb />oVattemare, Nicolas Marie Alexandre,�<lb />hereinafter cited as DAB; Elizabeth M.<lb />Richards, oAlexandre Vattemare and His<lb />System of International Exchanges,�<lb />Medical Library Association Bulletin 32<lb />(October 1944): 414-416, hereinafter cited<lb />as Richards, oAlexandre Vattemare.�<lb /><lb />2 DAB; Richards, oAlexandre<lb />Vattemare, o 418-422; Dictionary of<lb />American Library Biography, " s.v.<lb />oVattemare, Nicolas-Marie-Alexandre,�<lb />hereinafter cited as DALB.<lb /><lb />3 George Burwell Utley, The LibrariansT<lb />Conference of 1853: A Chapter in American<lb />Library History, ed. Gilbert H. Doane (Chi-<lb />cago: American Library Association,<lb />1951), 174.<lb /><lb />4 Proceedings of the General Assembly of<lb />North Carolina on the Subject of Interna-<lb />tional Exchanges, Session 1848-T49 (Ra-<lb />leigh: Seaton Gales, Printer for the State,<lb />1849), 37, hereinafter cited as Proceedings<lb />of the General Assembly.<lb /><lb />S Richards, oAlexandre Vattemare,�<lb />426; Proceedings of the General Assembly,<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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        <p>38-39. lina, 1848-1849, January 6, 1849; Journal of Charles Manly, 1849, GLB 39, State Ar-<lb />6 DALB; Richards, oAlexandre the House of Commons of North Carolina, chives, Division of Archives and History,<lb /><lb />Vattemare,� 426. 1848-1849, January 6, 1849. Raleigh; Alexandre Vattemare to Gover-<lb />7 DALB; Richards, oAlexandre 18 Proceedings of the General Assembly, [4]; nor David S. Reid, November 10, 1852,<lb /><lb />Vattemare,� 426-428. Dictionary of North Carolina Biography, s.v. William Gaston Papers, Southern Histori-<lb />8 Richards, oAlexandre Vattemare,� oSmith, William Nathan Harrell,� oWash- cal Collection, hereinafter cited as<lb /><lb />428-429; Utley, LibrariansT Conference, ington, William Henry,� oJones, Hamilton Gaston Papers.<lb /><lb />lig Chamberlain,� oCourts, Daniel William,� 30 Vattemare to Reid, November 10, 1852,<lb /><lb />9 Graham (1804-1875), a lawyer and oDobbin, James Cochran,� oStanly, Ed- Gaston Papers; Manly to Vattemare, June<lb />planter, served as governor from Janu- ward,� and oRayner, Kenneth�; John L. 17, 1850, GLB 39, State Archives; Vattemare<lb />ary, 1845, until January, 1849. During Cheney, Jr., ed., North Carolina Government, to his Excellency the Governor of the State<lb />his tenure he promoted humanitarian 1585-1979: A Narrative and Statistical His- of North Carolina, September 30, 1851,<lb />causes and internal improvements, in- tory (Raleigh: North Carolina Department GovernorsT Papers, David S. Reid, G.P. 127,<lb />cluding the development of railroads. of the Secretary of State, 1981), 316-317. State Archives; Manly to Vattemare, Janu-<lb />President Millard Fillmore selected Gra- 16 Proceedings of the General Assembly, |4]; ary 26, 1849, Correspondence (1838-64),<lb />ham in 1850 to serve as secretary ofthe Raleigh Register, January 10, 1849. The Letters Arranged by Place of Origin, New<lb />Navy. Dictionary of North Carolina newspaperTs notice of the public meeting York-North Carolina, Microfilm Reel 4,<lb />Biography, s.v. oGraham, William appeared the day after VattemareTs speech. Alexandre Vattemare Papers, Rare Books &amp;<lb />Alexander,� hereinafter cited as DNCB. 17 Weekly Raleigh Register, and North Caro- Manuscripts Division, New York Public Li-<lb /><lb />10 Proceedings of the General Assembly, lina Gazette, January 17, 1849. brary, hereinafter cited as NC Letters,<lb />[3]. It is likely that the pamphlet was 18 Proceedings of the General Assembly, 27. Vattemare Papers. This series of letters in-<lb />VattemareTs Report on the Subject of Inter- 19 Proceedings of the General Assembly, 28-29. cludes also two lists of books and docu-<lb />national Exchanges, published in 1848. 20 Proceedings of the General Assembly, 33- ments pertaining to North Carolina. One<lb />A card file in the North Carolina State 34, 64. of them contains the oPresentation of the<lb />Archives in Raleigh indicates that a 21 Proceedings of the General Assembly, 64-65. State�; the other, works that onever reached<lb />copy of this pamphlet was in the papers 22 Proceedings of the General Assembly, 38- their destination.�<lb /><lb />of GrahamTs successor, Charles Manly, 40, [67]-114. 31 NC Letters, Vattemare Papers.<lb />but the writer was unable to locate it. 23 Proceedings of the General Assembly, 32 Vattemare to His Excellency the Gov-<lb />11 Cogswell (1786-1871), who became [115]-118. ernor of the State of North Carolina, Sep-<lb /><lb />librarian of the Astor Library in New 24 Weekly Raleigh Register, and North Caro- tember 30, 1851, GovernorsT Papers,<lb />York in 1848, was hired by North Caro- lina Gazette, January 17, 1849; North Caro- David S. Reid, G.P. 127, State Archives;<lb />lina in the early 1840s to recommend _lina Standard (Raleigh), January 10, 1849. Journal of the House of Commons of North<lb />and purchase a broad range of literary, The favorable comments published in the Carolina, December 5, 16, 1850; Laws of<lb />historical, and scientific works to re- Standard may have been written prior to North Carolina, 1850-1851, c. 61.<lb />plenish the State Library, which had "_ VattemareTs speech. Ruffin was a trustee of 33 Richards, oAlexandre Vattemare,�<lb />been destroyed in 1831 when the State _ the State Library. Strange in 1839 had pub- 432-435, 441-443,446. The decision of<lb />Capitol burned. He worked on behalf of lished Eoneguski, or The Cherokee Chief: A Congress to end its association with<lb />North Carolina while collecting books Tale of Past Wars, the first novel set in Vattemare may have resulted in part<lb />for the Astor Library. Maurice C. York, North Carolina. Roy Parker, Jr., from the newly created Smithsonian<lb />oA History of the North Carolina State | Cumberland County: A Brief History (Ra- InstitutionTs involvement in exchanging<lb />Library, 1812-1888� (masterTs thesis, leigh: Division of Archives and History, textual and other materials.<lb /><lb />University of North Carolina at Chapel = North Carolina Department of Cultural 34 Vattemare to His Excellency the Gover-<lb />Hill, 1978), 20-22, 33-41; Maurice C. Resources, 1990), 30. nor of the State of North Carolina, Septem-<lb />York, oBorn Again: Rebuilding the 25 North Carolina Standard (Raleigh), Janu- ber 30, 1851, GovernorsT Papers, David S.<lb />North Carolina State Library, 1834- ary 17, 1849; Proceedings of the General As- Reid, G. P. 127, State Archives; Vattemare to<lb />1847,� North Carolina Libraries SO sembly, [7]-13. David S. Reid, November 10, 1852, Gaston<lb />(Spring 1992): 32-34. A new State Capi- 26 Ja[me]s F. T[aylor] to Dear Sir [David Papers; J. H. Sawyer to His Excellency the<lb />tol was completed in 1840 at the enor- Lowry Swain], January 20, 1849, David Govy[.] of No[.] Cal.], January 14, 1852, Gov-<lb />mous cost of $530,000. It was thought Lowry Swain Papers, Southern Historical ernorsT Papers, David S. Reid, G. P. 129, State<lb />of as one of the most beautiful ex- Collection, University of North Carolina Archives; Richards, oAlexandre Vattemare,�<lb /><lb />amples of Greek Revival architecture in Library, Chapel Hill. 435-436.<lb />the country. Hugh Talmage Lefler and 27 Laws of North Carolina, 1848-1849, 35 ©. H. Perry, Catalogue of Books Belong-<lb />Albert Ray Newsome, North Carolina: 230-231. ing to the North Carolina State Library, Pre-<lb /><lb />The History of a Southern State (Chapel 28 Laws of North Carolina, 1848-1849, c. _ pared by O. H. Perry, Librarian (Raleigh:<lb />Hill: The University of North Carolina 63. This impressive pamphlet of 116 pages, Nichols, Gorman &amp; Neathery, Book and<lb />Press, 1973), 352. cited above, includes Governor GrahamTs Job Printers, 1866), 76-79. This catalog<lb />12 William S. Powell, North Carolina communication; the joint select committeeTs contains a separate listing of the works<lb />through Four Centuries (Chapel Hill: The correspondence with Vattemare; the report obtained through the system of interna-<lb />University of North Carolina Press, of the joint select committee; copies of the tional exchanges. The writer wishes to<lb />1989), 308-327; Charles C. Jewett, No- committeeTs proposed resolutions and bill; thank Mrs. Cheryl McLean, head, Infor-<lb />tices of Public Libraries in the United States VattemareTs address; instructions for collect- _ mation Services Branch, State Library of<lb />of America (Washington: Smithsonian _ ing, preserving and transporting objects of North Carolina, for locating in the State<lb /><lb />Institution, 1851), 148-149. natural history; and a list of works presented LibraryTs collection a few books obtained<lb />13 Laws of North Carolina, 1848-1849, to the State Library by Vattemare. through VattemareTs exchange program,<lb />c. 1, 82, 112, 120, 148. 29 Governor Charles Manly to James F. and for arranging to have their title pages<lb /><lb />14 Journal of the Senate of North Caro- Taylor, January 26, 1849, Letter Books of " photographed for this article.<lb />North Carolina Libraries Spring 1998 " 1%<lb /></p>
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          <lb />
          <lb />Bringing Boston Books<lb /><lb />to the Carolina Mountains:<lb />Charles Hallet Wing and the Good-Will Free Library at Ledger<lb /><lb />he name of Charles Hallet Wing<lb />appears on no library building in<lb />North Carolina. His portrait<lb />hangs in no library foyer, confer-<lb />ence room, or auditorium. No local<lb />or state library association presents<lb />an award in his memory. Indeed,<lb />only a handful of North Carolina li-<lb />brarians recognize his name today.<lb />Yet, few Tar Heels have ever demon-<lb />strated a stronger belief in the value of<lb />public libraries and the importance of<lb />providing them in every community,<lb />no matter how small or remote.<lb /><lb />Wing was born on August 5, 1836,<lb />in Boston, Massachusetts. He attended<lb />the Lawrence Scientific School at<lb />Harvard University where he received<lb />a Bachelor of Science degree in 1870.<lb />Later that year, he was appointed a pro-<lb />fessor of chemistry at Cornell Univer-<lb />sity. He remained there until 1874,<lb />when he accepted a professorship<lb />teaching analytical chemistry at the<lb />Massachusetts Institute of Technology<lb />in the Boston suburb of Cambridge.!<lb /><lb />Wing quickly distinguished himself<lb />in the academic world. As early as 1870,<lb />he had begun publishing on scientific<lb />topics. In that year, his article oOn Cer-<lb />tain Double Sulfates of the Cerium<lb />Group� appeared in the highly re-<lb />spected American Journal of Science.� In<lb />November 1874, the prestigious Ameri-<lb />can Academy of Arts and Sciences<lb />elected him a fellow. In 1881 he pub-<lb />lished Notes on Quantitative Analysis as<lb />Used at the Massachusetts Institute of<lb />Technology. Administrators at the Mas-<lb />sachusetts Institute of Technology<lb />turned to him to plan and direct con-<lb />struction of the Kidder Chemical Labo-<lb />ratories, which would become recog-<lb /><lb />16 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />by Robert G. Anthony, Jr.<lb /><lb />nized as model facilities.* For a decade,<lb />Wing led an active life of research and<lb />teaching.<lb /><lb />In 1885, however, WingTs life sud-<lb />denly changed. He quit academia and,<lb />in a dramatic move, relocated from<lb />cosmopolitan Boston to the small com-<lb />munity of Ledger in Mitchell County,<lb />North Carolina, one of the most iso-<lb />lated areas in Southern Appalachia.<lb />It is not known for certain what<lb />prompted WingTs decision to leave<lb />Massachusetts. He had visited western<lb />North Carolina with friends to study<lb />the emerging mica mining industry<lb />there and had been immediately capti-<lb />vated by the beauty of the mountains.<lb />He may have decided to settle in Led-<lb />ger and oversee his friendsT mining in-<lb />terests, or exhaustion and other health<lb />concerns may have led to his move.<lb />When New York writer/photographer<lb />Margaret Morley, who shared WingTs<lb />fascination with Southern Appalachia,<lb />visited his Ledger home and described<lb />it in her book The Carolina Mountains,<lb />she explained his move as the result of<lb />a need oto escape the turmoil of the<lb />outer world.�*<lb /><lb />Regardless of the reason or reasons<lb />for his move, Wing quietly and easily<lb />settled into the Ledger community. It<lb />was a world quite different from Bos-<lb />ton and the academic one he had left<lb />behind. Mitchell County, lightly popu-<lb />lated with 9,435 people scattered over<lb />220 square miles, was a land of small<lb />farmers. Nearly all of his new neigh-<lb />bors struggled to make a living from<lb />the crops of corn, oats, wheat, tobacco,<lb />and Irish potatoes they planted on the<lb />mountain ridges and in the more fertile<lb />valleys. More than 95% of them had<lb /><lb />been born in North Carolina, and<lb />nearly all the rest came from nearby<lb />parts of Tennessee, which bordered<lb />Mitchell to the northwest. Most had<lb />never traveled far from their homes.<lb />Only eight individuals in the county<lb />were foreign born.°<lb /><lb />Many of the adults Wing encoun-<lb />tered in his new community were illit-<lb />erate. Although the county operated a<lb />system of small public schools, its ef-<lb />forts to provide a quality education for<lb />its children were limited severely by a<lb />lack of funding. In the late nineteenth<lb />century, no North Carolina county<lb />spent much on its public schools when<lb />compared to most non-Southern coun-<lb />ties, especially those in New England<lb />and the Northeast. Yet Mitchell ranked<lb />poorly even if compared only to Tar<lb />Heel counties. During the school year<lb />that ended November 30, 1886, for ex-<lb />ample, only three of the stateTs 96<lb />counties spent less on its schools, even<lb />though Mitchell ranked seventy-sec-<lb />ond in population.® The impact of such<lb />poorly funded schools would continue<lb />to plague the county for years to come.<lb />When the U.S. Census for 1910 com-<lb />piled statistics on illiteracy in North<lb />Carolina, it revealed that 24.1% of the<lb />White voters in Mitchell could not so<lb />much as sign their names, the third<lb />highest rate among the stateTs one hun-<lb />dred counties.T<lb /><lb />Despite the great difference be-<lb />tween WingTs educational and cultural<lb />background and that of his neighbors,<lb />the retired professor won quick accep-<lb />tance in his new community. He<lb />bought several tracts of land and began<lb />developing a model farm. He hired<lb />Stephen Willis, as his overseer, a local<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027362_0019" />
        <p>man, paying him the very generous<lb />wage of fifty cents per day. The people<lb />of Ledger watched with great interest as<lb />Wing began construction of a two-<lb />story, six-room log cabin, which con-<lb />tained no interior stairs, but rather two<lb />exterior stairways leading from the<lb />front porch to the upper floor.®<lb /><lb />Although he put much energy into<lb />developing his mountain homestead, a<lb />greater passion soon seized Wing.<lb />Greatly concerned by the high illit-<lb />eracy rate and poor schools around<lb />him, he resolved to improve educa-<lb />tional opportunities in the area. He rec-<lb />ognized that in order to encourage a<lb />love of learning and education he<lb />needed to make good books more<lb />readily available in the community.<lb />The retired professor, accustomed as he<lb />had been to fine libraries in the Boston<lb />area, determined to build one in Ledger<lb />that would be free and open to all.<lb /><lb />On several acres of land he had re-<lb />cently purchased, Wing began con-<lb />struction of an impressive two-story<lb />building. He designed the first floor as<lb />a library; the second, he reserved as a<lb />community assembly hall, where civic<lb />and social gatherings could be held. He<lb />personally financed the $2,500 project<lb />and named the facility the Good-Will<lb />Free Library. Nearby, he built a small<lb />cottage to house a librarian.?<lb /><lb />The new library, of course, needed<lb />books, which were not all that easy to<lb />acquire in the western North Carolina<lb />mountains. Wing eagerly donated<lb />many of his own, and he appealed to<lb />Northern friends to contribute vol-<lb />umes. But a large number, apparently<lb />most, he acquired from the Boston<lb />Public Library, where they were being<lb />withdrawn from the collection and dis-<lb />carded. Wing arranged for them to be<lb />shipped to Ledger.!°<lb /><lb />The new library opened in 1887,<lb />and the community welcomed it en-<lb />thusiastically. Many people living<lb />nearby made immediate use of it, but,<lb />for those living farther away in the<lb />county, travel to Ledger could be diffi-<lb />cult, often over rough and muddy<lb />roads. To make books more accessible,<lb />Wing organized several small traveling<lb />libraries, each with about seventy-five<lb />books. These collections could be<lb />picked up by interested individuals and<lb />placed in general stores or homes dis-<lb />tant from Ledger for use in those<lb />neighborhoods. Every three months or<lb />so, a collection was to be returned to<lb />the Good-Will library and exchanged<lb />for a new one. Unfortunately, neither<lb />a list of books in the library nor formal<lb />circulation records exist for Good-<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />WillTs earliest years. But when Margaret<lb />Morley visited Ledger several years<lb />later, she was informed that oat the end<lb />of the first year not a book was missing,<lb />none had been kept out overtime,<lb />while less than six per cent of those<lb />taken had been fiction!�!!<lb /><lb />Many of the books donated to<lb />Good-Will had been damaged or worn<lb />during earlier use, so Wing secured the<lb />necessary tools and supplies to repair<lb />and rebind them. He trained Avery<lb />Willis, son of his overseer Stephen, to<lb />perform these tasks.!� For several years,<lb />the younger Willis also served as librar-<lb />ian. In 1917, his wife appears to have<lb />assumed that duty.'%<lb /><lb />When the newly established North<lb />Carolina Library Commission pub-<lb />lished its First Biennial Report in 1910,<lb />it made available for the first time de-<lb />tailed statistics on the growing number<lb />of libraries in the Tar Heel state. The re-<lb />port also illustrated just how remark-<lb />able Charles Hallet WingTs accomplish-<lb />ment at Ledger was. At the end of 1910,<lb />North Carolina had 82 libraries, a fig-<lb />ure that included college, special, and<lb />public libraries. Sixty-two of the stateTs<lb />92 counties had no public library. Yet<lb />in the tiny community of Ledger,<lb />population 52, located in a remote, im-<lb />poverished area, Wing had built the<lb />stateTs largest library intended for pub-<lb />lic use. Indeed, only six Tar Heel librar-<lb />ies " those at the University of North<lb />Carolina at Chapel Hill, Davidson Col-<lb />lege, Trinity College, Wake Forest Col-<lb />lege, the North Carolina State Library,<lb />and the North Carolina Supreme Court<lb />Library " exceeded in collection size<lb />the 12,000 -volume Good-Will Free Li-<lb />brary.'4<lb /><lb />The state Library CommisionTs first<lb /><lb />N.C. Library at Chapel Hill.<lb /><lb />Good-Will Free Library at Ledger. Photo courtesy of North Carolina Collection, University of<lb /><lb />eight biennial reports, covering 1909<lb />through 1924, reveal other impressive<lb />facts about the Good-Will Free Library.<lb />In 1911-1912, for example, it was one<lb />of only 15 public libraries in North<lb />Carolina to receive financial assistance<lb />from its host town or county. Good-<lb />Will received $105 from Mitchell<lb />County that biennium. In 1913-1914,<lb />the biennial appropriation grew to<lb />$150, a figure that remained constant<lb />through 1919-1920.<lb /><lb />Book circulation totals at Good-<lb />Will appear to have varied considerably<lb />over the years, however. In 1909-1910,<lb />the library reported that 50 borrowers<lb />used 800 volumes. A circulation of<lb />5,000 books to 100 borrowers was re-<lb />ported for both the 1913-1914 and<lb />1917-1918 bienniums. For the 1919-<lb />1920 and December 1920-1922 peri-<lb />ods, circulation totals of 590 and 1,600<lb />were reported, respectively. Borrowers<lb />numbered 93 and 200. The Library<lb />Commission reports, however, do not<lb />explain why such variations in circula-<lb />tion totals occurred. But it is likely that<lb />circulation increased whenever new<lb />books arrived from donors or when<lb />traveling library collections were re-<lb />placed around the county, making new<lb />titles available to borrowers.<lb /><lb />After opening his library, Wing<lb />turned to a new project, construction<lb />of a school nearby. As with the library,<lb />he personally financed the building,<lb />which was large enough to accommo-<lb />date 125 students. The two teachers he<lb />hired taught the standard othree Rs� "<lb />reading, writing, and arithmetic. The<lb />retired professor directed a manual<lb />training department in the buildingTs<lb />basement. There boys could learn car-<lb />pentry, woodworking, and other skills<lb /><lb />oi<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 17<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>useful to a small farmer. Girls could<lb />learn sewing and other domestic<lb />crafts.15<lb /><lb />For 20 years after his arrival at Led-<lb />ger in 1885, Wing had dedicated him-<lb />self to improving the lives of the<lb />people in his adopted community. He<lb />had built a remarkably large and much-<lb />appreciated library, open to all who<lb />wished to use it. He had even arranged<lb />for small collections of books to be de-<lb />posited around the area so that people<lb />unable to travel to his library would<lb />have access to good reading material.<lb />In addition, he had financed and<lb />taught at a free school for his neigh-<lb />borsT children, providing them an alter-<lb />native to the poorly funded and inad-<lb />equate skeletal public school system<lb />the county was attempting to operate.<lb />But as the first decade of the twentieth<lb />century passed, Wing began to look<lb />back toward Boston.<lb /><lb />WingTs health had begun to<lb />worsen, and he and his wife made the<lb />difficult decision to return to Massa-<lb />chusetts for their final years. After ar-<lb />riving in Boston, however, he contin-<lb />ued to think about the library and<lb />school he had left behind in the Caro-<lb />lina mountains. He decided to donate<lb />the library to the county, with the con-<lb />dition that county officials continue to<lb />operate it. The minutes of the May 3,<lb />1909, meeting of the county board of<lb />commissioners stoically record WingTs<lb />gift " a oCertain library and building<lb />land and so forth Situated at Led-<lb />ger ....�'© The deed of conveyance, reg-<lb />istered a few weeks later, detailed the<lb />gift more fully. Wing had given the<lb />people he had grown to love and ad-<lb />mire during 20 years among them<lb />o,, the buildings thereon known as the<lb />~Good-will Free LibraryT and librarians<lb />house, together with books and library<lb />materials therein contained.� The deed<lb />also recorded the commissionersT<lb />agreement to operate the library for at<lb />least eight more years.!� Two years<lb />later, local citizens successfully peti-<lb />tioned the county board of education<lb />to purchase the Wing school and adja-<lb />cent teacherTs house from the retired<lb />professor for $770, half of which the<lb />citizens agreed to raise privately. !®<lb /><lb />During the next several years,<lb />however, without Wing to promote it,<lb />the Good-Will Free Library declined in<lb />significance to the people of Ledger<lb />and the surrounding area. One prob-<lb />lem was that it added few new books.<lb />Its holdings never exceeded in size the<lb />estimated 12,000 volumes that it had<lb />when it opened in 1887. Indeed, at the<lb />end of 1924, the libraryTs holdings had<lb /><lb />18 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />dropped to 10,025, probably the result<lb />of discarding irreparable volumes.�<lb />Another factor lessening the libraryTs<lb />importance was that in 1919-1920 the<lb />North Carolina Library Commission<lb />began depositing its own traveling li-<lb />braries around Mitchell County, all but<lb />eliminating the demand for ones from<lb />Good-Will.�°<lb /><lb />Recognizing that these changes re-<lb />duced the need for Good-Will and, ap-<lb />parently unwilling or unable to finance<lb />the improvement and expansion of its<lb />book collection and operations, the<lb />county commissioners decided to close<lb />the library. They already had operated<lb />it longer than the eight years agreed<lb />upon when Wing had deeded it to<lb />them. Since WingTs departure, the<lb />countyTs public school system had<lb />grown in size and quality and could<lb />easily absorb the Good-Will books. Also,<lb />because the county had acquired WingTs<lb />former school, there was no longer a<lb />private school at Ledger dependent on<lb />Good-Will. In 1926, when the state Li-<lb />brary Commission released its report for<lb />the preceding two years, the Good-Will<lb />Free Library was not included. The<lb />monument to Charles Hallet WingTs<lb />belief in the importance of free libraries<lb />was no more. Although the Good-Will<lb />Free Library no longer existed, most of<lb />the books that had once made it the<lb />largest library intended for public use in<lb />North Carolina were now serving duty<lb />in nearby schools.�!<lb /><lb />After his return to Boston, Wing<lb />never visited Ledger again. His health<lb />continued to decline, and on Septem-<lb />ber 13, 1915, he died. The library he<lb />had built in a small, isolated commu-<lb />nity in the western North Carolina<lb />mountains would continue for another<lb />decade; then it too would pass from the<lb />scene, all but forgotten today. But to<lb />North Carolina librarians seeking an<lb />example of the belief in public librar-<lb />ies, no finer example exists than<lb />Charles Hallet Wing and his Good-Will<lb />Free Library.<lb /><lb />References<lb /><lb />| Proceedings of the American Academy of<lb />Arts and Sciences, LI (May 1915-May<lb />1916): 928-929.<lb /><lb />2 American Journal of Science, 2nd se-<lb />ries, 49 (1870): 354-361.<lb /><lb />3 Proceedings of the American Acad-<lb />emy of Arts and Sciences, pp. 928-929.<lb /><lb />* Margaret W. Morley, The Carolina<lb />Mountains (Boston: Houghton Mifflin<lb />Co., 1913), 326-328.<lb /><lb />5 Compendium of the Tenth Census<lb />(June 1, 1880), Part 1 (Washington:<lb /><lb />Government Printing Office, 1883),<lb />365, 523, 802-803.<lb /><lb />® Biennial Report of the Superintendent<lb />of Public Instruction of North Carolina for<lb />the School Years 1885 and 1886 (Raleigh:<lb />P. M. Hale, State Printer and Binder,<lb />1887), 130-132.<lb /><lb />� Adult Illiteracy in North Carolina and<lb />Plans for Its Elimination (Raleigh: State Su-<lb />perintendent of Public Instruction,<lb />1915), 15.<lb /><lb />8 Lorene P. G. Willis, oStephen Morgan<lb />Willis,� in The Heritage of the Toe River<lb />Valley (Durham, N.C.: Lloyd Richard<lb />Bailey, Sr., 1994), 448; Ashton Chapman,<lb />oUnique Landmark Moved and Rebuilt,�<lb />in The State 38 (15 February 1971): 11-12.<lb /><lb />° Mary B. Palmer, oCharles Hallet<lb />Wing, Founder of the Good- Will Free Li-<lb />brary,� in North Carolina Library Bulletin<lb />2 (September 1915): 126-127.<lb /><lb />10 Tbid.<lb /><lb />1 Morley, The Carolina Mountains, p.<lb />3270<lb /><lb />12 Lorne P. G. Willis, oStephen Morgan<lb />Willis,� p. 448.<lb /><lb />13 Second Biennial Report of the North<lb />Carolina Library Commission, 1911-1912,<lb />p. 24; Fifth Biennial Report of the North<lb />Carolina Library Commission, 1917-1918,<lb />p. 23. Actually, the report lists oMrs. H.<lb />W. Willis� as librarian, apparently a mis-<lb />print. The next biennial report, the Sixth,<lb />corrects the error.<lb /><lb />14 First Biennial Report of the North Caro-<lb />lina Llbrary Commission, 1909-1910, pp.<lb />25-27. Although this report does not in-<lb />clude collection size for the library at<lb />Wake Forest College, the report for the<lb />next biennium revealed that its collec-<lb />tion was larger than that of Good-Will.<lb /><lb />1S Morley, The Carolina Mountains, p.<lb />326; Lorene P. G. Willis, oStephen Mor-<lb />gan Willis,� p. 448; Mary E. Palmer,<lb />oCharles Hallet Wing, Founder of the<lb />Good-Will Free Library,� p. 127.<lb /><lb />16 Minutes, Mitchell County Board of<lb />Commissioners, Vol. 1, 1908-1914, p, 73.<lb /><lb />17 Mitchell County Deeds, Book 61, p.<lb />479.<lb /><lb />18 Minutes, Mitchell County Board of<lb />Education, 7 August 1911.<lb /><lb />19 Eighth Report of the North Carolina Li-<lb />brary Commission, July 1, 1922-June 30,<lb />1924, p. 18.<lb /><lb />20 Sixth Biennial Report of the North Caro-<lb />lina Library Commission, 1919-1920, p. 13.<lb /><lb />21 Wendell W. Smiley, Library Develop-<lb />ment in North Carolina before 1930<lb />(Greenville, N,C.; Library, East Carolina<lb />University, 1971), 81; Thornton W.<lb />Mitchell, The State Library and Library<lb />Development in North Carolina (Raleigh:<lb />North Carolina Department of Cultural<lb />Resources, Division of State Library,<lb />1983), 3.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />oIn My Mind ITm Going to Carolina ...�:<lb /><lb />Bruce CottenTs Passion for North Caroliniana<lb /><lb />n the 1890s, a tight-knit family<lb />in rural eastern North Carolina<lb />was under siege. The Cotten fam-<lb />ily was a prominent one, respected<lb />locally and with civic and political<lb />ties across the state. Like many<lb />southern farm families, they had ex-<lb />perienced several financial ups-and-<lb />downs, but the steep decline in cotton<lb />prices, together with a risky switch into<lb />tobacco production, had forced the<lb />Cottens to the edge of ruin. The plan-<lb />tation was mortgaged and then put up<lb />for sale; only the intervention of a fam-<lb />ily friend prevented loss of the home<lb />place. Mr. Cotten was distracted by<lb />these financial crises, while his wife<lb />was still mourning the death of her el-<lb />dest son a decade earlier. Their oldest<lb />surviving son had yet to find his place<lb />in business or society. His sisters and<lb />their friends loved the young manTs<lb />good looks and easy charm, but with-<lb />out secure prospects, heTd be always a<lb />houseguest, never the master. What<lb />was this young man, Bruce Cotten, to<lb />do? oGo west,� as the slogan of the era<lb />urged? Go west he did, but at an emo-<lb />tional cost. To assuage the loneliness<lb />and estrangement he felt, Cotten<lb />turned to a ogentle pastime�! and in<lb />doing so made himself the preeminent<lb />twentieth-century collector of North<lb />Caroliniana.<lb /><lb />Bruce Cotten, the fifth child of<lb />Robert Randolph Cotten and Sallie<lb />Southall Cotten, was born in Wilson,<lb />North Carolina, on March 3, 1873.<lb />Robert Randolph Cotten, a native of<lb />Edgecombe County, was a prominent<lb />businessman, planter, and civic leader<lb />in eastern North Carolina for over sixty<lb />years. The elder Cotten began his busi-<lb />ness career as a Clerk in Tarboro, but he<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />by Eileen McGrath<lb /><lb />later moved to Baltimore, Maryland,<lb />where he was a partner in a cotton bro-<lb />kerage. CottenTs firm dissolved at the<lb />start of the Civil War, and he returned<lb />to North Carolina to join a Confeder-<lb />ate cavalry unit. While in North Caro-<lb />lina on leave near the end of the war,<lb />Cotten met a young teacher, Sallie<lb />Swepson Sims Southall. They were mar-<lb />ried in 1866.<lb /><lb />Sallie Southall Cotten was a native<lb />of Amelia County, Virginia. Mrs.<lb />Cotten spent the first decades of her<lb />marriage at home raising her family,<lb />but after most of her children were<lb />grown, she began a public life as an ad-<lb />vocate for women and children in<lb />North Carolina. She was one of the<lb />North Carolina olady managers� for<lb />the 1893 Columbian Exposition, an or-<lb />ganizer of the North Carolina Federa-<lb />tion of WomenTs Clubs, a participant in<lb />the first National Congress of Mothers,<lb />and the author of numerous poems<lb />and essays.<lb /><lb />The Cottens settled permanently<lb />at Cottendale, a Pitt County planta-<lb />tion, in 1879. The household at<lb />Cottendale consisted of Robert and<lb />Sallie Cotten, their seven offspring, an<lb />older, unmarried white woman who<lb />helped manage the household, and<lb />several African-American servants. Iso-<lb />lation forced family members to de-<lb />pend on each other for entertainment,<lb />education, and emotional sup-<lb />port. Mrs. Cotten was the most<lb />important early influence in<lb />Bruce CottenTs life. He later<lb />characterized his mother as a<lb />loving and devoted mother, but<lb />also dreamy and unconven-<lb />tional, a good reader and a ro-<lb />mantic. He remembered her as<lb /><lb />a woman tormented by private fears as<lb />well, oan unaccountable, but pro-<lb />nounced temperamental brooding and<lb />apprehension of ill that might befall<lb />her or those she loved.�� Misfortune<lb />did strike Sallie CottenTs family: two of<lb />her children died as infants and her<lb />oldest son, Robert Randolph Cotten,<lb />Jr., drowned on his fifteenth birthday<lb />in 1883. Mrs. Cotten took her oldest<lb />sonTs death especially hard; she wore<lb />partial mourning attire for the rest of<lb />her life.<lb /><lb />The 1890s were especially difficult<lb />years for Robert CottenTs businesses.<lb />Cottendale was mortgaged in 1893 and<lb />put up for sale in 1897. It remained in<lb />the family only because former North<lb />Carolina Governor Thomas Jordan<lb />Jarvis gave the family a new mortgage.<lb />Despite such well-placed friends, the<lb />familyTs financial situation remained<lb />precarious for several years.<lb /><lb />Bruce Cotten was little help in this<lb />family crisis. He followed his fatherTs<lb />example and went to Baltimore in<lb />search of employment, but he could<lb />not secure a position. Years later,<lb />Cotten admitted that the world of busi-<lb />ness did not appeal to him and that his<lb />heart was not in this search for work.<lb />In an unpublished memoir, Cotten<lb />confessed o[I] was conscious of being<lb />influenced by my own peculiar tem-<lb />perament and a strong dislike I had of<lb /><lb />His passion was to amass a<lb /><lb />library that reconnected<lb /><lb />him to the land of his birth.<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 19<lb /></p>
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        <p>an ordinary business life, " that per-<lb />petual buying and selling of things... .<lb />I wanted something else, the nature of<lb />which I can not define. I dreaded the<lb />sameness and monotony of the life or-<lb />dinary.�?<lb /><lb />Fortunately for Cotten, gold was<lb />discovered in the Yukon Territory in<lb />1896, triggering the Alaska Gold Rush<lb />of 1897-1898. Cotten became obsessed<lb />with the possibilities for wealth and<lb />adventure that Alaska might offer. To<lb />finance a trip to Alaska,<lb />Cotten tried to organize an<lb />investment group from<lb />among his familyTs friends.<lb />The attempt failed, but<lb />Cotten left for Alaska in Oc-<lb /><lb />tober 1897. William<lb />Stephenson, a biographer of<lb />Sallie Southall Cotten,<lb /><lb />thought that CottenTs at-<lb />tempt to raise funds for the<lb />Alaska trip had dishonored<lb />the family; family correspon-<lb />dence hints that CottenTs<lb />drinking concerned his par-<lb />ents.4 The remaining evi-<lb />dence does not allow us to<lb />know the exact reason for<lb />CottenTs departure,° but what<lb />we do know is that Cotten<lb />had not found a place for<lb />himself in North Carolina<lb />business or society commen-<lb />surate with his familyTs stat-<lb />ure or his image of himself.<lb />Even if he did not dishonor<lb />the family, he was not able to<lb />help them in a material way.<lb />At the least, this was a blow<lb />to his pride.<lb /><lb />When he reached Se-<lb />attle, Cotten sought to join<lb />any expedition going north<lb />to the gold fields. Unbe-<lb />knownst to him, the expedi-<lb />tion that accepted Cotten<lb /><lb />1898, Cotten joined a battalion of<lb />Washington volunteers organized to<lb />fight in the Spanish-American War;<lb />later he joined the regular army. In the<lb />army he found some of the adventure<lb />that he was seeking, serving in China<lb />during the Boxer Campaign and in the<lb />Philippines during the insurrection<lb />there. Cotten returned to the United<lb />States as a second lieutenant in 1902.<lb />In early 1907, while stationed at Fort<lb />Monroe, Virginia, as part of the<lb /><lb />This caricature of Cotten appears at the end of Housed on the<lb />Third Floor. Courtesy North Carolina Collection, University of N.C.<lb /><lb />Library -Chapel Hill.<lb /><lb />certs, and trips to spas in America and<lb />abroad. It is telling that Cotten dedi-<lb />cated An Adventure in Alaska to Edyth,<lb />calling her othe little nugget and great<lb />possession� that all his efforts had been<lb />leading to.® Cotten once referred to his<lb />Alaska experience as an attempt oto<lb />win at one turn of the wheel, that for-<lb />tune and affluence that is denied many<lb />deserving millions after a life of toil and<lb />labor.�? Winning Edyth TysonTs hand<lb />was CottenTs lucky turn at the wheel; af-<lb />ter their marriage he never<lb />wanted for affection, com-<lb />fort, or status.<lb /><lb />Cotten traced the ori-<lb />gin of his interest in collect-<lb />ing North Caroliniana to<lb />his motherTs experiences<lb />when she was preparing<lb />the North Carolina exhibit<lb />for the 1893 Columbian Ex-<lb />position. Sallie Southall<lb />Cotten wanted the exhibit<lb />to include a collection of<lb />books about North Caro-<lb />lina, but as she traveled the<lb />state, sometimes with Bruce<lb />accompanying her, she<lb />found few libraries of North<lb />Caroliniana. For Cotten the<lb />experience oplanted the<lb />germ and desire in me to<lb />know and to possess some-<lb />thing of the books and lit-<lb />erature that had been pub-<lb />lished in and about my na-<lb />tive State.�!° Cotten began<lb />collecting for himself when<lb />he was in the army. He fre-<lb />quented used bookstores<lb />and curiosity shops. Al-<lb />though hindered because<lb />oboth money and knowl-<lb />edge were entirely lack-<lb />ing,�" Cotten did amass a<lb />collection of about two<lb />hundred volumes before he<lb /><lb />was a fraud: the organizers of<lb />the expedition solicited investors, re-<lb />cruited and outfitted a crew, dropped<lb />the crew in a remote location, and then<lb />absconded with the remaining funds.<lb />The crew was left to die when their sup-<lb />plies ran out, or find their way back to<lb />civilization. Cotten, hearty and re-<lb />sourceful, came out alive. Rather than<lb />being shaken by this brush with death,<lb />he was exhilarated. oDrills, Raids and<lb />Escapades� opens with CottenTs judg-<lb />ment of his Alaska experience: oThis<lb />trip to Alaska had been an experience<lb />very excellent, hardening and educat-<lb />ing; it had set me aright with myself<lb />and with the world.�®<lb /><lb />Upon returning to Seattle in June<lb /><lb />20 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />Jamestown Tercentennial, Cotten met<lb />Edyth Johns Tyson. Edyth Tyson was<lb />the widow of Jesse Tyson, a Baltimore<lb />industrialist who had made a fortune<lb />mining chrome. Beautiful and wealthy,<lb />she was a grande dame of Baltimore<lb />society. For Cotten, it was love at first<lb />sight. Although Cotten was discreet<lb />about the courtship, he did confess in<lb />oDrills, Raids and Escapades� that oI<lb />instantly liked her far better than any<lb />person I had ever seen. She was my<lb />fate, my joy or sorrow.�T The couple<lb />were married three years later in En-<lb />gland.<lb /><lb />Cotten easily adjusted to a life<lb />filled with parties, club meetings, con-<lb /><lb />left army service.<lb /><lb />Bruce Cotten wrote his parents<lb />only infrequently between 1898 and<lb />1902. This was very hard on Mrs.<lb />Cotten. When correspondence be-<lb />tween mother and son picked up in<lb />1902, Sallie CottenTs letters to her son<lb />were filled with assurances of love and<lb />pleas for him to visit. oWe are all crazy<lb />to see you again " and you know that<lb />a warm welcome awaits you whenever<lb />you come.� o[Y]ou must constantly<lb />bear in mind that we all love you "<lb />that time and long absence and dis-<lb />tance " all tend to make us love you<lb />better and long more to see you.�<lb />oNever mind, son, when you come<lb />home " no matter what month the<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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        <p>calendar may record, it will be Christ-<lb />mas to us, because our hearts will be<lb />full of gladness.�'* After all this<lb />prompting and pleading, Cotten vis-<lb />ited Cottendale in the fall of 1905. The<lb />prodigal son returned; a reconciliation<lb />was effected. His interest in North<lb />Caroliniana helped with that reconcili-<lb />ation. Family members, particularly his<lb />mother, became participants in the<lb />collecting process, inquiring about<lb />books with friends and associates, fol-<lb />lowing leads about particular<lb />titles, and purchasing books for<lb />Cotten. CottenTs parents,<lb />through their travels around the<lb />state on civic and social affairs,<lb />provided Cotten with contacts<lb />and information that enabled<lb />him to locate and acquire many<lb />obscure titles.<lb /><lb />All through the 1910s and<lb />well into the 1920s, Mrs. CottenTs<lb />correspondence with her son<lb />shows evidence of the familyTs<lb />collaboration with Cotten, and it<lb />also gives glimpses of the books<lb />that Cotten was seeking. Robert<lb />Cotten was the one to locate<lb />John LawsonTs A New Voyage to<lb />Carolina (London, 1709); Sallie<lb />Cotten tried for eight years to get<lb />Joseph BiggsTs A Concise History of<lb />the Kehukee Baptist Association<lb />(Tarboro, 1834). Mrs. CottenTs<lb />diligence eventually paid off with<lb />that book and with Edwin<lb />FullerTs Sea-Gift, which she also<lb />pursued for years.'8<lb /><lb />Cotten did not rely solely on<lb />family contacts. As all collectors<lb />do, he read dealersT catalogs. By<lb />the time he published Housed on<lb />the Third Floor, a catalog of the<lb />highlights of his collection,<lb />Cotten estimated that he had<lb />read over a half a million pages of cata-<lb />logs.!4 He also used book dealers and<lb />book scouts in North Carolina and<lb />neighboring states. He even published<lb />a newsletter that he mailed to such<lb />agents. He used the bulletins to inform<lb />ocertain dealers, scouts and friends of<lb />my Collection of North Caroliniana�<lb />about his most notable acquisitions.!»<lb />He also included pointed, but friendly,<lb />jabs in the bulletin to goad scouts into<lb />giving his interests more attention.<lb /><lb />The collection that Cotten<lb />amassed consisted of almost two thou-<lb />sand titles. It contained books printed<lb />in North Carolina, books by North<lb />Carolinians, books about North Caro-<lb />lina, and a few associational volumes.<lb />Addresses, biographies, catechisms,<lb />college and school publications, gene-<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />alogies, histories, memorial volumes,<lb />natural histories, novels, poetry, and<lb />religious tracts were all present. Unlike<lb />that other great collector of North<lb />Caroliniana, Stephen B. Weeks, Cotten<lb />limited his collecting to books that<lb />were wholly about North Carolina or<lb />some area of the state. As a professional<lb />historian, Weeks collected to support<lb />his research interests, while Cotten had<lb />no research needs or institutional con-<lb />straints. This freedom, together with<lb /><lb />Bruce Cotten, courtesy North Carolina Collecion, University of<lb />N.C. Library -Chapel Hill.<lb /><lb />his wealth and contacts, helped him<lb />become the greatest amateur collector<lb />of North Caroliniana. His passion was<lb />to amass a library that reconnected<lb />him to the land of his birth. This very<lb />personal impetus led to some idiosyn-<lb />cracies in his collecting. Because poli-<lb />tics was distasteful to him, he made<lb />little attempt to collect political ad-<lb />dresses and public documents; he also<lb />excluded items that rarely came as<lb />complete sets, such as newspapers,<lb />church minutes, and school catalogs.<lb />He was overy partial to items of some<lb />interest large enough to stand in their<lb />own binding,�!® so he rejected many<lb />pamphlet items. The physical condi-<lb />tion of an item was important to<lb />Cotten. He would successively buy and<lb />sell copies of a title until he had a speci-<lb /><lb />men that met his standards for condi-<lb />tion. There is also evidence that Cotten<lb />rebound volumes in order to possess an<lb />aesthetically pleasing collection.<lb /><lb />Cotten was not a scholar, but he<lb />was knowledgeable about the history<lb />and publishing heritage of North Caro-<lb />lina. Cotten knew which early Euro-<lb />pean titles to collect, but despite his<lb />wealth and contacts abroad, he had dif-<lb />ficulty acquiring first editions of Euro-<lb />pean works on North Carolina. He felt<lb />great pride that he was able<lb />to acquire Sir Walter<lb />RaleighTs The History of the<lb />World (1614).<lb /><lb />Cotten was far more suc-<lb />cessful at acquiring titles<lb />published in North Carolina.<lb />He had 44 eighteenth cen-<lb />tury North Carolina im-<lb />prints; he also had 71 Con-<lb />federate imprints, chiefly<lb />from North Carolina presses.<lb />Cotten discriminated se-<lb />verely among twentieth cen-<lb />tury imprints; the twentieth<lb />century portion of the collec-<lb />tion is heavily weighted to-<lb />wards materials on the east-<lb />ern part of the state.<lb /><lb />After his wifeTs death in<lb />1942, Cotten sold their es-<lb />tate, Cylburn, to the city of<lb />Baltimore and moved to<lb />smaller quarters. No longer<lb />would CottenTs collection be<lb />ohoused on the third floor.�<lb />Edyth CottenTs death, and<lb />CottenTs dissatisfaction with<lb />how his books were handled<lb />in the move from Cylburn,<lb />caused Cotten to worry<lb />about what would become of<lb />his books when he died.<lb />There is no indication which<lb />side made the first move, but by the<lb />mid-1940s, Cotten and the library staff<lb />at the University of North Carolina<lb />were engaged in a steady correspon-<lb />dence about CottenTs collection. In De-<lb />cember 1948, Mary Lindsay Thornton,<lb />the librarian of the UniversityTs North<lb />Carolina Collection, visited Cotten at<lb />his home. The trip cemented the rela-<lb />tionship between Cotten and the Uni-<lb />versity Library. Cotten then consulted<lb />John Sprunt Hill, a prominent benefac-<lb />tor of the university and someone<lb />whom Cotten much admired, about<lb />how his will should be amended to<lb />give his collection to the university.<lb />University Librarian Charles E. Rush<lb />made several suggestions, most of<lb />which became part of the final docu-<lb />ment. The notable suggestion that<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 21<lb /></p>
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          <lb />Cotten rejected was that the collection<lb />be named for his mother.<lb /><lb />Cotten was revitalized by the suc-<lb />cessful conclusion of negotiations over<lb />the will. In his correspondence with<lb />Mary Lindsay Thornton, he began to<lb />address her as oMy dear Partner.�!�<lb />Cotten also began to re-write his manu-<lb />script catalog of the collection. This,<lb />too, renewed his interest in the collec-<lb />tion, and he was surprisingly active as<lb />a collector during the last few years of his<lb />life. Library staff continued to visit and<lb />correspond with Cotten; his correspon-<lb />dence with Mary Lindsay Thornton was<lb />interrupted only by his frequent bouts of<lb />ill health. The last letter from Miss<lb />Thornton reached Cotten just a week<lb />before his death on April 1, 1954.<lb /><lb />Bruce Cotten was buried in Balti-<lb />more, but his book collection came<lb />home to North Carolina, to the North<lb />Carolina Collection at the University of<lb />North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Cotten<lb />left North Carolina to find his place in<lb />the world, but he still needed some<lb />connection to his family and his home<lb />state. Collecting North Caroliniana<lb />provided him with that connection. It<lb />became his passion. He combined that<lb />passion with great wealth and many<lb />family connections, and in doing so<lb />amassed a private collection of North<lb />Caroliniana not equalled to this day.<lb /><lb />References<lb /><lb />! The term is the one used by Bruce<lb />Cotten in the dedication of his Housed on<lb />the Third Floor (Baltimore: Horn-Shafer,<lb />1941).<lb /><lb />2 Bruce Cotten, As We Were: A Personal<lb />Sketch of Family Life (Baltimore: Privately<lb />Printed, 1935), 23.<lb /><lb />3 Bruce Cotten, oDrills, Raids and Esca-<lb />pades: A Personal Narrative of Life in the<lb />Army, 1898-1910,� 17. North Carolina<lb />Collection, University of North Carolina<lb />at Chapel Hill.<lb /><lb />4 William Stephenson, Sallie Southall<lb />Cotten: A WomanTs Life in North Carolina<lb />(Greenville, NC: Pamlico Press, 1987),<lb />123; Bruce Cotten to Robert Randolph<lb />Cotten, October 3, 1897, Cotten Family<lb />Papers, Collection #3589, Southern His-<lb />torical Collection, University of North<lb />Carolina at Chapel Hill.<lb /><lb />~ The chief sources for studying the<lb />Cottens are the Cotten Family Papers<lb />(Collection #3589) and the Sallie South-<lb />all Cotten Papers (Collection #2613) in<lb />the Southern Historical Collection, Uni-<lb />versity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.<lb />The later collection consists primarily of<lb />letters from Sallie Southall Cotten to her<lb />son Bruce, 1902-1926. Unfortunately,<lb />the correspondence is one-sided; we read<lb />news of Cottendale and many protesta-<lb />tions of a motherTs love, but nothing<lb />concrete about why Bruce Cotten left<lb /><lb />home or what kept him away.<lb /><lb />6 oDrills, Raids and Escapades,� 1.<lb /><lb />7 Tbid., 238.<lb /><lb />8 Bruce Cotten, An Adventure in Alaska<lb />during the Gold Excitement of 1897-1898:<lb />A Personal Experience (Baltimore: Sun<lb />Printing Office, 1922), dedication.<lb /><lb />° Bruce Cotten to Mr. and Mrs. Robert<lb />Randolph Cotten, 14 April 1925. Letter<lb />bound in oDrills, Raids and Escapades.�<lb /><lb />10 Housed on the Third Floor, 7.<lb /><lb />11 Jbid., 8.<lb /><lb />12 Sallie Southall Cotten to Bruce<lb />Cotten, January 1, 1903, June 23, 1904,<lb />December 18, 1904, Sallie Southall<lb />Cotten Papers, Southern Historical Col-<lb />lection, University of North Carolina at<lb />Chapel Hill.<lb /><lb />13 Sallie Southall Cotten to Bruce<lb />Cotten, June 17, 1915, February 20,<lb />1916, March 13, 1921, February 18,<lb />1923, January 7, 1924, Sallie Southall<lb />Cotten Papers.<lb /><lb />14 Housed on the Third Floor, 11.<lb /><lb />1S Only a few bulletins remain. They<lb />are in the Bruce Cotten files, North Caro-<lb />lina Collection, University of North<lb />Carolina at Chapel Hill.<lb /><lb />16 Housed on the Third Floor, 10.<lb /><lb />17 Bruce Cotten to Mary Lindsay<lb />Thornton, January 16, 1950, Bruce<lb />Cotten files, North Carolina Collection,<lb />University of North Carolina at Chapel<lb />Hill.<lb /><lb />John Higgins, Sales Representative<lb /><lb />ww<lb />OXFORD<lb /><lb />22 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />P.O. Box 21011<lb />Columbia SC 29221<lb /><lb />1-800-222-9086<lb />Fax: 803-731-0320<lb /><lb />OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS Ce QUALITY BOOKS INC.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />et a Ts ~ = =<lb /><lb />Mollie Huston Lee:<lb />Founder of RaleighTs Public Black Library<lb /><lb />by Patrick Valentine<lb /><lb />Mollie Lee otalked of her library as though it was a living entity of vast importance.�<lb /><lb />"W.E. B. DuBois!<lb /><lb />As children owe went religiously to the Richard B. Harrison Library.�<lb /><lb />ollie H. Huston Lee was an<lb />energetic apostle for libraries<lb />and for her race at a time and<lb />place that gave little respect to<lb />either. Whatever her personal<lb />feelings may have been, she<lb />knew how to work within the<lb />existing power structure to bring librar-<lb />ies and their treasures to her people. Her<lb />great achievement lay in developing,<lb />maintaining, and increasing public li-<lb />brary service to the African American<lb />people of Raleigh and Wake County<lb />while never losing the dream of ensur-<lb />ing equal library service for everyone.<lb />When people would not come to the<lb />library, she took a omarket basket in<lb />hand� and brought books to them "<lb />and more.* The esteem in which she<lb />was held later in life is indicated by her<lb />selection as an UNESCO library delegate<lb />and her appointment as a trustee of the<lb />State Library of North Carolina.*<lb />Although public library service was<lb />extended to Blacks in Charlotte in 1905,<lb />Raleigh had to wait another thirty<lb />years.» No documentation appears to<lb />exist today that can explain the long<lb />delay " there were twelve Black public<lb />libraries in operation across the state by<lb />1935° " but White resistance, includ-<lb />ing that of librarians, was largely to<lb />blame. While some White librarians<lb />were in favor of extending services to<lb />Blacks, little was done in most areas of<lb />the state.? Whatever the truth may be,<lb />Mollie Huston Lee was in the forefront<lb />of those advocating and working for<lb />such a library in Raleigh. She helped<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />persuade the White mayor of Raleigh,<lb />George A. Isley, to form a biracial com-<lb />mittee in 1935 to establish a oNegro Li-<lb />brary.�® She was not alone in her desire,<lb />and the push fox the library must have<lb />aroused strong and wide support to win<lb />the mayorTs quick action, not just in the<lb />African American community but<lb />among powerful Whites as well. It is<lb />notable that Raleigh had the first bira-<lb />cial governing library board in the<lb />South. !°<lb /><lb />African Americans in North Caro-<lb />lina had largely lost the right to vote<lb />early in the 1900s. Economically and<lb />socially, as well as politically, they were<lb />segregated and held down. But by the<lb />1920s, some White support was evident<lb />for increasing their access to educa-<lb />tional and other cultural institutions.<lb />Within the Black community, segrega-<lb />tion had the effect of strengthening<lb />Black-owned businesses and institu-<lb />tions, so that by the time of the Depres-<lb />sion, North Carolina had a small but<lb />firmly entrenched African American<lb />elite of small business owners, minis-<lb />ters, and educators. Black women like<lb />Mts. Lee often were better educated and<lb />maybe freer than their male counter-<lb />parts to stand up to and manipulate the<lb />establishment.'! Still, the attempt to<lb />foster Black library access in Davidson<lb />and Mecklenburg counties in the late<lb />1920s, funded by the Rosenwald Foun-<lb />dation, had mixed results at best.!?<lb /><lb />One of the most remarkable things<lb />about Mollie Huston Lee was that was<lb />she was not raised in the South and was<lb /><lb />" Audrey V. Wall?<lb /><lb />not returning from college to help her<lb />people: she had a bright and relatively<lb />easy future stretching before her in the<lb />North. Lee had been raised in Colum-<lb />bus, Ohio, attended Howard Univer-<lb />sity, and then took her library degree at<lb />Columbia University in New York in<lb />1930 " where she was the first African<lb />American to graduate. She then chose<lb />to work at Shaw University in Raleigh,<lb />where she served as librarian until the<lb />Richard B. Harrison Library opened on<lb />November 12, 1935. It may be unusual<lb />today for a college librarian to enter<lb />public library ranks, but the situation<lb />was much more fluid then. As a college<lb />librarian, she had been instrumental in<lb />the founding of what became the Ne-<lb />gro Library Association of North Caro-<lb />lina.¥3<lb /><lb />While the Harrison collection,<lb />named after a recently deceased profes-<lb />sor of drama at North Carolina A&amp;T<lb />College famous for his role as oDe<lb />Lawd� in the popular play, Green Pas-<lb />tures, contained only 890 books, they<lb />were public books, accessible to all, man-<lb />aged by a professional librarian paid by<lb />the public. The city of Raleigh agreed to<lb />pay $2,500 and the county $750 for<lb />support of the Harrison Library.'* At<lb />this time, one-third of Wake County<lb />was Black, with an average income con-<lb />siderably less than that of Whites who<lb />themselves earned only slightly more<lb />than half the national average. Two-<lb />thirds of the African Americans in the<lb />county lived in rural areas."<lb /><lb />Within two years, the Harrison Li-<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 23<lb /></p>
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        <p>brary held 3,310 volumes, was open 42<lb />hours-a week, and had an annual circu-<lb />lation of almost 15,000. This compared<lb />favorably with many of the 17 other<lb />Black public libraries in existence in<lb />North Carolina. (Greensboro, whose<lb />White business community had given<lb />early support to the concept of a Black<lb />public library, funded its Negro library at<lb />26¢ per Black person and Durham,<lb />which had a vigorous Black business<lb />community, provided 17¢ while Raleigh<lb />and Asheville managed only 10¢.)!¢<lb />Lee was not content to rest, but<lb />looked upon it as her duty to provide li-<lb />brary services for all the Blacks, whether<lb />they lived in the city or not, whether<lb />they particularly concerned themselves<lb />with libraries and books or not. As she<lb />told a radio audience in 1951, oa public<lb />library is the recorded memory of man-<lb />kind, serving the community. Its func-<lb />tion is to make available to all, informa-<lb />tion and thought in all fields of human<lb />knowledge and experience and to help<lb />each person, whatever his interest may<lb />be, to find and use the books and other<lb />library facilities and material which best<lb />serve his needs.�!� One of her major<lb />achievements was building what was<lb /><lb />aimed at reaching and up-<lb />lifting blacks. Under her di-<lb />rection, the Harrison Li-<lb />brary in 1941 established a<lb />branch in Apex and shared<lb />the use of a bookmobile for<lb />the rural areas of the<lb />county.!* In addition to<lb />her regular duties, she<lb />served as part-time supervi-<lb />sor of the Raleigh school li-<lb />braries. In 1943, she helped<lb />to organize a five-day work-<lb />shop at Shaw University on<lb />operating Negro public li-<lb />braries.2° The next year,<lb />under her prodding, Wake<lb />County purchased for<lb />Harrison its own bookmo-<lb />bile.�! By this time 45 coun-<lb />ties provided some library<lb />service to Negroes, a situa-<lb />tion State Librarian<lb />Marjorie Beal was deter-<lb />mined to improve.?�<lb /><lb />In 1949, Beal recom-<lb />mended the employment<lb />of a full-time Negro super-<lb />visor of rural libraries as<lb />part of a nine-point pro-<lb /><lb />Mollie Huston Lee arranges books before the opening of<lb />the new library building in 1948. Richard B. Harrison<lb />collection. Photo courtesy of Wake County Public Library.<lb /><lb />later called the oLee Collection� of books gram for improving Black public li- _a part-time assistant " and naturally<lb />by and about African Americans.'* Lee _ braries.�* While she did not get allshe | chose Mollie Huston Lee. Lee held this<lb />also directed many innovative programs wanted, she did get permission to hire position while also maintaining her job<lb /><lb />"~<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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        <p>as the Harrison librarian " perhaps a<lb />wise precaution as the state job died<lb />away after Beal left in 1950. The cause,<lb />effect, and sequence of LeeTs departure<lb />remain unclear. Beal herself considered<lb />Lee oa stimulating influence for Negro<lb />library development.�*<lb /><lb />But on the local front, pressure was<lb />mounting to combine the Richard B.<lb />Harrison with the White Olivia Raney<lb />Library and then add other town librar-<lb />ies to create a comprehensive county-<lb />wide system. Negotiations were long<lb />and somewhat tortuous " at one point<lb />some at Olivia Raney wanted to merge<lb />with the State Library! Part of the prob-<lb />lem in Wake, as elsewhere, was a gen-<lb />eral indifference to libraries on the part<lb />of the public.�° In 1965, after six long<lb />years of dispute, the city merged the<lb />Raney and Harrison libraries, but kept<lb />the individual facilities open. The new<lb />system, called the Olivia Raney Library,<lb />Inc., had a biracial, 22 member board.<lb />Only after 1970 did a true county-wide<lb />system emerge.76<lb /><lb />Combining libraries and merging<lb />staffs and policies is never easy, and<lb />can be made better or worse depending<lb />on the personalities and circumstances<lb />involved. Differences in cataloging, ac-<lb />quisition, personnel policies, staffing<lb />levels, and outreach services affect the<lb />process. Even leaving aside the delicate<lb />business of Black-White integration,<lb />the list of potential trouble goes on.<lb />Records about such matters, as for li-<lb />brary integration itself, tend to be<lb />sketchy.?� We do know that Lee was in<lb />favor of the merger, for financial if no<lb />other reason, as was William OTShea,<lb />director of the combined system, for<lb />administrative if no other reason.�®<lb />Both worked together to harness what<lb />could be, and in some other systems<lb />has been, a difficult merger.<lb /><lb />Lee remained in charge of the<lb />Harrison Branch Library until her retire-<lb />ment in 1972, at which time there was<lb />an outpouring of community and staff<lb />love and respect.?� She had committed<lb />her life to a southern Black community<lb />that had little voice and fewer resources.<lb />She had insisted on helping others and<lb />making them help themselves. She<lb />knew the power of reading and good<lb />books and worked tirelessly to promote<lb />them. Yet she also knew how to work<lb />within the system to promote the best<lb />goals of both races.<lb /><lb />Mollie H. Huston Lee died unex-<lb />pectedly on January 26, 1982. Her hus-<lb />band, Dr. James S. Lee, retired head of<lb />the Biology Department at North Caro-<lb />lina Central University, had prede-<lb />ceased her, and a son and two grand-<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />children survived her.*° Her legacy in<lb />Raleigh and North Carolina and the<lb />South remains and has grown.<lb /><lb />References<lb /><lb />' Quoted in Ray Nichols Moore,<lb />oMollie Huston Lee: A Profile,� Wilson<lb />Library Bulletin 49 (1975): 434. This ex-<lb />cellent article (pp. 432-439) remains a<lb />prime source for information about<lb />Lee and her times.<lb /><lb />2 Oral interview in Linda Simmons-<lb />Henry and Linda Harris Edmisten, Cul-<lb />ture Town: Life in RaleighTs African<lb />American Communities (Raleigh: Ra-<lb />leigh Historic Districts Commission,<lb />1993), 83.<lb /><lb />3 Moore, oMollie Huston Lee.� See<lb />also Benjamin F. Speller, Jr., oMollie<lb />Huston Lee,� Notable Black American<lb />Women, Jessie Carney Smith, editor<lb />(Detroit: Gale Research, c1992), II, 406-<lb />408; Benjamin F. Speller, Jr., and James<lb />R. Jarrell, oProfiles of Pioneers: Selected<lb />North Carolina Black Librarians,� The<lb />Black Librarian in the Southeast: Reminis-<lb />cences, Activities, Challenges, ed. by<lb />Annette L. Phinazee (School of Library<lb />Science, North Carolina Central Uni-<lb />versity, 1980), 78-81; Virginia Lacy<lb />Jones, oA DeanTs Career,� The Black Li-<lb />brarian in America, ed. E. J. Josey<lb />(Metuchen: Scarecrow Press, 1970), 35;<lb />and A. P. Marshall, oThe Search for<lb />Identity,� ibid., 179.<lb /><lb />4 North Carolina State Library, News<lb />Letter (October 1961) 27; oScott An-<lb />nounces Posts,� News and Observer<lb />(April 13, 1972), 68.<lb /><lb />5 See Patrick M. Valentine, oSteel,<lb />Cotton and Tobacco: Philanthropy<lb />and Public Libraries in North Carolina,<lb />1900-1940,� Libraries &amp; Culture 31<lb />(Spring 1996): 272-298; and oThe<lb />Spread of Public Libraries: The Com-<lb />munity of the Book in North Carolina,<lb />1900-1960,� North Carolina Libraries<lb />(Fall 1996): 113-121.<lb /><lb />6 Asheville, Charlotte, Durham,<lb />Greensboro, Henderson, Laurinburg,<lb />Lexington, Raleigh, Thomasville,<lb />Weldon, Wilmington, and Winston-<lb />Salem. It appears that the libraries in<lb />Oteen and Hendersonville also served<lb />African Americans. (oNorth Carolina<lb />Libraries 1935-1936,� statistics com-<lb />piled by the North Carolina Library<lb />Commission.�) High Point, New Bern,<lb />Hendersonville, Rocky Mount,<lb />Sanford, and Warrenton added Black<lb />branches the next year.<lb /><lb />7 See Minutes, North Carolina Li-<lb />brary Association, 3rd Biennial Confer-<lb />ence, November 2, 1927; and North<lb />Carolina Library Commission, 62.9,<lb />Administrative Section, Minutes,<lb /><lb />meetings of September 30, 1924 and Sep-<lb />tember 22, 1927 (both in North Carolina<lb />Department of Archives and History).<lb />Typically, a tenth of the stateTs appropria-<lb />tion for library work, mainly for travel-<lb />ing libraries, would obe used for Negro li-<lb />brary work.� North Carolina Library Bul-<lb />letin 6 (December 1926): 202. The first<lb />two librarians at RaleighTs White Olivia<lb />Raney Library had no library training.<lb />Jonathan Daniels remembered them as<lb />oold maiden ladies ... whose qualifica-<lb />tions as librarians were that there was<lb />then no old age assistance roll upon<lb />which their influential relatives could<lb />put them.� oAddress before the American<lb />Library Association, in Philadelphia, July<lb />8, 1955,� University of North Carolina at<lb />Chapel Hill, Southern Historical Collec-<lb />tion [cited hereafter as SHC], Jonathan<lb />Daniels papers, 3466, folder 2268, p. 11.)<lb />The first trained librarian was Miss Clyde<lb />Smith, who was hired in 1936. While li-<lb />brary officials later claimed that Olivia<lb />RaneyTs state charter limited its service to<lb />Whites only, this charter was amended<lb />in 1927 to allow services to Negroes.<lb /><lb />8 Race nomenclature remains a sensi-<lb />tive and shifting field. This paper will use<lb />oBlack� and oAfrican American� inter-<lb />changeably. Earlier terms will be used<lb />where historically appropriate. For in-<lb />stance, the first Black library, in Char-<lb />lotte, later called the Brevard Street Li-<lb />brary (or Branch), was titled the oChar-<lb />lotte Public Library for Colored People�<lb />for years. In the late 1940s Weldon and<lb />High Point had oNegro Branches� while<lb />Asheville had a oColored Public Library.�<lb /><lb />° See for instance, A. T. White, Chair-<lb />man, (Library) Location Committee, to<lb />Drs. [Lemuel T.] Delany and [George]<lb />Evans, September 18, 1935, and WRAL<lb />radio typescript, 16th Anniversary of Ri-<lb />chard B. Harrison Library, in the<lb />oHarrison Library " History� files, Rich-<lb />ard B. Harrison Branch Library [cited<lb />hereafter as RBH]. Delany and Evans<lb />agreed to give the entire first floor of<lb />their building to the library. That Mayor<lb />Isley became chairman of the library<lb />board, which consisted of three Whites<lb />and three Blacks, surely was a compli-<lb />ment to LeeTs abilities.<lb /><lb />10 Eliza Atkins Gleason, The Southern<lb />Negro and the Public Library (Chicago:<lb />University of Chicago Press, 1941), n. 13,<lb />p. 82. On the composition of the board,<lb />which included Julia B. Delany, an in-<lb />structor at St. Augustine College, and<lb />Pearl L. Byrd, supervisor of North Caro-<lb />lina colored elementary schools, see<lb />News and Observer (November 12, 1935):<lb />10. Julia Brown Delany was Dr. Lemuel<lb />DelanyTs wife. (oRaleigh Physician Dies,�<lb />News &amp; Observer (January 10, 1956), 3.)<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 25<lb /><lb />8 eee eee<lb /></p>
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        <p>11 Note in particular the pioneering<lb />but largely forgotten work of John R.<lb />Larkins, The Negro Population of North<lb />Carolina; Social and Economic, Special<lb />Bulletin #23 (Raleigh: N. C. State Board<lb />of Charities and Public Welfare, 1943);<lb />oThe Negro Population of North Caro-<lb />lina, 1945-1955,� typescript, North<lb />Carolina State Board of Public Welfare<lb />(August 1957); and Patterns of Leadership<lb />Among Negroes in North Carolina (Ra-<lb />leigh: Irving-Swain Press, 1959). Good<lb />background studies are Glenda Eliza-<lb />beth Gilmore, Gender and Jim Crow:<lb />Women and the Politics of White Su-<lb />premacy in North Carolina, 1896-1920<lb />(Chapel Hill: University of North Caro-<lb />lina Press, 1996); Jacqueline Jones, La-<lb />bor of Love, Labor of Sorrow: Black<lb />Women, Work, and the Family from Sla-<lb />very to the Present (New York: Basic<lb />Books, 1985); and Evelyn Brooks<lb />Higginbotham, Righteous Discontent: The<lb />WomenTs Movement in the Black Baptist<lb />Church, 1880-1920 (Cambridge:<lb />Harvard University Press, 1993). The<lb />North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance<lb />company, based in Durham, was of<lb />course not a osmall business� but had<lb />tentacles reaching into every Black<lb />community in the state. Its agents were<lb />often aspiring and prospering members<lb />of the local elite, but they were hard<lb />pressed by the Depression.<lb /><lb />12 James V. Carmichael Jr., oTommie<lb />Dora Barker and Southern Librarian-<lb />ship� (Ph.D. diss., University of North<lb />Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1987); and Val-<lb />entine, oSteel, Cotton and Tobacco,� of-<lb />fer the most recent assessment and fur-<lb />ther references.<lb /><lb />13 oColored Library Conference Meets<lb />at Shaw University,� typescript, oNe-<lb />groes " N.C. - Libraries,� RBH files.<lb />(The author thanks Wanda Cox-Bailey<lb />for her help in using the wonderful ma-<lb />terials at Harrison.) See also Mollie<lb />Huston Lee, oDevelopment of Negro Li-<lb />braries in North Carolina,� North Caro-<lb />lina Libraries I] (May 1944): 1-2. Most<lb />of the professionally trained Black li-<lb />brarians working in North Carolina<lb />were from the Hampton Library School,<lb />with one each from Simmons, Michi-<lb />gan and Columbia (Lee). Albert P.<lb />Marshall, oThe North Carolina Negro<lb />Library Association,� Handbook of Black<lb />Librarianship, comp. &amp; ed. E. J. Josey<lb />and Ann Allen Shockley (Littleton, CO:<lb />Libraries Unlimited, 1977), 54-57.<lb /><lb />4 Cited in George Stradley Browning,<lb />oThe Services of the Richard B. Harrison<lb />Public Library, Raleigh, North Caro-<lb />lina,� (Thesis, University of North Caro-<lb />lina at Chapel Hill, 1962), 4. The Olivia<lb />Raney Library received $7,000 from Ra-<lb /><lb />26 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />leigh and $3,250 from Wake County.<lb />oNorth Carolina Libraries 1935-1936,<lb />statistics compiled by the North Caro-<lb />lina Library Commission.�<lb /><lb />1S Additional statistics for Wake can be<lb />found in Charles S. Johnson, Statistical<lb />Atlas of Southern Counties... (Chapel Hill:<lb />University of North Carolina Press,<lb />1941), 192.<lb /><lb />16 The statewide average for commu-<lb />nities that provided Negro library ser-<lb />vice " and reported on it " was 6¢ per<lb />capita per year. Based on oNews Notes<lb />prepared by the North Carolina Library<lb />Commission,� October 28, 1937. Over<lb />half the state did not provide any li-<lb />brary service to Blacks.<lb /><lb />17 WRAL radio transcript.<lb /><lb />18 This collection was especially im-<lb />portant at a time when Black research-<lb />ers were not welcome at mainstream in-<lb />stitutions. See John Hope Franklin, Race<lb />and History: Selected Essays, 1938-1988<lb />(Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University<lb />Press, 1989), 288-289; and Michael<lb />Kammen, In the Past Lane: Historical<lb />Perspectives on American Culture (New<lb />York: Oxford University Press, 1997), 33-36.<lb /><lb />1 Mollie Huston Lee, oDevelopment<lb />of Negro Libraries in North Carolina,�<lb />North Carolina Libraries Ill, (May 1944):<lb />3. Hertford County had the first Black<lb />bookmobile in the state, in 1939, and<lb />Durham the second. Blacks in Hertford<lb />raised over $1,000 for their bookmobile,<lb />and later another $500 for a permanent<lb />branch library. North Carolina Libraries<lb />Newsletter (3 May 1938). RBH, on the<lb />other hand, shared its bookmobile with<lb />the Olivia Raney Library. On foreign re-<lb />action to the use of bookmobiles in Ra-<lb />leigh and Wilson, see oLibrary System<lb />in South Lauded,� News and Observer (6<lb />March 1949), 12.<lb /><lb />20 "Library Studies Will Open Today,�<lb />News and Observer (19 June 1944), 10.<lb />Mrs. Ann Robinson also served at RBH.<lb />North Carolina Library Commission<lb />News Letter, November 18, 1946), 2.<lb />Beatrice R. Hamlin, who later received<lb />her graduate degree from North Caro-<lb />lina Central University, became the<lb />childrenTs librarian at Harrison in 1952.<lb />Oral interview, Culture Town, 139-143.<lb /><lb />21 By 1949 ten counties had bookmo-<lb />biles for African Americans and another<lb />13 shared a bookmobile between<lb />Whites and Blacks. See oNorth Carolina<lb />Negro Public Library Service " 1949�<lb />map (RBH files).<lb /><lb />22 Marjorie Beal, ed., oLibraries in<lb />North Carolina: A survey, 1946-1947�<lb />(mimeograph, Raleigh: North Carolina<lb />Library Association, 1948), 19.<lb /><lb />3 Public Libraries Section report,<lb />NCLA Records, Vol. 1, 1937-1951, (un-<lb /><lb />cataloged files, State Library of North<lb />Carolina), 3. The North Carolina Negro<lb />Library Association had first broached<lb />the idea in 1944 to the legislature. Lee,<lb />oDevelopment of Negro Libraries,� 2.<lb />BealTs efforts in many directions, during<lb />a difficult time, have gone largely unap-<lb />preciated.<lb /><lb />4 Beal, oLibraries in North Carolina,�<lb />19. See also North Carolina Library<lb />Commission, News Letter (November<lb />18, 1946), 2. For an example of LeeTs<lb />work at the State Library, see oBibliog-<lb />raphies of Holdings of North Carolina<lb />Libraries� and the reactions it spawned.<lb />SHC, 3823, North Carolina Council on<lb />Interracial Cooperation, folder 52. An-<lb />other example is LeeTs candid report on<lb />the Brevard Street and Fairview Homes<lb />branches in Mecklenburg County, May<lb />13, 1948, uncataloged files, State Li-<lb />brary of North Carolina.<lb /><lb />25 For instance, in 1960 a bond issue<lb />passed in Wake County but a library tax<lb />vote did not. Valerie W. Lovett, ed., oA<lb />Closer Look: A Community Analysis<lb />and Library Evaluation of Wake<lb />County� (Raleigh: Department of the<lb />Wake County Library, 1979). As Doris<lb />Rosemond commented, oSelling librar-<lb />ies in North Carolina seems to be one of<lb />our problems, however.� (Mrs. D. G.<lb />Rosemond to McNeill Smith, United<lb />States Commission on Civil Rights,<lb />North Carolina Advisory Committee,<lb />Duke University, Rare Books, Manu-<lb />scripts, and Special Collections Library<lb />Box 3, September 2, 1960. Rosemond<lb />was head of the Wilson County Negro<lb />Library.)<lb /><lb />26 See the extensive material under<lb />oWake County Public Library,� uncata-<lb />loged files, State Library of North Caro-<lb />lina. In 1951 Lee had established a sec-<lb />ond branch library, in Washington Ter-<lb />race. North Carolina Library Commis-<lb />sion News Letter (March 1951), 4.<lb /><lb />27 See, for example, the paucity of ma-<lb />terials in the United States Commission<lb />on Civil Rights, 52-A, even though use<lb />of public libraries was a major focus of<lb />the Commission.<lb /><lb />28 For the latter, personal conversation<lb />with Bill OTShea in 1980.<lb /><lb />29 See Charlotte Hilton Green, oOut-<lb />of-Doors in Carolina,� News &amp; Observer,<lb />June 18, 1972 V-11; Leon White, oTar<lb />Heel of the Week,� ibid., April 1, 1971;<lb />Mary Day Mordecai, oMrs. Mollie Lee<lb />and a Little Faith Built Richard B.<lb />Harrison Library.� ibid., June 2, 1972, 17<lb /><lb />30 Tn addition to sources noted above,<lb />see oChairman Of NCC Dept. Of Biol-<lb />ogy Dies At Age Of 59,� Durham Morn-<lb />ing Herald (June 13, 1963).<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />
          <lb />itTs a relief to Know thereTs fellow librarian Allen Benson.<lb /><lb />Allen C. Benson is the author of three essential professional guides<lb />written for librarians by a librarian and an expert in integrating the<lb />Internet into traditional library services.<lb /><lb />Securing Lisrary PCs Anp Data:<lb /><lb />A Hanpsook With Menuine, Anti-Virus,<lb />AND OTHER Protective SOFTWARE<lb /><lb />By Atten C. BENSON<lb />This package " a CD-ROM and extensive<lb /><lb />guide " includes carefully selected and field-<lb /><lb />tested, hacker-resistant shareware and<lb />freeware programs complete with instructions<lb />on when " and how " to use and install<lb />them. These will help your library:<lb /><lb />e keep patrons from inadvertently altering the<lb />Windows operating environment<lb /><lb />¢ block unauthorized access to programs<lb />and files<lb /><lb />© protect against computer viruses<lb /><lb />e deter hackers from breaking into Windows<lb />3.X and Windows 95 computers<lb /><lb />© prevent computers and peripherals from<lb />being stolen with anti-theft devices<lb /><lb />write security policy and manage it<lb />day-to-day<lb /><lb />© protect against Internet attacks<lb /><lb />e implement backup procedures<lb /><lb />e deal with disaster recovery<lb /><lb />© review and install security systems for<lb />MS-DOS and Windows<lb /><lb />1-55570-321-6. February 1998. 6 x 9.<lb /><lb />250 pp.<lb />Book and CD-ROM $125.00.<lb /><lb />Requires a Computer with A CD-ROM Drive and<lb /><lb />Web Browser<lb /><lb />100 Varick Street, New York, NY 10013<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />ConnecTING KIDS AND THE INTERNET:<lb /><lb />A HANDBOOK FoR LIBRARIANS,<lb />TEACHERS, AND PARENTS<lb /><lb />By Aten C. Benson AND LinpA FopEMsKI<lb /><lb />Designed to help school media specialists,<lb />teachers, parents, and home-schoolers get<lb />children learning online, this user-friendly<lb />handbook includes:<lb /><lb />© a general guide to the best Internet resources<lb />for kids<lb /><lb />e information on setting up pen pal programs<lb /><lb />e ways to research and contact childrenTs book<lb />authors and illustrators online<lb /><lb />e helping children take virtual field trips<lb /><lb />e enabling kids to share interests with peers<lb />through Internet discussion groups<lb /><lb />e lesson plans and sessions that can be copied<lb />for use in classroom presentations<lb /><lb />1-55570-244-9. 1996. 8 1/2x 11. 300 pp.<lb />$35.00.<lb />oA true handbook...� Database<lb /><lb />oAll of what one needs to become a competent<lb />user is covered here....a rich and valuable<lb />resource.� VOYA<lb /><lb />othe ideal tool for getting yourself " and<lb />your kids " on the Net...� Valley Parent/Bay<lb />Area Parent<lb /><lb />o...a treasure trove...� Catholic Library World<lb /><lb />NeaAL-SCHUMAN PUBLISHERS<lb />212.925.8650<lb /><lb />NeaL-SCHUMAN<lb />Comp_ere InreRneT COMPANION<lb />FOR LIBRARIANS<lb /><lb />By Awten C. BENson<lb /><lb />BensonTs guide offers both onewbie� cybrarians<lb />and Internet veterans everything they need to<lb />master todayTs Internet and incorporate it into<lb />their services.<lb /><lb />No other source " virtual or print " offers<lb />more step-by-step instructions, explains more<lb />Internet tools and protocols, or uses library<lb />examples to illustrate both basic and advanced<lb />techniques. This incomparable resource will<lb />help you:<lb /><lb />e Learn about recent developments like<lb />intranets and digital copyright issues<lb /><lb />e Discover new Internet and Web tools and<lb />resources " many of them free<lb /><lb />e Select and install the hardware, software, and<lb />systems you need<lb /><lb />e Integrate the Internet into your library<lb />services and develop fair and effective<lb />Internet policies<lb /><lb />The manual also includes a glossary written in<lb />language you can actually read, a listing of<lb />library discussion lists on the Internet, and oJob<lb />Hunting on the Internet for Librarians.�<lb /><lb />1-55570-317-8. November 1997.<lb />8 1/2 x 11. 525pp. $65.00.<lb /><lb />VUAUANVAaleteleasveltlUlnarslamexe)in<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 27<lb /></p>
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          <lb />
          <lb />Innovation in Library Education:<lb />Historical X-Files on Technology, People, and Change<lb /><lb />Nn spite of the random accolade<lb />occasionally tossed to the unusu-<lb /><lb />ally prominent professor, most<lb />practitioners regard library educa-<lb /><lb />tors with distrust, disdain, or at<lb />best, strained tolerance. Academi-<lb />cians generally are viewed as self-<lb />serving, indulgent, and effete due to<lb />the supposed flexibility of their sched-<lb />ules and their philosophical flirtations<lb />with irrelevant and perhaps erroneous<lb />theory from other fields. It is assumed<lb />that they are somehow intellectual,<lb />meaning removed from the day-to-day<lb />concerns of real librarians and their<lb />customers. Some state legislatures have<lb />promoted the idea that the entire pro-<lb />fessorate represents a high-paid welfare<lb />class, and several have abolished ten-<lb />ure. In North Carolina, the legislature<lb />has called for proof that professors<lb /><lb />should be compensated for time be--<lb /><lb />yond their actual 6-to-9 contact hours<lb />with students per week. Practicing li-<lb />brarians may feel that library educators<lb />are oout of touch� with marketplace<lb />developments, particularly technologi-<lb />cal ones, and with good reason, since<lb />no one seems to stay abreast any more.<lb />Some librarians may fear that their job<lb />performance is being mocked by super-<lb />cilious professors in the classroom for<lb />the sake of a laugh. Yet all of these<lb />fears, justified or not, underscore the<lb />fundamental misunderstandings about<lb />the role of higher education generally<lb />and library education in particular,<lb />many of which are firmly rooted in<lb />professional history, millennial hype<lb />about innovation notwithstanding.<lb />Few librarians can name ten fa-<lb />mous library educators other than the<lb />ones who taught them in their own li-<lb />brary education programs, or to enu-<lb />merate the contributions of Pierce But-<lb /><lb />28 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />by James V. Carmichael, Jr.<lb /><lb />ler, Jesse Shera, Charles Stone, Sarah<lb />Bogle, Virginia Lacey Jones, Frances<lb />Cheney, or Evelyn Parsons Jackson (for<lb />example) to librarianship, although<lb />their achievements were substantial.<lb />Librarians consider as remarkable the<lb />ability to recall the fact that Melvil<lb />Dewey began the first library school at<lb />Columbia University in 1887, or notice<lb />only in passing that the author of a<lb />book or article they are reading hap-<lb />pens to be written by a library educa-<lb />tion professor. Generally, however, li-<lb />brarians donTt read much library litera-<lb />ture " most donTt have time " and<lb />unfortunately, such is the quality of<lb />much library literature that it is prob-<lb />ably not to their credit to do so. The lot<lb />of the library educator, known chiefly<lb />through publication and teaching, is<lb />consequently even more ignominious<lb />than that of librarians, who are usually<lb />only remembered by posterity if their<lb />name happens to be inscribed on a<lb />building. The reasons for this<lb />ahistoricity have been reiterated many<lb />times before: librarians adopt a self-ef-<lb />facing stance with regard to their own<lb />achievements, in light of the fact that<lb />librarianship is a service profession; li-<lb />brarians and their professors tend to<lb />destroy their own records while saving<lb />those of the greater society; and most<lb />of all, librarians operate<lb />under the perception<lb />that their function is<lb />subsidiary to the inven-<lb />tion, discovery, and cre-<lb />ativity in which their<lb />public(s) engage.<lb /><lb />The intellectual en-<lb />ergy represented at the<lb />early ALA conferences<lb />may never have been<lb />equaled, and that is<lb /><lb />why, perhaps, leaders like William<lb />Frederick Poole were so bitterly op-<lb />posed to Melvil DeweyTs proposal for<lb />formal library education. There were<lb />already brilliant practitioners in the<lb />field suited to the challenge of imple-<lb />menting the omodern library idea,�<lb />Poole opined, and these persons were<lb />suited ideally to train their own assis-<lb />tants in house, as had been the stan-<lb />dard practice up until then.! The li-<lb />brary pioneers addressed all manner of<lb />library problems in the papers they pre-<lb />sented to the association in its first sev-<lb />eral decades, and the solutions that<lb />they devised have received only mod-<lb />est modification in recent times: library<lb />services to children, mobile library ser-<lb />vice, library publicity and marketing,<lb />remote storage, services to excluded<lb />minorities, the physically challenged,<lb />and the foreign-born, bibliographic<lb />standards, alternative collection orga-<lb />nizational schemes, and the need for<lb />more comprehensive (and cooperative)<lb />periodical indexing.<lb /><lb />Many prominent North Carolina<lb />library pioneers were trained or self-<lb />taught through the apprentice system,<lb />notably under Louis Round Wilson of<lb />the University of North Carolina"ar-<lb />guably the most influential librarian of<lb />the first half of the twentieth cen-<lb /><lb />In the historical sense, at least,<lb />library educators serve as obe-<lb />lisks " landmarks on the library<lb />landscape " more than they do<lb />bellwethers of things to come.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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        <p>tury " but also under Cornelia Spencer<lb />Love of Massachusetts, whom Wilson<lb />employed as order librarian through<lb />inquiry to DeweyTs school, and later ap-<lb />pointed his second-in-command. Al-<lb />though Love was Radcliffe-educated<lb />and later obtained a library certificate<lb />from DeweyTs school at Albany, she<lb />credited her greatest professional expe-<lb />rience to a self-trained librarian at Epis-<lb />copal Theological Seminary named<lb />Edith Fuller " oa homely little woman<lb />with a screw of grey hair here at the<lb />back of her neck. She wasnTt in the least<lb />good looking. [But] She had the sweet-<lb />est smile, and she was a very, very kind<lb />person.�� By the same token, Nellie<lb />Rowe Jones, librarian of Greensboro<lb />from 1920 to 1948, received her library<lb />certificate from the Library School of<lb />the Carnegie Library of Atlanta (begun<lb />by another self-trained librarian, Anne<lb />Wallace), yet she was already far ahead<lb />of her classmates when she entered the<lb />class of 1920, thanks to the daily tuto-<lb />rial ministrations of GreensboroTs self-<lb />taught librarian, Bettie D. Caldwell<lb />(1901-1920).<lb /><lb />The establishment of formal edu-<lb />cation for librarianship faced many ob-<lb />stacles, most of them from within the<lb />profession. Melvil Dewey made many<lb />enemies during his long career, not<lb />least of all because he was able to spear-<lb />head an effort that librarians had until<lb />then thought impracti-<lb />cal " the formation of.a<lb />viable and strong national<lb />library association " but<lb />also because he lost no op-<lb />portunity to claim credit<lb />for his ideas, some of<lb />which were not his own,?<lb />and some of which are<lb />touted mistakenly by<lb />ahistorical practitioners as ya<lb />recent innovations: inter-<lb />institutional and multi-<lb />type library cooperation,<lb />outreach of myriad stripes,<lb />library extension services,<lb />standardized library<lb />equipment, and the use of<lb />business methods in li- 4<lb />braries, all of which were |<lb />in the minds if not the<lb />practice of the 100 del-<lb />egates to the first meeting )<lb />of the American Library<lb />Association (ALA) in<lb />Philadelphia in 1876.<lb /><lb />Dewey had an alter-<lb />native scheme to ad hoc<lb />training, of course, and,<lb />most unusually, the plan<lb />included women " cheap<lb /><lb />v<lb /><lb />Figure 1<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />Annals of Library Technology, 1905.<lb />The elongated loops of Lila May ChapmanTs handwriting so unnerved Anne<lb />Wallace that she required Chapman to prove that she could master olibrary hand�<lb />(block printed form) by sending in samples of her work the summer before she<lb />entered the Carnegie Library of AtlantaTs oSouthern Library School� class of 1906.<lb />[Special Collections Department, Robert W. Woodruff Library, Emory University. ]<lb /><lb />labor, yes, but women all the same. Not<lb />surprisingly, the plan did not minimize<lb />his central role in conceiving the first<lb />library school, which eventually pro-<lb />vided an outlet for part of the library<lb />and office staples he marketed through<lb />ALATs supply arm, the Library Bureau.<lb />The school also provided him with a<lb />ready-made laboratory in which to<lb />vent his Tayloristic obsession with ef-<lb />ficiency. On a more positive note,<lb />DeweyTs initial curricular plan involved<lb />interdisciplinary study, and lectures<lb />from the field of library practice. He<lb />thus made clear to novices just how<lb />vast was the universe of knowledge,<lb />and how essential some systematic<lb />manner was to grappling with such a<lb />diversity of methodologies, competing<lb />theories, and literature.* Ironically,<lb />one could not hope better for todayTs<lb />graduates than that they gain a sense of<lb />humility before the breadth and depth<lb />of knowledge structures"not just the<lb />sound byte or database of the mo-<lb />ment " and that library education in-<lb />still in these students a desire to im-<lb />merse themselves in interdisciplinary<lb />connections, a wide range of academic<lb />and popular reading, and familiarity<lb />with the bibliographic apparatus that<lb />attempts to track it all.<lb /><lb />In the historical sense, at least, li-<lb />brary educators serve as obelisks "<lb />landmarks on the library landscape "<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />ep 7 Oe Fe<lb /><lb />Library Schoot<lb />Carmegie Library<lb /><lb />tuvwrxyz<lb />jae BEAYe 6 T8940<lb />Southern Library Sehoot<lb /><lb />more than they do bellwethers of<lb />things to come. The library educator<lb />distinguishes the new from the fad-<lb />dish, tests new theories and discounts<lb />redundant or false ones, defines and ar-<lb />ticulates the core professional func-<lb />tions, and incidentally, or luckily, con-<lb />tributes to the improvement of library<lb />practice and information techniques.<lb />The first formal review of library<lb />education, the famous Williamson Re-<lb />port of 1923,5 criticized existing library<lb />programs for their clutter of busy-work,<lb />which was essentially no more than<lb />glorified secretarial practice, and their<lb />lack of intellectual substance. Courses<lb />in standardized printing and handwrit-<lb />ing, known as olibrary hand,� still were<lb />required in some parts of the country<lb />because it could not automatically be<lb />assumed that typewriters would be<lb />available for use in the production of<lb />catalog cards. Anne Wallace, self-<lb />taught principal and director of the<lb />Southern Library School (after 1907,<lb />the Library School of the Carnegie Li-<lb />brary of Atlanta, and after 1925, the<lb />School of Library Science of Emory<lb />University), told one of the applicants<lb />to the class of 1906 that oour chief ob-<lb />jection to your writing lies in the loop<lb />letters ... which must be short and per-<lb />pendicular� and advised her that oIt is<lb />a quite serious matter to change the<lb />form of your handwriting, but I am<lb />sure you will be able to accom-<lb />plish the vertical hand.�® It was<lb />futile for the prospective student<lb />to protest that she had experi-<lb />ence on a private typewriting<lb />machine in her uncleTs office,<lb />since many southern communi-<lb />ties were strapped for funds, not<lb />only for library otechnology,�<lb />but for book stock<lb />and salaries as<lb />well. She therefore<lb />practiced assidu-<lb />ously all summer,<lb />and regularly sent<lb />Wallace samples<lb />of her script and<lb /><lb />Pianta,<lb /><lb />block printing (see<lb /><lb />WBeGelE F Gina aa ant figure 1). Another<lb />OeRS TU Ve wee more fortunate<lb />AbedeFghij Kimnoe classmate whose<lb /><lb />handwriting was<lb />less eccentric was<lb />hired as librarian<lb />at Winthrop Col-<lb />lege, and boasted<lb />that oPresident<lb />Johnson has been<lb />so good to give us<lb />everything we<lb />asked for lately<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 29<lb /></p>
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        <p>that we are meditating a petition fora<lb />typewriter. I am sure you ... most de-<lb />voutly hope he will grant us one.�� Ex-<lb />perience on a typewriter was desirable<lb />but not essential, although great quan-<lb />tities of typewritten letters were issued<lb />from the Atlanta school praising gradu-<lb />ates who used their creativity in intro-<lb />ducing victrola technology into the li-<lb />brary for a Halloween Virginia reel, for<lb />example, or toting in equipment for a<lb />lantern-slide show into the libraryTs lec-<lb />ture hall, or else requesting detailed<lb />technical specifications for white ink<lb /><lb />and pen nibs used in labeling books,<lb />with EsterbrookTs JudgeTs Quill 112 rec-<lb />ommended above all others. Some<lb />even contemplated adding moving pic-<lb />tures to the libraryTs standard fare for a<lb />bit of excitement.<lb /><lb />Yet between 1876 and 1925, the<lb />main progress made in the modern li-<lb />brary idea was not technological, but<lb />attitudinal. Whereas at the beginning<lb />of the period, customers often were<lb />seen as the enemies of the libraries,<lb />with dirty hands, larcenous tendencies,<lb />and careless habits which would de-<lb /><lb />plete library stocks, some librarians re-<lb />alized that patrons oare worth more<lb />than the books� and were willing oto<lb />lose several dollars worth a month<lb />rather than close the library against a<lb />single reader.�® The Atlanta School,<lb />until 1930 the only oapproved� school<lb />for White librarians in the South,<lb />therefore followed the example of<lb />DeweyTs school in demanding an ex-<lb />traordinary specific background knowl-<lb />edge of literature, foreign languages,<lb />history, and current events of its appli-<lb />cants, as well as a great deal of facility<lb /><lb />What Every Librarian Should Know, ca. 1905<lb />Entrance Examination (excluding page of French or German translation)<lb />Southern Library School, Carnegie Library of Atlanta<lb /><lb />Il. HISTORY AND GENERAL INFORMATION<lb />(1) Give in chronological order the wars in which the United States has<lb />been engaged, with causes and results of each.<lb /><lb />|, LITERATURE<lb />(1) Give a synopsis of the important periods of English literature<lb />naming the chief writers of each period. Mention a work of each<lb /><lb />writer. (2) Name the ruling houses of England, beginning with the Norman<lb /><lb />(2) Name 3 New England poets Conquest. Characterize each briefly.<lb />2 Southem poets<lb /><lb />2 American historians<lb />2 American novelists<lb /><lb />1 American essayist<lb /><lb />(3) What national policies were the following men responsible for or<lb />associated with<lb /><lb />Alexander Hamilton<lb /><lb />Thomas Jefferson<lb /><lb />Wendell Phillips<lb /><lb />James Monroe<lb /><lb />William McKinley<lb />(Or) Give the names of those who hold the following offices at the<lb />present time<lb /><lb />Mayor of New York<lb /><lb />Ambassador at Court of St. James<lb /><lb />Secretary of State of U.S<lb /><lb />President of the Senate of U. S.<lb /><lb />Speaker of the House of Representatives<lb /><lb />(3) Name the best English translation of the following:<lb />Homer's Iliad<lb />DanteTs Divine Comedy<lb />Goethe's Faust<lb /><lb />(4) Mention the names of<lb />2 Greek dramatists<lb />2 Roman historians<lb />1 French essayist<lb />2 modern Spanish novelists<lb />2 German philosophers<lb />1 English historian<lb />(Or) Name a representative work on one of the following subjects,<lb />giving the author<lb />Biology<lb />Pedagogy<lb />Sociology<lb />Eastem situation<lb />French revolution<lb /><lb />(4) What is meant by the Renaissance? What period did it embrace?<lb />Give some of the great names connected with it, and its effect upon the<lb /><lb />history of Europe.<lb /><lb />(5) What was the<lb /><lb />Magna Carta<lb /><lb />Coup dTEtat<lb /><lb />Feudal system (Answer 2)<lb /><lb />Gunpowder plot<lb />(5) State briefly what is suggested to your mind by the following Crusades<lb />Realism in literature<lb />Transcendentalism<lb />Meistersingers<lb />Pre-Raphaelitism<lb /><lb />Bayreuth<lb /><lb />(6) When and under what circumstances did England and Scotland unite<lb />under one govemment?<lb /><lb />(7) Name 2 scientific discoverers, with their contributions to science<lb />2 great styles of architecture, with a building illustrating each<lb />2 famous sculptors, with nationality, and one important work<lb />2 philosophers, with system with which they are identified<lb />(Or) Name a Portugese navigator<lb />Swedish king<lb />Spanish king<lb />Japanese general<lb />French philosopher<lb />Norwegian explorer<lb /><lb />(6) What do you consider five important names in modern literature?<lb /><lb />(7) Who wrote the following? Answer ten.<lb />Hypatia<lb />Rasselas<lb />Silas Lapham<lb />Portrait of a Lady<lb />Stones of Venice<lb />Consuelo<lb />Descent of Man<lb />Blue Flower<lb />Lady RoseTs Daughter<lb />Tom Sawyer<lb />American Commonwealth<lb />Vicar of Wakefield<lb />Confessions of an English Opium Eater<lb /><lb />English educator<lb />Italian scientist<lb />Dutch painter<lb />Scotch reformer<lb /><lb />(8) Discuss any one of the following subjects<lb />. College settlements<lb />Trades unions<lb />Government ownership<lb /><lb />30 " Spring 1998 North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027362_0033" />
        <p>with the English language (see figure<lb />2). The final exam, on a range of sub-<lb />jects ranging from oEstablishing a Pub-<lb />lic Library� to oAdministration of the<lb />Library,� tested the written communi-<lb />cation skills of the student as much as<lb />it did the points of content in any li-<lb />brary plan.<lb /><lb />Not surprisingly, then, some li-<lb />brary educators developed a reputation<lb />for picayune nit-picking in matters of<lb />grammar, usage and syntax, a reputa-<lb />tion which has not entirely disap-<lb />peared as of this writing for educators<lb />who read carefully what graduate stu-<lb />dents write. Nietzsche, the great proto-<lb />atheist of modern philosophy, argued<lb />that ounfortunately� civilization could<lb />not dispose of God so long as it had<lb />grammarians, and certainly, the lin-<lb />guistic piety of the early library educa-<lb />tors could not be questioned. In 1903,<lb />for example, Mrs. Salome Cutler<lb />Fairchild, who by then had assumed<lb />the role of Principal in DeweyTs School,<lb />wrote to one of AlbanyTs graduates,<lb />Edna Bullock, then serving as Secretary<lb />of the Nebraska Library Commission,<lb />ostensibly to compliment her upon her<lb />first biennial report and oState Fair cir-<lb />cular,� but in reality to point out a<lb />otiny blemish� in the report resulting<lb />from the use of owill� instead of oshall�<lb />in the last line. Bullock lost no time in<lb />replying to Fairchild that<lb /><lb />I am almost as much of an<lb />iconoclast about language as<lb />Mr. Dewey is about spelling. I<lb />believe that usage is what<lb />makes and unmakes language,<lb />and I believe the greater<lb />proportion of educated people<lb />use these two words inter-<lb />changeably to a certain extent.<lb />If they do, then I donTt care<lb />what the grammars and the<lb />dictionaries say. They are made<lb />by scholastics, and I believe the<lb />general average makes lan-<lb />guage, history and everything<lb />else. I do not, however, use the<lb />two words interchangeably,<lb />and in the connection you<lb />mention, I used the word that<lb />expressed my meaning.T<lb /><lb />Mrs. Fairchild, never one to yield a<lb />point lightly, reminded Bullock by re-<lb />turn post that<lb /><lb />[... ] the librarian would better<lb />stick to his own task and<lb />conform in conventional<lb />matters whether he believes in<lb />it or not, for otherwise he gets<lb />the reputation of a crank in<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />such things and loses part of<lb />his influence in his own field.<lb />Is not this position a sound<lb />and sensible one?!°<lb /><lb />One has the impression that Miss Bul-<lb />lock and Mts. Fairchild would have<lb />greatly enjoyed the convenience of the<lb />e-mail environment, where their barely<lb />contained expressions of heat could<lb />have found suitable form in oflames.�<lb /><lb />Some technological innovations<lb />became embartrassments once they were<lb />fixed as library staples " consider the<lb />microcard, for example " and the same<lb />principle applied to sacrosanct library<lb />practice. What librarians remember,<lb />therefore, about Fremont RiderTs fa-<lb />mous work on managing growth in li-<lb />braries, The Scholar and the Future of the<lb />Research Library, is not the particular<lb />technological solution he proposed<lb />(copy all books on microcard, attach the<lb />copy to the back of the catalog card,<lb />and thus eliminate the need for the<lb />physical book), nor the rate of growth<lb />he predicted (he underestimated) but<lb />that his prescient grasp of the particu-<lb />lar social context of knowledge in 1944<lb />presaged the postwar growth in scien-<lb />tific knowledge and the current oinfor-<lb />mation explosion� hysteria.<lb /><lb />Former ALA President Marilyn<lb />Miller was famous among students at<lb />the University of North Carolina at<lb />Greensboro for her hilarious satire of<lb />the accessioning process utilized at one<lb />Kansas field site, and the minutiae<lb />taught to her in library school of ohow<lb />to open a new book properly.� Such a<lb />level of mundane detail has never been<lb />unimportant to librarians whose book<lb />stock is scarce and aged, who do not<lb />have the autonomy and political clout<lb />in their jobs to gain increased appro-<lb />priations, who rarely receive additional<lb />training in new technology, or who are<lb />never permitted to attend national pro-<lb />fessional meetings. Such individuals<lb />have to learn book-repair on the job, as<lb />it is rarely taught in library school, they<lb />know how to fall back on a Brodart<lb />charging machine if the electronic cir-<lb />culation system crashes, and many will<lb />not give up a hard-copy shelflist no<lb />matter how many promises the cata-<lb />loging software vendor tenders to<lb />them. One of the most persistent prob-<lb />lems faced by academic libraries,<lb />misshelved and lost books, may ulti-<lb />mately be simplified by electronic in-<lb />ventory systems, but they will be effec-<lb />tive only part of the time (right after an<lb />inventory is made), and only if a suffi-<lb />cient number of reliable student<lb />shelvers can be found who understand<lb /><lb />the torturous intricacies of classifica-<lb />tion and cuttering.<lb /><lb />How has technology affected edu-<lb />cation, really? At school media centers<lb />and community college and university<lb />reference desks everywhere, one hears<lb />that the demand for technology is up,<lb />not necessarily because so much more<lb />information is available, but because<lb />teachers and professors are requiring<lb />students to bring in printouts of their<lb />searches as proof of library use. It is fu-<lb />tile to describe to these students or<lb />their teachers the data jungle that ex-<lb />ists on the World Wide Web, or suggest<lb />a monographic substitute " the<lb />myriad of ohits� on almost any topic<lb />reeks of power and sex appeal " never<lb />mind the inefficiencies of data over-<lb />load, or lack of intellectual authority.<lb />Information itself " however one de-<lb />fines that term " has assumed an os-<lb />tensible primacy it never possessed in<lb />the Gilded Age due primarily to the<lb />growth of knowledge industries, tele-<lb />communications, and technological<lb />breakthroughs barely conceivable only<lb />15 years ago. Yet the revolution in in-<lb />formation technology has not obliter-<lb />ated the human component of library<lb />work: a 1995 survey of employers of<lb />library education graduates of the<lb />University of North Carolina at<lb />GreensboroTs Department of Library<lb />and Information studies found that li-<lb />brarians are generally satisfied with the<lb />level of technological competence of<lb />graduates, but are still somewhat con-<lb />cerned about their communication and<lb />other interpersonal skills.<lb /><lb />Changes in library education in<lb />the past 125 years are largely cosmetic,<lb />and reflect to a greater or lesser extent<lb />changes in the profession, in educa-<lb />tion, and in society. The establishment<lb />of an accreditation process in 1925 in<lb />effect dealt the death blow to in-house<lb />training programs as an acceptable cre-<lb />dential for emerging professionals. Li-<lb />brary programs over the next several<lb />decades became less self-governing and<lb />more like established disciplinary pro-<lb />grams, subject to university executive<lb />fiat and accountability pressures.<lb />When the fifth-year BachelorTs degree<lb />replaced the library certificate in 1925,<lb />and when the MasterTs degree replaced<lb />the fifth-year BachelorTs degree as the<lb />terminal professional credential in<lb />1948, many experienced librarians<lb />found themselves unable to advance<lb />further or to re-enter the field until<lb />they refreshed their professional union<lb />card.<lb /><lb />Library education and scholarship<lb />involve constants as well as change. It<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 31<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027362_0034" />
        <p>is not the job of the li-<lb />brary educator to incul-<lb />cate the novice in a litany<lb />of technological trivia<lb />except insofar as that ter-<lb />minology and technique<lb />informs society as a<lb />whole, and even then,<lb />technology does not pro-<lb />vide the end of library<lb />education, but the means<lb />to fulfill the basic library<lb />functions in a better way.<lb />These functions were de-<lb />fined by former ALA<lb />President Josephine<lb />Rathbone in 1934 as col-<lb />lecting, organizing, and<lb />making available obooks<lb />or other printed material<lb />for the use and benefit of<lb />a given constituency.�!!<lb />Today librarians preserve<lb />information in a variety<lb />of media besides print<lb />(and a great deal besides<lb />that over-used word oin-<lb />formation,� which is of-<lb />ten confused with<lb />oknowledge�), but their<lb />functions remain basically unchanged.<lb />The graduate of 1910 possessed the<lb />ability to collect, organize, and dis-<lb />seminate in no lesser degree than the<lb />graduate of 1950, or hopefully, 1998,<lb />with only the social context of infor-<lb />mation delivery changed " that tem-<lb />poral emphasis that library educators<lb />supply. For this reason, classic library<lb />literature rarely becomes dated. Prob-<lb />ably no more basic or profound percep-<lb />tion of the librarianTs function has ever<lb />been formulated, for example, than<lb />that provided by Pierce Butler in his An<lb />Introduction to Library Science (1933, first<lb />reprinted in 1961), nor of library edu-<lb />cation than Jesse H. SheraTs The Foun-<lb />dations of Education for Librarianship<lb />(1972). Lester E. AsheimTs 1954 state-<lb />ment on censorship!* has never been<lb />surpassed. Historians of library educa-<lb />tion reiterate time and again how little<lb />the relationship has changed between<lb />library education and the library pro-<lb />fession, whatever the particulars of cur-<lb />ricular reform, the nature of mercurial<lb /><lb />A Techie Haunt, c. 1912; Student Break Room, Carnegie Library of Atlanta.<lb />Here aspiring novices could immerse themselves in copies of Dewey<lb />Decimal Classification (in bookshelves on left), or ponder the profundities<lb />of ChamberTs Book of Days, atlases, encyclopedias, or other reference<lb />works while sipping tea. New students were also required to attend a<lb />Saturday seminar to review news and current events " training for the<lb />reference mind set. [Special Collections, Atlanta-Fulton Public Library].<lb /><lb />have survived  bril-<lb />liantly.'3<lb /><lb />The same principle<lb />applies in library prac-<lb />tice, where job ads seem<lb />to demand _ change<lb />agents, when in reality<lb />factotums are desired.<lb />Earlier in ShoresTs career,<lb />his lack of guile and fear<lb />in the face of the profes-<lb />sional power structure<lb />earned him a reputation<lb />as a professional misfit.<lb />When the Brooklyn-<lb />born graduate _"_" off<lb />ColumbiaTs School of Li-<lb />brary Service became li-<lb />brarian at Fisk University<lb />in 1930, he organized a<lb />Southern Negro Library<lb />Conference on his own<lb />initiative, and ruffled<lb />feathers in the ranks of<lb />southern White library<lb />establishment and the<lb />ALA. Tommie Dora<lb />Barker (Atlanta), Louis<lb />Round Wilson (Univer-<lb /><lb />credentials, or the vagaries of institu-<lb />tional funding and politics.<lb />Interestingly, those who in fact try<lb />something innovative in library educa-<lb />tion are often discounted by their<lb />peers, and ignored by the profession.<lb />Certainly, Louis Shores of the Univer-<lb />sity of Florida " godfather of the oli-<lb />brary college� idea based on Justin<lb />WinsorTs much earlier maxim that the<lb />library should be othe heart of the uni-<lb />versity� " was provocative because of<lb />ShoresTs overweening ego. His attempts<lb />to make library instruction central to<lb />the education of every University of<lb />Florida undergraduate were exemplary<lb />and valorous, if somewhat misguided.<lb />Florida did in fact require credit courses<lb />in library instruction for several years<lb />during the 1950s, and although the<lb />sheer size of the university and the in-<lb />evitable campus bureaucracy eventu-<lb />ally toppled ShoresTs plan, in a different<lb />higher education environment, at<lb />Earlham College, ShoreTs basic ideas,<lb />realized and refined by Evan Ira Farber,<lb /><lb />... technology does not provide the end of library<lb />education, but the means to fulfill the basic library<lb /><lb />functions in a better way.<lb /><lb />32 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />sity of North Carolina)<lb />and Mary Utopia Rothrock (Knoxville)<lb />conferred with ALA before they agreed<lb />to speak at the conference, not so<lb />much because they were racist " in<lb />fact, they were considered somewhat<lb />progressive in their time " but because<lb />Shores was apparently unaware of the<lb />covert vested interests of ALA in south-<lb />ern librarianship. In 1925, Wilson had<lb />selected the site for a Black library<lb />school (Hampton Institute, Hampton,<lb />Virginia) under the aegis of the ALA<lb />and the Carnegie Corporation. The<lb />schoolTs head from 1925 to 1939 was<lb />Florence Rising Curtis, a Quaker from<lb />upstate New York who was a close per-<lb />sonal friend of Sarah Bogle, Secretary of<lb />the Board of Education for<lb />Librarianship. CurtisTs senator father,<lb />General Nathaniel Curtis, had been<lb />commemorated by a huge bronze<lb />statue in Ogdensburg, New York, for<lb />his bravery in capturing Fort Fisher,<lb />North Carolina (the last Confederate<lb />port to fall), as well as for his progres-<lb />sive views on abolition and the abol-<lb />ishment of capital punishment. Curtis<lb />was a osafe� candidate for the Director-<lb />ship, since it would have been impoli-<lb />tic to promote a southern White direc-<lb />tor, and unprecedented to select an<lb />African American candidate. ALATs<lb />stance on library education for minori-<lb />ties in 1925 was in fact accomodationist<lb />if not retrogressive, because there were<lb />very few public libraries in the South<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />where people of color could be em-<lb />ployed as librarians. Shores ignored the<lb />regulatory power of the ALA and the<lb />southern White library establishment<lb />in addressing the orace question� in<lb />southern librarianship, but it was his<lb />unbridled initiative " innovative in<lb />itself in the library profession at that<lb />time " more than the conference it-<lb />self, that rankled the sensibilities of<lb />ALATs Executive Director and his south-<lb />ern power-brokers.!4<lb /><lb />Not all innovative ideas are con-<lb />troversial in library education, and<lb />most of them are rarely recognized for<lb />being innovations when they are intro-<lb />duced. Charles H. Stone, for example,<lb />had been a pioneering member of the<lb />committee of the<lb />Southern Associa-<lb />tion of Standards for<lb />Colleges that first<lb />proposed standards<lb />for high school li-<lb />braries, a move<lb />which in 1930 must<lb />have seemed fool-<lb />hardy, given the<lb />state of the southern<lb />economy and the<lb />dilapidated state of<lb />many secondary<lb />schools, where such<lb />schools even ex-<lb />isted. Stone de-<lb />signed a curriculum<lb />for school librarians<lb />at Peabody Institute<lb />in 1919, although<lb />the ALA did not ac-<lb />credit the Nashville<lb />program until 1931.<lb />By that time, Stone<lb />had become director<lb />of the library at the<lb />North Carolina Col-<lb />lege for Women in<lb /><lb />brarians"she in effect precluded for<lb />years accredited library education for<lb />working women in the southern<lb />school library field. Meanwhile, Stone<lb />had also been misled by Wilson and<lb />UNC's President Frank Porter Graham<lb />into believing that he would be the<lb />new head of the Chapel Hill program,<lb />while Wilson moved on to the Univer-<lb />sity of Chicago as Director of the<lb />Graduate Library School. Discouraged,<lb />Stone accepted a position as Director of<lb />the Library at the College of William<lb />and Mary in 1935, and inaugurated<lb />still another library education program<lb />aimed at school librarians, but the in-<lb />terference of former library director<lb />Earl G. Swem in library and school af-<lb /><lb />Distance Education Delivery in the Pre-Ergonomics Era. Lecture Hall, Carnegie<lb />Library of Atlanta, c. 1912<lb />Students heard about the very latest library developments from national authorities<lb />Edna Lyman (childrenTs literature), Lutie Stearns (state library commissions and<lb /><lb />library extension), Annie Carroll Moore (storytelling), Arthur Bostwick (professional ity<lb /><lb />philopsophy), and Pratt InstituteTs Mary Wright Plummer, among other visiting<lb />national library dignitaries. There is no evidence that the speakers were ever<lb />reimbursed for their travel expenses.<lb /><lb />[Special Collections, Atlanta-Fulton Public Library].<lb /><lb />Greensboro, where<lb /><lb />he had developed a program for school<lb />librarians "the first ALA-accredited<lb />program of any kind in North Caro-<lb />lina. Politics snared Stone, however,<lb />when the North Carolina legislature<lb />consolidated library education at<lb />Chapel Hill in 1933 under the direction<lb />of the schoolTs first female director, and<lb />only the third female Ph.D. in<lb />Librarianship, Dr. Susan Grey Akers.<lb />Akers was a stickler for university resi-<lb />dency requirements and no doubt was<lb />zealous in her desire to enhance the<lb />educational experience for her stu-<lb />dents, but when she deigned to refuse<lb />credit for successive summers of<lb />work"a necessary evil for working<lb />school employees, including school li-<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />fairs eventually drove Stone to resign in<lb />1942, and he finished his career quietly<lb />as librarian of Mercer University (1942-<lb />1960).!5 Meanwhile, AkersTs contribu-<lb />tion to education for librarianship, a<lb />cataloging textbook, became standard<lb />in the cataloging field, went through<lb />nine editions, and was translated into<lb />many foreign languages.<lb /><lb />In personnel matters, library edu-<lb />cation often operates on the passive<lb />principles of least resistance and ratio-<lb />nalization " the truly lazy student will<lb />eventually flunk out, the unproductive<lb />assistant professor will fail to get ten-<lb />ure " but such was not always the<lb />case. Consider admissions require-<lb />ments, for example. Library educators<lb /><lb />have always been hard-pressed to turn<lb />away the bright, qualified, but socially<lb />maladroit or emotionally disturbed stu-<lb />dent, for both financial and compas-<lb />sionate reasons. Reading library records<lb />of the turn-of-the-century era, when<lb />studentsT voluble temperaments, physi-<lb />cal defects, lack of physical attractive-<lb />ness, what used to be called obreed-<lb />ing,� or the fundamentals (never mind<lb />the credentials) of a liberal arts educa-<lb />tion were dissected, analyzed, and dis-<lb />cussed with an unthinkable degree of<lb />frank avidity in letters of recommenda-<lb />tion and office memoranda, one canTt<lb />help but be impressed with how tact-<lb />fully such problem students were dis-<lb />patched (usually they were recom-<lb />mended for a job ina<lb />small and geographi-<lb />cally-remote com-<lb />munity). InstructorsT<lb />perceptions often<lb />were uncannily accu-<lb />rate in the light of<lb />later events. How<lb />similar and yet differ-<lb />ent their situation<lb />was to that of the<lb />present-day library<lb />professor, whose ef-<lb />fectiveness in dealing<lb />with the problem<lb />student is  con-<lb />strained by federal<lb />law, modern inter-<lb />pretations of the cli-<lb />ent confidentiality<lb />clause on campus,<lb />and an ill-conceived<lb />notion that personal-<lb />characteristics<lb />and competency in<lb />interpersonal ex-<lb />changes are second-<lb />ary to technological<lb />literacy in the em-<lb />ployment pool.<lb /><lb />As for the meaning of what passes<lb />for accreditation of library education<lb />programs in the current university en-<lb />vironment, library educators rarely<lb />have considered ALA accreditation sat-<lb />isfactory, and even among members of<lb />the Association of Education for Li-<lb />brary and Information Science (ALISE),<lb />there is confusion and dissent about its<lb />aims and means to this day. During a<lb />recent accreditation visit to the Univer-<lb />sity of North Carolina at Greensboro<lb />library education program, for ex-<lb />ample, the 1982 Committee on Ac-<lb />creditation (COA) standards apparently<lb />were utilized for evaluation, although<lb />the more loosely written, output-based<lb />1992 COA Standards had already taken<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 3%<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027362_0036" />
        <p>effect. Moreover, accredited or not, li-<lb />brary education is enrollment-driven.<lb />The North Carolina university system<lb />funds university programs based on<lb />FTE hours, and the curricular content<lb />of any given library education program<lb />usually is limited only by what the<lb />market will bear, and what will appeal<lb />to prospective students and employers.<lb /><lb />Many doctoral programs in library<lb />education " in other words, those ca-<lb />tering to a national as opposed to a re-<lb />gional market " have made sweeping<lb />changes in their MasterTs curricula in<lb />recent years, for example, thus elimi-<lb />nating technical services entirely from<lb />the core courses required at the Univer-<lb />sity of Pittsburgh, or (also at Pitts-<lb />burgh) returning to the idea of corre-<lb />spondence courses (an idea the Board<lb />of Education for Librarianship nixed<lb />early in its history), offering credit<lb />courses in World Wide Web site con-<lb />struction at still others (never mind<lb />that the Internet skills of high school<lb />graduates frequently equal and will in-<lb />evitably surpass that of anyone born<lb />before about 1980). The educational<lb />hoopla over distance education, of<lb />which one reads a great deal in library<lb />education literature, has gained ascen-<lb />dancy due to the high cost of graduate<lb />education, the fact that fewer students<lb />than ever can afford to be full-time<lb />graduate students, and the subsequent<lb />likelihood that they will attend the li-<lb />brary education program closest to<lb />their home; yet in North Carolina, dis-<lb />tance education represents a techno-<lb />logical shibboleth more than it does an<lb />educational innovation, given the fact<lb />that the North Carolina university sys-<lb />tem still does not award FTE credit to<lb />programs for distance education stu-<lb />dents. Moreover, the classrooms at the<lb />University of North Carolina at Greens-<lb />boro still house televisions mounted at<lb />ceiling level in the School of Educa-<lb />tion, left over from a 1983 renovation<lb />during a previous round of enthusiasm<lb />for distance education " then called<lb />omultimedia� or otelevised learn-<lb />ing� " an idea that came with money<lb />for machines, but not for training, ad-<lb />ditional personnel, or instructional<lb />design. How many school media spe-<lb />cialists, one wonders, were similarly<lb />saddled with clunky technological wiz-<lb />ardry in the last round of legislative lar-<lb />gesse, in school media centers that did<lb />not even possess a telephone line?<lb /><lb />At the University of North Caro-<lb />lina at Greensboro, a MasterTs program<lb />has risen phoenix-like from the ashes<lb />of Charles StoneTs dream, due mainly<lb />to the leadership of the late Mary<lb /><lb />74 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />Frances Kennon Johnson (1962-79),<lb />whose efforts on behalf of standards for<lb />school libraries in the Great Society Era<lb />were of national importance; Dr. Kieth<lb />Wright (1980-86, 1996-), who brought<lb />the program up to technological snuff<lb />in the first round of library automation<lb />and formed vital partnerships with li-<lb />braries of every type; Cora Paul Bomar<lb />(1986-87), who succeeded in guiding<lb />the program through its first successful<lb />accreditation after the program was re-<lb />vived; and Dr. Marilyn Miller (1987-<lb />95), whose ALA Presidency and library<lb />advocacy lent a national visibility to<lb />the program it might otherwise have<lb />never possessed. The program became<lb />the first to receive the approval of the<lb />universityTs general administration to<lb />offer an entire graduate degree via sat-<lb />ellite. The distance education initiative<lb />was taken by Miller during a period<lb />when library education was still smart-<lb />ing from the last round of program<lb />closings in the 1980s (Case Western<lb />Reserve, Emory University, Peabody<lb />School of Education, Columbia Univer-<lb /><lb />An Innovator in Library Education:<lb />Charles H. Stone (1980-1965), a native<lb />of Athens, Georgia and a graduate of the<lb />University of Illinois Library School<lb />(1914), started the first southern library<lb />education program for school librarians<lb />at Peabody Institute (1919), and<lb />developed similar ALA-accredited<lb />programs at the North Carolina College<lb />for Women (1927-33), and The College<lb />of William and Mary (1935-43). Both of<lb />the latter programs fell afoul of library<lb />and university politics within a decade,<lb />and Peabody closed in 1988.<lb />[University Archives, Walter Clinton<lb />Jackson Library, University of North<lb />Carolina at Greensboro].<lb /><lb />sity, Northern Illinois University, and<lb />Brigham Young University). Most of<lb />these programs, it is true, were located<lb />in private institutions, and no doubt<lb />administrative expediency, perceptions<lb />of social and economic utility, and<lb />ideas about the future role of technol-<lb />ogy in society predicated these closings<lb />as much as did the lack of faculty re-<lb />search productivity, program cost per<lb />student, or spiraling inflation " the<lb />usual scapegoats. In particular, the de-<lb />mise of the Division of Library and In-<lb />formation Science at Emory University,<lb />and Columbia UniversityTs School of<lb />Library Service, both in 1988, seemed<lb />to spell an end to the era of DeweyTs vi-<lb />sion of a obook for every reader� and of<lb />Anne WallaceTs ambition to transform<lb />the benighted southern cultural land-<lb />scape by means of oa school for south-<lb />ern conditions.� Yet at least theoreti-<lb />cally the closings were long overdue.<lb />Tommie Dora Barker of Atlanta and Sa-<lb />rah Bogle of ALATs Board of Education<lb />had advised ALA in 1930 that most pri-<lb />vate library education programs (and<lb />certainly poorly-prepared owildcat�<lb />programs designed to capture the<lb />booming school library market) should<lb />be continued only if they met mini-<lb />mum standards for staff and equip-<lb />ment, and then only after the need for<lb />one strong state-supported library edu-<lb />cation program had been met in each<lb />southern state.'¢<lb /><lb />What constitutes innovation in li-<lb />brary education as the millennium ap-<lb />proaches? (1) a great deal more than<lb />awe and reverence for computers and<lb />the Internet, which in themselves ad-<lb />dress only a fractional part of the<lb />libraryTs function, accessing informa-<lb />tion; (2) innovation comprises a<lb />rearticulation of the libraryTs essential<lb />role in society, respect for a great deal<lb />more in life than the bottom line of the<lb />budget, or obeisance to the conven-<lb />tions of Byzantine terminology meant<lb />to impress administrators by its obscu-<lb />rity; and (3) in an era of huge wealth<lb />generated by the information industry,<lb />and the subsequent downsizing of<lb />other industries, librarians will think of<lb />children and graduate students as more<lb />than potential profit centers for corpo-<lb />rate technology entrepreneurs. True, it<lb />is essential that librarians master tech-<lb />nology and learn to filter the informa-<lb />tion glut, but more importantly, they<lb />need to filter the filters (information<lb />producers), and exercise savvy about<lb />the economics of information. What<lb />has been lost to outsourcing, for ex-<lb />ample? Wayne Wiegand, arguably one<lb />of the most influential library educa-<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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        <p>tors of the present era, suggests that li-<lb />brarians, as the historical gatekeepers<lb />of cultural authority in their roles as<lb />selectors, should be vigilant about how<lb />that responsibility has shifted, and<lb />who now holds that authority.!7 Dur-<lb />ing the first part of the century, librar-<lb />ians and educators " thanks largely to<lb />fast friends among the industrial ty-<lb />coon set, including Andrew Carnegie,<lb />John D. Rockefeller, Julius Rosenwald,<lb />and others " shared an unparalleled<lb />degree of control over what was con-<lb />sidered ogood� culture and ogood�<lb />reading, but cultural relativism and<lb />social revolution in the postmodernist<lb />era spelled an end to this monopoly.<lb />Library education, and higher educa-<lb />tion generally, now experience pres-<lb />sures to adjust both course content and<lb />pedagogic style to accommodate com-<lb />puter technology and cyberspace. Fu-<lb />turists have been equally divided in<lb />interpreting this trend as either an end<lb />of librarian/professor hegemony and<lb />the rise of the Internet State, or simply<lb />unparalleled economic opportunism<lb />on the part of university administrators<lb />and the private sector, because future<lb />students represent a multimillion dol-<lb />lar captive audience for new products,<lb />services, and courseware.!® The last ob-<lb />servation seems particularly poi-<lb />gnant in light of remedial programs<lb />like Accelerated Reader, one part of<lb />which consists of multiple-choice com-<lb />puterized tests on content. What this<lb />program seems to say is that it is not<lb />important that children read for<lb />readingTs sake, but so that they can pass<lb />a test (or, as another corporate tie-in to<lb />public libraries would have it, so they<lb />can win McDonaldTs certificates based<lb />on the number of summer reading<lb />titles they have perused). Two book<lb />representatives recently reported to a<lb />UNCG faculty member that any pub-<lb />lisher can have a title added to the Ac-<lb />celerated Reader program simply by<lb />paying a three hundred dollar fee.<lb />What weight does this program add to,<lb />or subtract from, the traditional profes-<lb />sional responsibility of book selection?<lb />The answer to that question is probably<lb />the key to the uniqueness of the librar-<lb />ian role in information production,<lb />organization, and dissemination.<lb /><lb />A review of library education his-<lb />tory suggests that innovation has less<lb />to do with either technology, the<lb />makeover of curricula to fit the linguis-<lb />tic fad of the moment, or the political<lb />positioning of the professional school<lb />within the university than it does with<lb />maintaining a sense of intellectual and<lb />emotional renewal among novices,<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />ee ee z= i<lb /><lb />practitioners, and alumni, keeping at-<lb />titudes open to opportunities for ser-<lb />vice, maintaining an ethical core, com-<lb />municating clearly, and above all, as-<lb />suming public service duties with ease,<lb />and treating patrons with respect. If li-<lb />brary educators fail to instill in gradu-<lb />ates the sense that they are not imper-<lb />sonal conduits for a deluge of pentium-<lb />processed bits and bytes, they will es-<lb />sentially be duplicating the work of<lb />computer science departments whose<lb />mission is primarily technological<lb />rather than interpersonal, civic, or ethi-<lb />cal. More than ever, library education<lb />programs are challenged to foster curi-<lb />osity about current events, reward<lb />depth as well as breadth of scholarship,<lb />underscore the importance of method-<lb />ology and research techniques in the<lb />literatures of different disciplines, and<lb />develop perceptions of literary and re-<lb />search quality, permanent versus<lb />ephemeral value, and the role of social,<lb />political, and economic agendas on in-<lb />formation production. While some of<lb />these tasks may seem inevitably reme-<lb />dial as the importance of literary cul-<lb />ture supposedly diminishes, others are<lb />associated with the ongoing aims of<lb />liberal education in the classical<lb />sense " an education which is lifelong,<lb />continuing, and not associated with<lb />profit margins per se. Whatever skills<lb />they acquire, librarians must possess<lb />this fundamental vision so that they<lb />can exercise informed judgement "<lb />discriminating intelligence, if you will,<lb />or to use the hackneyed library meta-<lb />phor, filtering capabilities " in extend-<lb />ing library service to future publics.<lb /><lb />References<lb /><lb />1 William L. Williamson, William<lb />Frederick Poole and the Modern Library<lb />Movement (New York: Columbia Uni-<lb />versity Press, 1963), 163.<lb /><lb />2 Lee Kessler, Interview With Cornelia<lb />Spencer Love, January 26, 1975, High<lb />Point, North Carolina, p. 14. Tran-<lb />scribed for the Southern Oral History<lb />Program by Joe Jaros, University of<lb />North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Iam in-<lb />debted to Patrick Valentine for a copy<lb />of portions of this transcript.<lb /><lb />3 Wayne A. Wiegand, Irrepressible Re-<lb />former: Melvil Dewey (New York: Forest<lb />Press, 1997).<lb /><lb />4 Francis L. Miksa, oThe Columbia<lb />School of Library Economy, 1887-<lb />1888,� Libraries &amp; Culture 23 (Summer<lb />1988): 249-80.<lb /><lb />5 Charles C. Williamson, Training for<lb />Library Service:A Report Prepared for the<lb />Carnegie Corporation of New York, New<lb />York: [The Corporation], 1923.<lb /><lb />6 Anne Wallace to Lila May<lb />Chapman, June 20, 1905; July 7, 1905,<lb />Chapman File, Archives of the Library<lb />School of the Carnegie Library of At-<lb />lanta, Special Collections, Robert W.<lb />Woodruff Library, Emory University,<lb />Atlanta, Georgia.<lb /><lb />7 Mary Martin to Anne Wallace, May<lb />1, 1907, Martin File, Archives of the Li-<lb />brary School of the Carnegie Library of<lb />Atlanta, Special Collections, Robert W.<lb />Woodruff Library, Emory University,<lb />Atlanta, Georgia.<lb /><lb />8 Minnie Murrill to Delia Foreacre<lb />Sneed, March 18, 1913, Murrill File, Ar-<lb />chives of the Library School of The<lb />Carnegie Library of Atlanta, Special Col-<lb />lections, Robert W. Woodruff Library,<lb />Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia.<lb /><lb />° Edna D. Bullock to Mrs. S. C.<lb />Fairchild, January 20, 1903, Nebraska<lb />State Library Commission Archives,<lb />Nebraska Historical Society, Lincoln,<lb />Nebraska.<lb /><lb />10 Mrs. Salome C. Fairchild to Edna D.<lb />Bullock, January 31, 1903, Nebraska<lb />State Library Commission Archives,<lb />Nebraska Historical Society, Lincoln,<lb />Nebraska.<lb /><lb />11 Josephine A. Rathbone, oLibrary<lb />Work for Women,�in Careers for<lb />Women: New Ideas, New Methods, New<lb />Opportunities"to Fit a New World, ed.<lb />Catherine Filene, 2d ed. (Boston:<lb />Houghton and Mifflin, 1934), 389.<lb /><lb />12 Lester E. Asheim, oThe LibrarianTs<lb />Responsibility: Not Censorship, But Se-<lb />lection,� in Freedom of Book Selection,<lb />ed. Frederick Mosher (Chicago: ALA,<lb />1954), 90-99.<lb /><lb />13 Lee Shiflett, Louis Shores: Defining<lb />Educational Librarianship (Lanham,<lb />Md.: Scarecrow Press, 1996), esp. 99-<lb />126.<lb /><lb />14 James V. Carmichael, Jr., oTommie<lb />Dora Barker and Southern Librarian-<lb />ship,� Ph.D. diss., University of North<lb />Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1988, 260-82,<lb />esp. 267-70.<lb /><lb />1S Charles Stone file, Graduate<lb />Records, Archives of the University of<lb />Illinois Library School, University of II-<lb />linois at Urbana-Champaign.<lb /><lb />16 Sarah C. N. Bogle, A Study of the Li-<lb />brary School Situation in the Southern<lb />States (Chicago: American Library Asso-<lb />ciation, 1931).<lb /><lb />17 Wayne A. Wiegand, oThe Politics of<lb />Cultural Authority,� American Libraries<lb />29 (January 1998): 80-82.<lb /><lb />18 David F. Noble, oDigital Diploma<lb />Mills: The Automation of Higher Edu-<lb />cation,� October 1997, accessed De-<lb />cember 5, 1997 through H-Editor, origi-<lb />nally published on marxism-<lb />international@lists. village. virginia.edu<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 35<lb /></p>
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        <p>Newfangled &amp; Highfalutin:<lb /><lb />North Carolina Library Innovations Over the Decades<lb /><lb />If a brief survey of NCLA publications can give any indication at all, then 20th century North Carolina<lb />library innovations have been driven by two major concerns: 1) a desire to reach underserved populations,<lb />and 2) the search for tools to deliver the raw materials of education, entertainment, and information faster,<lb />more efficiently, and in an increasing number of media formats. Innovation has been horse-drawn wagons<lb />carrying books into the coves of Appalachia, storytellers visiting polio wards, and that (now) old stand-by,<lb />the bookmobile. It has been card catalogs, teletypewriters, filmstrip projectors, and laminating machines.<lb />The Internet and all that goes with it may very well be just the most recent variation on our old familiar<lb /><lb />two-verse tune.<lb />Here are a few North Carolina library innovations from decades past.<lb /><lb />" Plummer Alston Jones, Jr. and Thomas Kevin B. Cherry, Guest Editors<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />In 1922 some bookmobiles<lb />needed hay.<lb /><lb />[NC Library Bulletin (Dec. 1922):<lb />82 insert. ]<lb /><lb />* Photos included in this essay are<lb />courtesy North Carolina<lb />Collection, University of North<lb />Carolina Library at Chapel Hill.<lb /><lb />76 " Spring 1998 North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />The stateTs first motorized bookmobile "<lb />Miss Kiwanis " a gift of the Durham<lb />Kiwanis Club, makes a trip to Burlington<lb />in 1924.<lb /><lb />[NC Library Bulletin (June 1924):<lb /><lb />204 insert. ]<lb /><lb />Winston-Salem Public LibraryTs<lb />hospital service celebrates its<lb /><lb />1st anniversary in 1930.<lb /><lb />[NC Library Bulletin (March 1930):<lb />234 insert.]<lb /><lb />When school libraries became media<lb />centers. How many media can you<lb />identify in this 1953 photo?<lb /><lb />[NCL 11 (May 1953): 79.]<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries Spring 1998 " 37<lb /></p>
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          <lb />Interlibrary loan gets a boost with the new<lb />teletypewriter in 1959.<lb />[NCL17 (Jan. 1959): 72.]<lb /><lb />Lamination is touted as cutting-edge<lb />technology in this 1961 photo.<lb />[NCL 19 (Winter 1961): 32.]<lb /><lb />Listening centers add a new dimension<lb />to library services in 1969.<lb />[NCL 27 (Spring 1969): 60.]<lb /><lb />Library students pay homage to the<lb />filmstrip previewer in 1971.<lb />[NCL 29 (Fall 1971): 142.]<lb /><lb />78 " Spring 1998 North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />ired to the<lb /><lb />orld<lb /><lb />by Ralph Lee Scott<lb /><lb />Java and the Web<lb /><lb />he Java language came on the software market in 1995.<lb /><lb />Java is a programming language like C++ or Fortran that<lb /><lb />creates or compiles instructions that tell your computer<lb /><lb />what to do. It has a number of features that make it an<lb />improvement over other compilers. The chief of these features<lb />is that Java programs work by downloading code (or instruc-<lb />tions) from the Internet in small doses called Applets. The main<lb />advantages of this applet system are: 1) these small programs,<lb />after initial download from the Web, run on your computer<lb />without going back to the Web page for updates; 2) these pro-<lb />grams run faster because they do not have to go back to the Web<lb />host computer (which might be busy or off line) to post infor-<lb />mation; 3) the Java programs run in real time, thus you can<lb />download and run software on your machine as well as just<lb />viewing Web pages; 4) the applets use a GUI (Graphical User<lb />Interface) so things like buttons, mouse movement, text boxes,<lb />etc. can be referenced.<lb /><lb />Among other useful aspects of the language as expressed<lb />in a White Paper written by the developers of Java, the Sun<lb />Microsystems Corporation, is that it is osimple, object oriented,<lb />distributed, secure, robust, portable, platform neutral, inter-<lb />preted, high performance, multi-threaded and dynamic.� In<lb />short, it works, we hope, safely when we need it. A lot of soft-<lb />ware is currently under development using these Java technolo-<lb />gies. For example: MicrosoftTs Exchange e-mail software uses Java<lb />applets to send and receive messages through an Internet proxy<lb />server. This enables the system to remain secure, but also allows<lb />e-mail users around the world to access their mail system. An-<lb />other example of the use of applets is in MSNBC (Microsoft<lb />NBC) home page Web site (www.msnbc.com). While the reader<lb />is looking at the MSNBC home page on his browser, news<lb />applets are running the background giving updates to current<lb />headline, weather, and folders of interest. Another Web appli-<lb />cation of applets is the KPIX traffic page (www. kpix.com/traffic),<lb />where real time TV cameras broadcast current San Francisco<lb />freeway traffic conditions worldwide. To view these Java appli-<lb />cations, you must have what is called Java enabled Web brows-<lb />ers. The two current major Internet browsers, NetscapeTs Navi-<lb />gator 4.0 and Microsoft's IE 4.0, both support Java technologies.<lb />The only catch is that you must have the Java script turned on<lb />through a pull-down software switch.<lb /><lb />Major detractors of the Java technology argue that the lan-<lb />guage is a Sun proprietary product and not a standardized com-<lb />piler. This, of course, allows one company to hold a monopoly<lb />on product development. Developers of standardized languages<lb />like C++ and Fortran argue that by developing language plat-<lb />forms cooperatively over many vendors, one gets a better prod-<lb />uct "a product built on mutually agreed goals. This way the<lb />end user is not forced to use just what the proprietary developer<lb />thinks is best. Some programmers with this bent have even been<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />known to state that oJava? You donTt need no steenkenT Java.��!<lb />Other programmers/users contend that proprietary software has<lb />the advantage of more focused, product-oriented goals. In other<lb />words, the software works better because the company has a<lb />vested interest in creating and selling a good-working product.<lb /><lb />Sun MicrosystemsT Java has a powerful ally, Netscape Com-<lb />munications, which has recently introduced what it calls the<lb />oVisual Basic of the Web.� Basic was a simple programming lan-<lb />guage that most computer users studied as their ofirst language.�<lb />NetscapeTs new Java development software, which was just re-<lb />leased in November at COMDEX, is called Visual JavaScript. Vi-<lb />sual JavaScript used click and drag icons to create components<lb />that run as Java applets, Java-Beans, HTML code, or COBRA<lb />(Common Object Broker Architecture). These components are<lb />combined by Visual JavaScript into what Netscape calls JavaScript<lb />Beans. The oBeans� are joined by the software into the finished<lb />Web page, using an application called Connection Builder.� The<lb />Visual JavaScript software is designed to work with NetscapeTs<lb />Web development tool package, SuiteSpot.<lb /><lb />Java has its limitations, the major one being that it slows<lb />down the loading of the page on your desktop. Another draw-<lb />back is that the Java applets cannot access data stored on a<lb />server, or modify an entire Web page once it has been sent. Our<lb />good friends at Microsoft tried to solve the one-way nature of<lb />Java by the use of control features in the IE browser called<lb />ActiveX. ActiveX actually takes control over a section of the desk-<lb />top and can display information and respond to commands<lb />from within the browser display without actually reloading the<lb />entire page. There are, of course, limitations to what ActiveX can<lb />do, primarily due to a lack of platform portability (i.e., it does<lb />not come with Netscape Navigator), and size/security concerns<lb />with your computer desktop. The latest transport software like<lb />Java under development is called Dynamic HyperText Markup<lb />Language (or DHTML). DHTML, like Java and ActiveX, promises<lb />to change the way the Internet works. With DHTML, once a<lb />page has been loaded on your desktop, you can interact with<lb />software to send with the original page without going back to<lb />the server. (Remember this was the original idea of Java.) With<lb />the new DHTML technology, additional pages, or parts of pages,<lb />remain hidden to be called up locally when you need them. The<lb />best analogy I can think of for DHTML is that it is like a big flip<lb />chart. On your desktop you can flip back and forth among<lb />pages, parts of pages, graphics, text, and even varying levels of<lb />content. More about DHTML in a future oWired� column.<lb /><lb />References<lb /><lb />1 Paul Kapustka, oGeek Patrol: Java Gets a Scalding,� Internet<lb />Week (November 10, 1997): 16.<lb /><lb />2 Ellis Booker, oJavaScript Becomes Visual,� Internet Week<lb />(November 17, 1997): 12.<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 39<lb /></p>
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          <lb />Dorothy Hodder, Compiler<lb /><lb />efore diving into Bland Simpson and Ann Cary SimpsonTs unique homage to<lb />North CarolinaTs coastal region, the land of their birth, prepare for a wet,<lb />sticky, and convoluted journey. The author, Bland, and photographer, Ann,<lb />seem to have traversed every river, creek, sound, swamp, and bog to be found<lb />east of I-95, and with their images they take the reader along on a humid and<lb />squishy journey. Part memoir, part travelogue, and part history book, Into the Sound<lb />Country will strike a note of familiarity with anyone who has lived or visited this part<lb />of the state. Like the region itself, there are joys to be found<lb />in this work, but often they require slogging through some<lb />flat and unexciting territory first.<lb /><lb />Bland Simpson and Ann Cary Simpson. The Sound Country, as Simpson describes it, begins in<lb />Into the Sound Country: the northeastern part of the state where the Dismal Swamp<lb /><lb />dominates, then stretches two hundred miles south to Cape<lb /><lb />A CarolinianTs Coastal Plain. Fear. By organizing this reminiscence along geographic<lb /><lb />Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1997.<lb />269 pp. $34.95 ISBN 0-8078-2381-3.<lb /><lb />Bland Simy<lb />\nn ©<lb /><lb />SON<lb /><lb />OWN P St 18<lb /><lb />40 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />lines, the author takes the reader through the coastal plain<lb />from top to bottom, beginning with the area around<lb />Elizabeth City where he grew up, down along the great<lb />Albemarle and Pamlico Sounds, to the Valley of the Neuse<lb />and into the corner of the state surrounding Wilmington.<lb />Each area provides a fertile source for the storyteller to draw<lb />upon personal memories of growing up in the 1950s and 1960s and from the legacies<lb />passed down by ancestors and acquaintances who settled that part of the country. On<lb />one page he may relay a memory of going to work with his father or seeing a matinee<lb />in the local movie palace, while on another he may recount the time Robert Frost,<lb />George Washington, or FDR visited the area. A personal recollection may lead into a<lb />detailed retelling of the Tuscarora War in the early 18th century. One chapter describes<lb />the Albemarle region by elaborating on the scuppernong grape and its impact on<lb />culture and economy while another chapter is devoted to the turpentine industry that<lb />made the coastal area world renown for its naval stores. In each case the author<lb />follows the pattern of relaying personal encounters as well as historical revelations,<lb />such as the fact that smoke from burning tar filled the streets of Wilmington in 1862<lb />in an unsuccessful effort to ward off a yellow fever epidemic that claimed 450 lives.<lb />Along the way, we are never too far from geography and the environmental impact<lb />that development and over-cultivation have had on the region. Lamented are the days<lb />when great forests of longleaf pine covered the coastal plain and when shellfish were<lb />abundant and safe to eat.<lb /><lb />The writing style found here fits well with the often marshy nature of the subject<lb />matter. SimpsonTs prose can bog the reader down with labored descriptions like that of<lb />Edenton, which he calls oa place deeply steeped in its own historicity.� Also, though<lb />occasionally charming, every walk through the woods, canoe trip down a river, or visit<lb />with a farmer is not as fascinating as a tingling encounter with the ghost of Joe<lb />Baldwin and his Maco light. This unevenness of material brings to mind the varied<lb />nature of our coastal plain. The accompanying photographs by BlandTs wife Ann Cary<lb />Simpson, the detailed map of the region, and the inclusion of an index enhance the<lb />sometimes slow trip through the lowlands. This work is recommended for all libraries<lb />with collections devoted to North Carolina. It is hard to imagine a work more evoca-<lb />tive of this specific and often neglected place.<lb /><lb />" William H. King<lb />State Library of North Carolina<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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        <p>pening David BrookTs intensively researched history of the first<lb />thirty-five years of theoAntiquities� society begins a journey into a<lb />fascinating world of socialites, dreamers, schemers, and visionaries.<lb />Their goal was the creation of an organized preservation movement<lb />in the Tar Heel state that would reverse a growing trend to forget the<lb />historic past, especially the structures associated with the history of the state.<lb />Turning to well-established organizations such as the Association for the Preserva-<lb />tion of Virginia Antiquities, the Society for the Preservation of New England<lb />Antiquities, and Colonial Williamsburg, the Society for the Preservation of North<lb />Carolina Antiquities (SPA) selected sometimes disparate<lb />elements of the models. The Society emerged during the last<lb />years of the Depression, struggled through the war years, faced<lb />an indecisive future fraught with demolitions, and finally<lb />David Louis Sterrett Brook. matured as a leader in the world of preservation planning,<lb /><lb />A Lasting Gift of Heritage: funding, and education. During the journey, numerous<lb />~ dynamic people, each with an ideal and opinion, come into<lb /><lb />A Histor y of the focus: Ruth Coltrane Cannon, dubbed oChoo Choo Busy Bee�<lb /><lb />° ° for her enthusiasm and energy; Christopher Crittenden,<lb />North Carolina Soci ety for the dedicated to awakening the public to history; Elizabeth oBuffy�<lb /><lb />j j iti Ives, who charged local preservationists to oget together and<lb /><lb />Preservation of Antiquities, do it jdtiasotwes/ ; Gaiieade Carraway, caine nclens<lb />1939-1974. Tryon Palace rebuilt and never missing a session of Culture<lb /><lb />Week; Jack Tyler, a oquiet pusher� who nurtured the growing<lb />professionalism in preservation; H.G. Jones, Bob Stipe, and<lb />Frank Stephenson, who reduced the drain of life memberships,<lb />attracted foundations to underwrite preservation, and worked<lb />to bring the society into a new age with new goals and the<lb />expertise to attain them. These and many more are the cast of<lb />characters who urge the story forward from the dreams of a<lb />few stalwarts with favorite projects in mind to an awakened<lb />popular awareness of the broad scope of history on the dawn<lb />of AmericaTs bicentennial year.<lb /><lb />Lost, however, in the restructuring of the society was Culture Week, held<lb />annually from 1939 to the 1970s, in which members of various historical organiza-<lb />tions met in Raleigh to discuss the past and plan the future. To me, as a thirty-<lb />something newcomer to North Carolina in 1972, ocouth week� was a feast, a<lb />gathering together of the cultural movers and shakers from across the state, an<lb />event unique in the nation, the essence of how to bring history to the people and<lb />get them to protect an irreplaceable heritage.<lb /><lb />Probably because the author has directed his attention to culling a vast amount<lb />of documentary and verbal information, A Lasting Gift of Heritage tends to become<lb />turgid and rambling. For example, there is great repetition of lengthy names<lb />throughout the book which could have been mitigated by introducing the person<lb />by his or her full name and then using a shortened form. A lot of the text is repeti-<lb />tive because facts and events are recounted again in successive chapters. And the<lb />lack of footnotes makes it necessary to turn to the index to find references. The best<lb />section " the last chapter entitled oForward to Renewal, 1970-1974� " comes alive<lb />with a spirit of revitalization and a victory over the depressing onever carried out�<lb />endings of earlier episodes. But the highlight of the book is actually at the very end<lb />where an overview of the whole tale is succinctly retold. Perhaps this should be<lb />read first to get a proper perspective of the history of the society.<lb /><lb />Essentially a reference book with an appeal to more general reading, the<lb />volume is especially useful for scholars interested in tracing the development of SPA<lb />and the volunteer members who brought the organization through the first thirty-<lb />five years of its history. The appendices are filled with names of the societyTs charter<lb />members, officers, directors, and district leaders; lists of recipients of revolving fund<lb />grants and the annual Cannon Cup Award; enumerations of historic buildings and<lb />sites in the state; and to cap it off, a voluminous bibliography.<lb /><lb />David Brook holds a juris doctorate from the College of Law at Ohio State<lb />University, and a masters degree in history from North Carolina State University. He<lb />has been administrator of the State Historic Preservation Office of the North<lb />Carolina Division of Archives and History since 1984.<lb /><lb />Raleigh: Division of Archives and History,<lb />North Carolina Department of<lb /><lb />Cultural Resources, 1997.<lb /><lb />205 pp. $24.00.<lb /><lb />ISBN 0-86526-274-8.<lb /><lb />" Edward F. Turberg<lb />Preservation Consultant, Wilmington, North Carolina<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries Spring 1998 " 41<lb /><lb />"<lb /></p>
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        <p>early everyone who visits the quaint coastal village on Ocracoke<lb /><lb />Island hears about the oBritish Cemetery.� Some will search it out,<lb /><lb />others happen upon the small graveyard plot nestled beside a winding<lb /><lb />dirt lane, but few leave the island with an understanding of its<lb /><lb />significance. The solution is a short book In Some Foreign Field by L.<lb /><lb />VanLoan Naisawald, which will entertain and fully enlighten the<lb />reader by the time the island ferry reaches the mainland.<lb /><lb />This smoothly written, well-researched account, complete with plenty of<lb />photographs, tells the story of the British antisubmarine trawler Bedfordshire<lb />torpedoed by the German submarine U-558 during the early days of World War<lb /><lb />II. Although his only tie to the incident was his induction into the US<lb />Army on the same day that Ocracokers found the bodies of four<lb />L. VanLoan Naisawald. British sailors on the ocean beach, Naisawald became infatuated with<lb />a J the subject. For the thirty years since he first visited the island, the<lb />In Some F or eign F ield: author has gathered a wealth of information from US, British, and<lb /><lb />Four British G raves and German archives, as well as interviewing parties on both sides of the<lb /><lb />ocean that were involved with the BedfordshireTs sinking.<lb /><lb />Submarine Warfare on the In the first two chapters, oThe Gray Wolves Return� and<lb /><lb />Raleigh: Historical Publications Section,<lb />Division of Archives and History, 1997. 99 pp.<lb /><lb />NC Outer Banks oH.M.S. Bedfordshire Goes to War,� the author provides a historical<lb />3 context within which to understand German strategies for disrupting<lb />Allied shipping and the corresponding counter actions, which<lb />brought the British vessel to American waters. Naisawald continues<lb />$10.00. ISBN 0-86526-272-1. his story by carefully piecing together evidence from a wide variety of<lb />sources to disclose the trawlerTs final moments, its destruction, and<lb />the recovery of four crew members. The simplicity of the chapter<lb />entitled oThe Cemetery� underscores the compassion and sensitivity<lb />the islanders showed the young Brits lost so far from home. Living on<lb />the edge of the ocean from which they make their livelihood, it is evident that<lb />the Ocracokers have a special feeling for those lost at sea, especially those who<lb />died protecting their shores. Naisawald completes his story nicely by revealing,<lb />primarily through photographs, the present situation of the H.M.S. Bedfordshire<lb />as it rests peacefully off Cape Lookout in 105 feet of water.<lb />L. VanLoan NaisawaldTs other writings include the book Grape and Canister:<lb />The Story of the Field Artillery of the Army of the Potomac. His background as an<lb />army officer with a masterTs degree in history from the University of North<lb />Carolina at Chapel Hill is reflected in his thoroughness and ability to translate<lb />the Bedfordshire incident into a story suitable for reading by all but the very<lb />young. Perhaps because of the popular nature of the subject, Naisawald has<lb />opted not to include footnotes or a bibliography, which is unfortunate for the<lb />more serious reader. The author divulges his source materials throughout the<lb />text, however, and has included a thorough index. There are many shipwrecks<lb />off North Carolina, each with an untold story; luckily, L. VanLoan Naisawald<lb />has taken the time to research and write In Some Foreign Field, and thus bring to<lb />light one of the more touching episodes of its kind.<lb />" Mark Wilde-Ramsing<lb />North Carolina Underwater Archaeology Unit, Fort Fisher<lb /><lb />Lancaster, PA 17603 1-800-487-2278 (FAX)<lb /><lb />CURRENT EDITIONS, INC.<lb />WHOLESALERS<lb /><lb />TO LIBRARIES<lb /><lb />858 Manor Street 1-800-959-1672<lb /><lb />"Support North Carolina Libraries"<lb /><lb />42 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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        <p>century ago North Carolina women were extraordinarily vulnerable to an<lb /><lb />alcoholic husbandTs profligacy and violence. In 1883, author Anastatia<lb /><lb />Sims reports, the stateTs oage of consent� " the age at which a girl could<lb /><lb />legally agree to sexual relations " was ten. In 1900 the illiteracy rate for<lb /><lb />white North Carolinians was 19.5%, and 47.6% for African Americans.<lb />Schools were unsafe, unsanitary, and ill-equipped for education. Smarting from<lb />defeat, white citizens strove to reinterpret Southern history and portray the Confed-<lb />eracy in a heroic light. North CarolinaTs organized women fought tirelessly during the<lb />period from 1880 to 1930 to bring these issues to the forefront of the political arena.<lb />Long before the Nineteenth Amendment gave women the vote in 1920, they orga-<lb />nized, raised money, wrote letters to legislators, and spoke with great eloquence in<lb />support of the causes that they felt were a logical extension of their roles as wives,<lb />mothers, and housewives.<lb /><lb />Anastatia Sims tells the stories of these women and their volunteerism. Her first<lb />book is based on her dissertation, Feminism and Femininity in the New South: White<lb />WomenTs Organizations in North Carolina, 1883-1930 (The University of North Caro-<lb />lina, Chapel Hill, 1985). In The Power of Femininity in the New South, she has interwo-<lb />ven a second set of stories, those of African American womenTs<lb />organizations. She first lays the groundwork by discussing the politi-<lb />cal milieu of North Carolina at the end of the last century. The ideal<lb /><lb />The Power of Femininity white Southern woman, delicate and vulnerable, yet possessing<lb />courage and moral rectitude, was a potent symbol in the racially<lb /><lb />in the New South. charged political rhetoric of the 1890s. African American women<lb /><lb />/ ° 4 adopted the same standard of gentility. WomenTs presumed moral<lb />WomenTs Org anizations and authority enabled them to be effective players in what became an<lb /><lb />Politics in North Carolina, increasingly public sphere.<lb />As Sims discusses the development of each area of activism, it is<lb />1880-1930 clear that issues of race, class, and gender permeated every one.<lb />Columbia: University of South Hereditary societies such as the Daughters of the Confederacy were<lb />Carolina Press, 1997. founded in large part to preserve the elite status jeopardized by the<lb />300 $29.95. ISBN 1-57003-178-9. impoverishment of former land- and slave-holding families. Interra-<lb />pp. ADS) 3 VES. JHE<lb />cial cooperation in work on the WomenTs Christian Temperance<lb />Union broke down due to racial prejudice. Schools remained very<lb />much separate and unequal because each group of reformers provided<lb />money and equipment exclusively to schools for children of their<lb />own race. Finally, white Southern womenTs concern that possessing<lb />political power might be ounfeminine� and white menTs fear that they might lose<lb />their supremacy complicated and ultimately defeated the stateTs woman suffrage<lb />campaign.<lb /><lb />Sims has done a tremendous amount of careful research, using sources ranging<lb />from letters and diaries to census records, organizational documents, newspapers, and<lb />broadsides. She documents each fact and assertion through her extensive footnotes<lb />and provides a lengthy bibliography and index. This work of careful scholarship is<lb />beautifully structured, clearly written, and enlivened by quotes and illustrations. It is<lb />highly recommended for public and academic libraries and for any special libraries<lb />focused on the history of North Carolina.<lb /><lb />Anastatia Sims.<lb /><lb />" Elizabeth Bramm Dunn<lb />Duke University<lb /><lb />A new column will debut in the next issue of North Carolina Libraries. oBetween Us� will offer opinion<lb />pieces from librarians about library-related matters. Some pieces may be serious, some may be tongue-<lb />in-cheek, but all will reflect the concerns of those individuals who daily go about the business of<lb />informing, educating, and entertaining North CarolinaTs library-going public. North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />invites all would-be pundits and opinion makers " well-known curmedgeons and fresh faces alike " to<lb />rev up their keyboards (or pull out their dip pens and ink).<lb /><lb />Those interested in contributing are invited to contact the column editor Keven Cherry at<lb />cherryk@co.rowan.nc.us<lb />or (704) 638-3021.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries Spring 1998 " 43<lb /></p>
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        <p>yths about Duke University abound, including the oft-repeated<lb />story that James B. Duke offered his gift to Princeton University if it<lb />would change its name to Duke. If Gargoyles Could Talk is a compi-<lb />lation of seventy-one articles originally published in the Dialogue, a<lb />weekly campus newsletter, which lays to rest many of these oral<lb />traditions. It also provides, through succinct sketches, a brief<lb />history of Duke from its beginnings as Union Institute in Randolph<lb />County in 1838.<lb /><lb />The work colorfully portrays the early presidents of Duke, as<lb />well as many of the faculty members and administrators who<lb />served under them and who laid a solid foundation for the later<lb /><lb />William E. King. reputation of the university. King also has included essays on the<lb /><lb />~ founders of DukeTs athletic programs, the building of the gothic<lb />If Garg oy les Could Talk, campus, academic freedom, campus statuary, town-gown relation-<lb /><lb />Sketches of Duke University. ships, and the campusTs response to various social issues of the day.<lb />The reader learns that the only time the Rose Bowl was played<lb />Durham: Carolina Academic Press, 1997. outside California was in 1942, when it was played at Duke; that<lb />208 pp. $22.50. the origin of the moniker oblue devils� has nothing to do with<lb />ISBN 0-89089-814-6. religion; and that the wall around DukeTs East Campus (the original<lb /><lb />Durham site of Trinity College) is not, as often stated, ten feet high<lb />with three feet above ground and seven below.<lb />William E. King has been archivist of Duke University since<lb />1972, when the Archives was first established. He is a Duke graduate with a Ph.D. in<lb />history from Duke as well. Drawing on materials from the Archives for these<lb />sketches, King states as his goal to oadd clarity, correct error, and illustrate the varied<lb />contributions of the many individuals who have made Duke University what it is<lb />today.� This fascinating publication will be a delight to Duke alumni and others<lb />with an interest in Duke, higher education, or Durham.<lb />"Joline Ezzell<lb />Duke University<lb /><lb />Broadfoot's has TWO Locations Serving Different Needs<lb /><lb />Broadfoot's<lb />of Wendell<lb /><lb />6624 Robertson Pond Road ~ Wendell, NC 27591<lb />Phone: (800) 444-6963 ~ Fax: (919) 365-6008<lb /><lb />1907 Buena Vista Circle ~ Wilmington, NC 28405<lb />Phone: (800) 537-5243 ~ Fax: (910) 686-4379<lb /><lb />MULTICULTURAL nae<lb />SELECTIONS Recent Publications:<lb /><lb />VISUALS The Colonial &amp; State Records of NC (30 vols.)<lb /><lb />Spring &amp; Fall Catalogs North Carolina Regiments (5 vois.)<lb />Are you on our mailing list Pig Roster of Confederate Troops (16 vols.)<lb /><lb />Tar Heel Treasures i 7a Supplement to the Official Records (100 vols.)<lb />for he at<lb /><lb />natives &amp; newcomers<lb /><lb />young &amp; old Full Color Catalog (free upon request)<lb /><lb />44 " Spring 1998 North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />his publication, one of seven in the Folklife in the South series, tells a fascinat-<lb />ing story of the ongoing struggle by inhabitants of the Carolina Piedmont to<lb />hold on to the values and attitudes of their agricultural past while embracing<lb />the economic opportunities of an industrial future. It also presents a riveting<lb />account of how, despite the separating force of racism, the beliefs and prac-<lb />tices of the Anglo-Americans and African Americans of one geographical area<lb />(located mainly between Charlotte, North Carolina and Greenville, South Carolina) became<lb />oStretrievably interwoven,� as both groups developed oa sense of place� quite distinct from the<lb />experience of people in regions outside the South.<lb />According to CoggeshallTs objectives, othis book examines the way in which the loom of<lb />Carolina folklife became established after the Civil War, and then reviews the process that,<lb />through the course of time, blended a variety of traditions into contemporary Piedmont<lb />folklife.� In meeting these goals, the author is quite successful. Well-<lb />versed in the southern regional studies of other social scientists, he<lb />skillfully combines their observations with his own study, illustrating<lb />John M. Coggeshall. both with recollections gleaned from oral history interviews. In fact, it<lb />° ° is the words of the men and women recalling their own experiences<lb />Carolina Piedmont Countr y- that give this book its most memorable quality. For example, in ex-<lb />plaining what role the making of moonshine whiskey played in the life<lb />of impoverished North Carolina farmers during the Depression, a<lb />woman from that locality declared that it owas the biggest cash crop<lb />they had.�<lb /><lb />Avoiding a one-dimensional study of the Carolina Piedmont, the<lb />author traces its evolution from farms to mill towns to commercial<lb />centers by focusing on two typical Piedmont communities,<lb />Hammondville and Kent. Within these communities he examines such<lb />folklife elements as cultural values, speech, storytelling, religion, games<lb /><lb />and recreation, food, occupations, and architecture. At the end of this work, the author pro-<lb />vides his readers with brief biographies of the oinformants,� a biographical essay, and an index.<lb /><lb />Carolina Piedmont Country is the third book by Coggeshall, an anthropologist at Clemson<lb />University. His other publications include: Vernacular Architecture in Southern Illinois<lb />(Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1988), and Transcending Boundaries: Multi-<lb />Disciplinary Approaches to the Study of Gender (New York: Bergin &amp; Garvey, 1991), an edited work<lb /><lb />with Pamela R. Frese.<lb /><lb />This book is recommended to a wide variety of readers whether they are served by aca-<lb />demic, public, or school libraries. More particularly, the work is a must for southerners wanting<lb />to revisit their past as well as for non-southerners wishing to understand the region better.<lb /><lb />" Richard Shrader<lb />University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill<lb /><lb />Jackson, Mississippi:<lb /><lb />University Press of Mississippi, 1996.<lb />xviii, 271 pp.<lb /><lb />Cloth, $45.00. ISBN 0-87805-766-8.<lb />Paper, $16.95. ISBN 0-87805-767-6.<lb /><lb />Instructions for the Preparation of Manuscripts for North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />1. North Carolina Libraries seeks to publish articles, materials reviews, and bibliographies of professional interest to librarians in North Carolina.<lb />Articles need not be necessarily of a scholarly nature, but they should address professional concerns of the library community in the state.<lb /><lb />2. Manuscripts should be directed to Frances B. Bradburn, Editor, North Carolina Libraries, Information Technology Evaluation Services, Public<lb />Schools of North Carolina, 301 N. Wilmington Street, Raleigh, NC 27601-2825.<lb /><lb />3. Manuscripts should be submitted in triplicate on plain white paper measuring 8 1/2" x 11" and on computer disk.<lb /><lb />4. Manuscripts must be double-spaced (text, references, and footnotes). Macintosh computer is the computer used by North Carolina Libraries.<lb />Computer disks formatted for other computers must contain a file of the document in original format and a file in ASCII or RTF. Please consult<lb />editor for further information.<lb /><lb />5. The name, position, and professional address of the author should appear in the bottom left-hand corner of a separate title page. The<lb />authorTs name should not appear anywhere else on the document.<lb /><lb />6. Pages should be numbered consecutively at the top right-hand corner and the title (abbreviated if necessary) at the upper left-hand corner<lb /><lb />. Footnotes should appear at the end of the manuscript. The editors will refer to The Chicago Manual of Style, 13th edition. The basic forms for<lb /><lb />books and journals are as follows:<lb /><lb />Keyes Metcalf, Planning Academic and Research Library Buildings (New York: McGraw, 1965), 416.<lb />Susan K. Martin, oThe Care and Feeding of the MARC Format,� American Libraries 10 (September 1970): 498.<lb /><lb />. Photographs will be accepted for consideration but cannot be returned.<lb /><lb />. Upon receipt, a manuscript will be acknowledged by the editor. Following review of the manuscript by the editor and at least two jurors, a<lb />decision will be communicated to the writer. A definite publication date cannot be given since any incoming manuscript will be added to a<lb />manuscript bank from which articles are selected for each issue.<lb /><lb />10. North Carolina Libraries holds the copyright for all accepted manuscripts. The journal is available both in print and electronically over the<lb /><lb />North Carolina Information Network.<lb />11. Issue deadlines are February 10, May 10, August 10, and November 10. Manuscripts for a particular issue must be submitted at least 2<lb /><lb />months before the issue deadline.<lb /><lb />N<lb /><lb />\o ©<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries Spring 1998 " 45<lb /></p>
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        <p>hristopher CamutoTs Another Country, the story of captive-bred wolves<lb />released in the Great Smoky Mountains region, will appeal to a variety of<lb />readers. A work of nonfiction, it is nonetheless as beautiful as it is informa-<lb />tive; indeed, it borders on poetry in some passages.<lb /><lb />This property will make the book accessible to anyone who<lb />appreciates a literate study of natural history, and perhaps even to<lb />readers of poems and fiction about the natural world. The author<lb />presents material any ecologist or population biologist might find<lb /><lb />: pertinent, yet he succeeds in explaining such slippery concepts in<lb />Christopher Camuto. population biology as the relation of subspeciation to hybridization<lb /><lb />Another Country: clearly enough to reach the educated lay reader.<lb />Another Country would make an excellent addition to any zoo,<lb /><lb />Jour. neying Toward nature museum, or museum of natural history on the grounds that<lb />° any exhibits of or about red wolves elicits questions. Especially in<lb />the Cherokee Mountains. modern zoos, where the emphasis is on larger habitats with more<lb />New York: Henry Holt and Co., 1997. naturalistic spatial and temporal arrangements, docents and other<lb />351 pp. $25.00. ISBN 0-8050-2694-0. volunteers field many inquiries about the shyer animals, which<lb />include red wolves. In museum settings, questions more likely would<lb />pertain to the animalTs survival status. In either setting, where libraries<lb />exist in part to educate the staff who work directly with the public,<lb />CamutoTs book would provide substantive support and training<lb />material.<lb /><lb />Another Country has almost unlimited potential as a recommended adjunct text for a<lb />number of university courses, both graduate and undergraduate. There is enough religion and<lb />history presented as ecology, so that all manner of cross-disciplinary classes and seminars<lb />could be enhanced by having students read this work. The relationship of the red wolf and its<lb />ecology to the culture of the Cherokee, who occupied the Appalachian habitat at the time of<lb />European contact, forms the backdrop of this narrative on the near-extinction and attempted<lb />re-establishment of the species. Another Country would add considerably to the reading lists of<lb />classes in, among other topics, Native American spirituality, human geography, colonization<lb />history, philosophical aspects of ecology, and animal rights.<lb /><lb />Most public libraries are blessed with readers who are excited to see diverse areas of<lb />inquiry fitted together, and CamutoTs book will be an important addition to their collections.<lb /><lb />Readers who are not comfortable with some degree of uncertainty will not enjoy this<lb />book. Camuto tests his audience in several ways, always coming back to the realization that<lb />there are no easy answers for profound questions regarding humans and non-human animals.<lb />He speaks of sentimentality about animals as counter-productive, then achingly describes the<lb />loss of several project wolves. He raises troubling questions about stereotyping and the general<lb />problem of seeing animals through human eyes. The reader must practice critical thinking,<lb />examining and re-examining how he or she feels about key issues throughout the book.<lb /><lb />Another Country is a deeply thoughtful, original, and integrative piece of writing. It makes<lb />a substantial contribution to the literature and will make a permanent impression on anyone<lb />who, being ready for a brisk workout of mental and emotional faculties, is fortunate or<lb />discerning enough to read it. Another Country, given as a gift or chosen as an addition to oneTs<lb />personal library, will certainly be used and re-used.<lb /><lb />" Meredith Merritt<lb />University of North Carolina at Charlotte<lb /><lb />Tired of making "permanent loans?"<lb /><lb />Ralph M. Davis, Sales Representative<lb />P.O. Box 144<lb />Rockingham, NC 28379<lb /><lb />= 1-800-545-2714<lb /><lb />a Lh chpoint Tomorrow's Technology for Today's Libraries�"�<lb /><lb />550 Grove Road « P.O. Box 188 * Thorofare, New Jersey 08086<lb />(800) 257-5540 * TELEX: 84-5396 * FAX: (609) 848-0937<lb /><lb />46 " Spring 1998 North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />OTHER PUBLICATIONS OF INTEREST ...<lb /><lb />Richard Krawiec, editor of Cardinal: A Contemporary<lb />Anthology of Fiction and Poetry by North Carolina<lb />Writers (Jacar Press, 1986), has added to the number of Tar<lb />Heel literary collections with Voices From Home: The North<lb />Carolina Prose Anthology, a volume of fiction and nonfic-<lb />tion from a few well-known and many lesser-known<lb />writers from North Carolina. The editorTs purpose was not<lb />to compile a oBest of North Carolina,� and he did not<lb />limit his selections to those set in the state. His introduc-<lb />tion says, oWhen discussing writers, people often forget<lb />the other half of the equation " readers. I wished to<lb />compile a miscellany of prose that would appeal to the<lb />diversity of readers in this state.� A valuable introduction<lb />to the next wave of Tar Heel writers. (1997; Avisson Press,<lb />Inc., P.O. Box 38816, Greensboro, NC 27438; 376 pp.;<lb />paper, $18.00; ISBN 1-888105-30-S.)<lb /><lb />Mandy Oxendine is Charles ChestnuttTs first novel, just<lb />published by the University of<lb />Illinois Press. Chesnutt was an<lb />eminent African American author at<lb />the turn of the century. His treat-<lb />ment of racial, class, and gender<lb />issues, particularly MandyTs decision<lb />to pass for white, was considered too<lb />scandalous for publication in 1897.<lb />Mandy is courted by Tom Lowrey, a<lb />fair-skinned man who remained in<lb />the black community, and Robert<lb />Utley, an unscrupulous white<lb />landowner who is killed while<lb />sexually assaulting her. Includes an<lb />introduction and notes onTthe text<lb />by Charles Hackenberry. (1997;<lb />University of Illinois Press, 1325<lb />South Oak St, Champaign, IL 61820;<lb />xxvii, 112 pp.; cloth, $27.50; ISBN 0O-<lb />252-02051-0; paper, $11.95;<lb />ISBN 0-252-06347-3.)<lb /><lb />Quilts, Coverlets, &amp;<lb />Counterpanes: Bedcoverings<lb />from the Museum of Early<lb />Southern Decorative Arts and<lb />Old Salem Collections is a<lb />handsome catalog by Paula W.<lb />Locklair, Director of Collec-<lb />tions and Curator at MESDA<lb />and Old Salem. It is illustrated<lb />with full-color photographs,<lb />showing whole coverlets,<lb />details, and quiltmakers tools<lb />and implements. Includes an<lb />introduction, notes, and<lb />bibliography. (1998; An Old<lb />Salem Book, Winston-Salem,<lb />NC; distributed by University<lb />of North Carolina Press, P.O.<lb />Box 2288, Chapel Hill, NC<lb />27515-2288; 71 pp.; paper,<lb />$16.95; 1-879704-04-8.)<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />Glenn Morris<lb /><lb />CHES<lb /><lb />Coverlets<lb /><lb />oy<lb /><lb />Counterpanes<lb /><lb />Bedcoverings from the<lb />Museum of Early<lb />© Southern Decorative Arts and famine<lb />Old Salem Collections<lb /><lb />A Paul Green Reader has been compiled and edited by<lb />Laurence G. Avery, who is also responsible for A Southern<lb />Life: Letters of Paul Green, 1916-1981, published in 1994.<lb />The Reader includes texts of three of GreenTs plays, six<lb />short stories, several essays and letters, and an excerpt<lb />from The Wordbook, his collection of regional folklore.<lb />(1998; University of North Carolina Press, P.O. Box 2288,<lb />Chapel Hill, NC 27515-2288; 297 pp.; cloth, $39.95; ISBN<lb />0-8078-2386-4; paper, $17.95; ISBN 0-8078-4708-9.)<lb /><lb />The Face Finder, by Raleigh author Carol F. Fantelli, will<lb />be enjoyed most by fans of forensic science. Devon<lb />Gardiner, a forensic sculptor for the North Carolina<lb />Museum of History in Raleigh, is approached by the SBI to<lb />reconstruct the face of a man whose body has just been<lb />found 45 years after his death. The solution to the mystery<lb />depends heavily on DevonTs psychic abilities, and the plot<lb />hangs on two preposterous coincidences, but the passages<lb />describing the process of building a face<lb />onto a skull are fascinating. (1996;<lb />Marblehead Publishing, 3026 Churchill<lb />| Rd, Raleigh, NC 27607; 200 pp.; paper,<lb />| $11.95; ISBN 0-943335-07-8.)<lb /><lb />Glenn MorrisTs north-to-south, island-by-<lb />island, pier-by-pier tour of North Caro-<lb />lina Beaches, originally published in<lb />1993, is available in a new edition,<lb />completely updated to reflect changes<lb />wrought by hurricanes and other recent<lb />events. (1998; University of North<lb />Carolina Press, P.O. Box 2288, Chapel<lb />Hill, NC 27515-2288; 294 pp.; paper,<lb />$17.95; ISBN 0-8078-4683-X.)<lb /><lb />boat ramps<lb />and docks,<lb />museums,<lb /><lb />and. more<lb /><lb />New publications from the Institute of<lb />Government include Public Records Law<lb />for North Carolina Local Governments<lb />by David M. Lawrence (1997; Institute of<lb />Government, CB No. 3330 Knapp<lb />Building, UNC-CH, Chapel Hill, NC<lb />27599-3330; 207 pp.; paper, $24.00; ISBN<lb />1-56011-299-9.), Ethics, Conflicts, and<lb />Offices: A Guide for Local Officials by A.<lb />Fleming Bell, II (1997; Institute of Govern-<lb />ment, CB No. 3330 Knapp Building,<lb />UNC-CH, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3330;<lb />228 pp.; paper, $20.00; ISBN 1-56011-287-<lb />5.), and Creating Effective Partnerships<lb />for Community Economic Development,<lb />prepared by Anita R. Brown-Graham for<lb />the Community Development<lb />Roundtable (1997; Institute of Govern-<lb />ment, CB No. 3330 Knapp Building,<lb />UNC-CH, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3330; 39<lb />pp.; paper, $11.50; ISBN 1-56011-314-6.).<lb />Write for a complete catalog of publica-<lb />tions, which include many new editions<lb />of works on topics such as animal control<lb />law, city council procedures, and sentenc-<lb />ing, probation, and parole.<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 47<lb /></p>
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          <lb />he aguiapipe' (North Cancliniana<lb /><lb />compiled by Plummer Alston Jones, Jr.<lb /><lb />*Lagniappe (lan-yapT, lah� yapT) n. An extra or unexpected gift or benefit. [Louisiana French]<lb /><lb />Learning WhatTs New from Library Newsletters:<lb />A Selected List of North Carolina Resources<lb /><lb />by Gillian M. Debreczeny<lb /><lb />an often overlooked resource for keeping up with<lb /><lb />what is going on in the profession. They can provide<lb />information about programs and innovations that do not<lb />always get written up for publication in the major profes-<lb />sional journals and will not be included in periodical in-<lb />dexes. Some of them can be a surprisingly good read for<lb />general information on a wide variety of topics. Many of<lb />these newsletters are produced to inform local patrons and<lb />sometimes to raise funds, but they also can be of interest<lb />to other librarians looking for ideas. North Carolina library<lb />newsletters come from academic, public, and special librar-<lb />ies as well as from interest groups of the state library asso-<lb />ciation. Although many lively examples are available, li-<lb />brary staff newsletters intended for internal use have not<lb />been included in this article.<lb /><lb />Sadly, some excellent titles have ceased publication.<lb />Newsletters often depend on the availability of an enthusi-<lb />astic local editor and support from the library administra-<lb />tion. They may be among the first to suffer from funding<lb />cuts. In December 1995, the Public Image from the Neuse<lb />Regional Library suspended publication after the departure<lb />of its editor Dwight McInvaill. Having begun publication<lb />in September 1988, it was designed to educate public li-<lb />brarians in the importance of public relations for their sys-<lb />tems. Over the years its scope was broadened to include a<lb />wide range of articles on professional topics; circulation<lb />rose to over 1,200 across the United States and abroad. Re-<lb />gretfully publication has not yet resumed. The North Caro-<lb />lina Foreign Language Center has published a modest<lb />folded-sheet newsletter since 1988, which will cease to ex-<lb />ist in June 1998 when the Center loses its federal funding.<lb />The NCFLC Quarterly publicized a vital and unique ser-<lb />vice, and information services in North Carolina will be<lb />the poorer for its, and the CenterTs, demise.<lb /><lb />Despite the loss of some valuable publications many<lb />exciting and interesting newsletters continue to flourish.<lb />The following listing is a limited sampling of the many li-<lb />brary newsletters currently being published in North Caro-<lb />lina. It has been compiled from recently received newslet-<lb />ters in the library of the School of Information and Library<lb />Science and the North Carolina Collection at UNC-Chapel<lb /><lb />| ibrary newsletters, the subject of this selected list, are<lb /><lb />48 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />Hill. It is not a complete listing of UNC-CH current hold-<lb />ings and does not include titles that have ceased publica-<lb />tion. Each entry includes title, frequency, editor, address,<lb />telephone number, e-mail and URL where available, sub-<lb />scription information, and a brief annotation on the con-<lb />tents of recent issues. Unless otherwise stated, comments<lb />refer to the latest issue available. The author would appre-<lb />ciate hearing from editors of newsletters who would like to<lb />be considered for any future listing.<lb /><lb />Academic Libraries<lb /><lb />Appal Notes<lb /><lb />1-2 times yr. Editor: Patty Wheeler. Address: Belk Library,<lb /><lb />Appalachian State University, Boone, NC 28608. Tel.: (704)<lb /><lb />262-2186. E-mail: wheelerpn@appstate.edu URL: http://<lb /><lb />www.library.appstate.edu/home/ To receive: E-mail or write to<lb /><lb />editor. Also available on homepage.<lb />The latest 6-page issue highlights the LibraryTs as-<lb />sessment efforts including information on patron<lb />surveys, a serials review, the revamped book ap-<lb />proval plan, the Wisconsin-Ohio Reference Evalua-<lb />tion Project, a monographic vendor review, the<lb />LibraryTs collection analysis project, and an evalua-<lb />tion of services offered by the Music Library. Much<lb />practical information designed for campus users.<lb /><lb />Duke University Libraries<lb /><lb />3 times yr. Editor: B. Ilene Nelson. Address: Duke Univer-<lb /><lb />sity Libraries, Box 90193, Durham, NC 27708-0193.<lb /><lb />Tel: (919) 660-5816. E-mail: bin@mail.lib.duke.edu Subscrip-<lb /><lb />tion inquiries to the editor at the above addresses.<lb />Latest 28-page issue highlights the libraryTs interna-<lb />tional collections with articles by the Ibero-Ameri-<lb />can Bibliographer and the resource specialist for<lb />Slavic studies. There is an article about foreign re-<lb />sources on the Web and a selection of poetry by<lb />George Elliot Clarke. An elegant publication printed<lb />on glossy stock with an informative content aimed<lb />at researchers, library users, and potential donors.<lb /><lb />Focus: the NCSU Libraries<lb />3 times yr. Editor: Terrell Armistead Crow. Address: North<lb />Carolina State University, NCSU Libraries, Box 7111,<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />Raleigh, NC 27695-7111. To receive: Call the editor at<lb /><lb />(919) 515-5882.<lb />Thirty-two pages of information on recent develop-<lb />ments in the library, exhibits and fund raising, and<lb />profiles of new staff members comprise the latest is-<lb />sue of this newsletter. It is well illustrated with<lb />many photographs. The last two volumes present a<lb />lively picture of the many projects and initiatives<lb />underway at NCSU. For campus users and potential<lb />donors.<lb /><lb />HunterTs Clarion<lb />Irregular. Editor: Becky Kornegay. Address: Hunter Library,<lb />Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC 28723. Tel.:<lb />(704) 227-7307. To receive: Request from director at ad-<lb />dress above.<lb />An example of a small (6-page) newsletter that com-<lb />bines information on recent developments in the li-<lb />brary, collections available, library hours, events,<lb />and fundraising. Designed for campus users.<lb /><lb />LIBRARY COLUMNS: Walter Clinton Jackson Library<lb />Irregular. Editor: Betty Morrow. Address: UNC-Greens-<lb />boro, 1000 Spring Garden St., NC 27412-5201. Tel.: (336)<lb />334-5781. E-mail: betty_morrow@uncg.edu To receive:<lb />E-mail editor.<lb />The April 1996 issue has nine pages and includes<lb />items on a music collection, the new online book re-<lb />quests and renewal services, electronic reference<lb />sources, the Kelmscott and Gogmagog Presses, Inter-<lb />net resources subject guides, local technical experts<lb />training, and staff news.<lb /><lb />WINDOWS<lb /><lb />2 times yr. Editors: Tanya Fortner and Marcella Grendler.<lb /><lb />Address: Friends of the Library, Academic Affairs Library,<lb /><lb />CB# 3902, UNC-CH, Chapel Hill, NC 27514-8890. To re-<lb /><lb />ceive: With membership in the Friends of the Library<lb /><lb />($25). Correspondence to Liza Terll at the above address.<lb />An eight-page newsletter aimed at potential donors<lb />with articles on donated collections, and donors, a<lb />report on the UNC Tar Heel Bus Tour to introduce<lb />new faculty and staff to the state, and short news<lb />briefs on UNC-CHTs library events. Well laid out and<lb />illustrated with photographs.<lb /><lb />¢ Public Libraries<lb /><lb />Check it Out: A library newsletter supported by the Friends of<lb /><lb />Rowan Public Library<lb /><lb />Quarterly. Editor: Marian Lytle. Address: Rowan Public Li-<lb /><lb />brary, 201 West Fisher Street, P.O. Box 4039, Salisbury, NC<lb /><lb />28145-4039. Tel.: (704) 638-3000. URL: http://www. lib.co.<lb /><lb />rowan.nc.us To receive: Contact editor at above address.<lb />Four pages with a pleasing font and several photos<lb />and graphics. It publicizes upcoming programs and<lb />reports on the Rowan Public LibraryTs special men-<lb />tion in the 1997 Library Journal/Gale Research Library<lb />of the Year Award competition. Includes the new RPL<lb />Logo to be found on the libraryTs home page.<lb /><lb />Friends of the Chapel Hill Public Library Newsletter<lb />Monthly. Editor: Margery Thompson. Address: Friends of<lb />the Chapel Hill Public Library, 100 Library Drive, Chapel<lb />Hill, NC 27514. Tel.: (919) 968-2777. URL: http://<lb />www.community.citysearch.com/FCHLibrary To receive: With<lb />membership in Friends of the Library ($10)<lb /><lb />Four page of news about upcoming events, an-<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />nouncement of the Library FoundationTs Needs As-<lb />sessment Task Force, introduction of new staff mem-<lb />ber, and announcement of childrenTs events. Illus-<lb />trated with photos.<lb /><lb />Happenings: Asheville-Buncombe Library System<lb /><lb />Monthly. Editor: Deborah Compton. Address: Friends of<lb /><lb />Buncombe County Libraries, P.O. Box 18132, Asheville,<lb /><lb />NC 28814. Tel: (704) 255-5203. To receive: With member-<lb /><lb />ship in Friend of the Buncombe County Libraries ($6).<lb />Four pages announce hours, upcoming programs,<lb />and awards to the library to improve service. In-<lb />cludes an article on how books are selected for the<lb />library. Illustrated with graphics. Format will be<lb />changing shortly.<lb /><lb />PLCMC News<lb /><lb />Irregular. Editor: Sharon M. Johnston. Address: Public Li-<lb /><lb />brary of Charlotte &amp; Mecklenburg County, 310 North<lb /><lb />Tryon Street, Charlotte, NC 28202. Tel.: (704) 336-2801. To<lb /><lb />receive: With membership in Friends of the Library. Ad-<lb /><lb />dress as above, attention Sharon Johnston.<lb />Latest issue available (Fall 96) is an 11x 25-inch<lb />folded 6-page imaginatively laid-out newsletter on<lb />glossy stock with many photos. It is designed for<lb />Friends of the Library and highlights grants and<lb />gifts received. It also publicizes the work of the li-<lb />brary, services and programs offered, and profiles<lb />library staff.<lb /><lb />¢ NC Library Association Interest Groups<lb />Ms Management: A Publication of the Roundtable on the<lb />Status of Women In Librarianship<lb />Irregular. Editors: Rex Klett and Anne Thrower. Address:<lb />Klett: Mitchell Community College, 500 West Broad St.,<lb />Statesville, NC 28677. Tel: (704) 878-3271; Thrower: Rich-<lb />mond County Public Library, 412 East Franklin St.,<lb />Rockingham, NC 28397. To receive: With membership in<lb />NC Library Association and $5 for membership in Round<lb />Table to: NCLA, c/o State Library Association, 109 E. Jones<lb />Street, Raleigh, NC.<lb />Six-to eight-page newsletter illustrated with graphics<lb />and occasional photos. Issues contain reflections<lb />from members on a wide range of issues, reports of<lb />workshops, and recommended reading. The Novem-<lb />ber 1996 issue includes an interview with Elinor<lb />Swaim recounting how she became interested in li-<lb />braries, and the work she has done on their behalf.<lb /><lb />¢ Special Libraries<lb />NCSLA Bulletin<lb />Quarterly. Editors: Andrea Rohrbacher and Kristen Roland.<lb />Address: Glaxo Welcome, 3030 Cornwallis Rd., RTP, NC<lb />27709. Tel: (919) 483-1816 e-mail: alr36770@glaxowellcome.com<lb />URL: http://ils.unc.edu/ncsla To receive: Membership in na-<lb />tional Special Libraries Association. Contact Ginny<lb />Hauswald, Winston-Salem Journal News Library, P.O. Box<lb />3159, Winston-Salem, NC 27101. Tel.: (336) 727-4071. E-<lb />mail: vhauswald@w-s-journal.com Also available from<lb />NCSLA homepage at above URL.<lb />Twenty-one pages including advertisements. Area<lb />group reports and student group reports contain<lb />much information about special library activities in<lb />North Carolina, as do the minutes of meetings. In-<lb />formation on upcoming meetings and employment<lb />opportunity information are included.<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 49<lb /></p>
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          <lb />NorTH CAROLINA LIBRARY ASSOCIATION<lb /><lb />Minutes of the Executive Board<lb />January 23, 1998, Charlotte Public Library/Main Branch<lb /><lb />Attending: Beverley Gass, Diane Kester, Maureen Costello, Liz Jackson, Susan Adams, Clarence Toomer,<lb /><lb />Martha Davis, Ann Miller, Peter Keber, Stephen Dew, Ginny Gilbert, Tracy Babiasz, Lou Bryant, Marilyn Miller,<lb />Eleanor Cook, Al Jones, Ross Holt, Vanessa Work Ramseur, Gayle Keresey, Catherine Wilkinson, Augie Beasley,<lb />Gene Lanier, Peggy Quinn, Carol Freeman, Dave Fergusson.<lb /><lb />Bob Canon, Director of the Charlotte-<lb />Mecklenburg Public Libraries welcomed<lb />the committee to the Charlotte Public<lb />Library. Mr. Canon talked briefly about<lb />the strategic plan in place which drives<lb />the Charlotte library system.<lb /><lb />President Gass called the meeting to<lb />order at 10:00 am.<lb /><lb />PresidentTs Report<lb /><lb />All committee chairs have been appointed<lb /><lb />and a schedule set for all Executive Board<lb /><lb />meetings.An attempt has been made to<lb /><lb />meet at various types of libraries through-<lb /><lb />out the state. Meeting dates and locations<lb /><lb />are as follows:<lb /><lb />e April 17, 1998 - Guilford Technical<lb />Community College in Jamestown<lb /><lb />¢ July 17, 1998 - Watauga County Public<lb />Library in Boone<lb /><lb />¢ October 16, 1998 - West Lake Elementay<lb />in Apex<lb /><lb />e January 15, 1999 - Greensboro Public<lb />Library<lb /><lb />¢ April 16, 1999 - Wake Forest University<lb />in Winston-Salem<lb /><lb />e July 16, 1999 - North Carolina<lb />Information Highway<lb /><lb />¢ September 21, 1999 - Biennial Conference<lb />in Winston-Salem<lb /><lb />Committee chairs were encouraged to<lb />contact NCLA members who volunteered<lb />for committee work at OctoberTs NCLA con-<lb />ference. Representation on each committee<lb />from all types of libraries is preferred. Fur-<lb />ther, anyone in charge of a committee, sec-<lb />tion, or round table was asked to send<lb />names of officers to Maureen Costello. A<lb />suggestion was made to put names of com-<lb />mittee members on the NCLA listserv for<lb />member information and recognition. Sec-<lb />tion and Round Table Chairs were encout-<lb />aged to invite the chairs elect to future<lb />Board meetings.<lb /><lb />Gayle Keresey, Chair of the Constitution,<lb />Codes, and Handbook Committee, has agreed<lb />to serve as the Parliamentarian. NCLA oper-<lb />ates following RobertTs Rules of Order.<lb /><lb />A reminder was given that all reports<lb />to the Executive Board should be written<lb /><lb />7270 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />and SO copies brought to the meetings for<lb />distribution. All motions that are antici-<lb />pated to be brought before the Board<lb />should be in writing and distributed with<lb />the announcement of Executive Board<lb />meetings that occur thirty days prior to<lb />each meeting.<lb /><lb />The NCLA Handbook was reviewed as<lb />an important document which explains<lb />the organization and procedures.<lb /><lb />President Gass set out her priority for<lb />the 1998-99 Biennium: to help NCLA grow<lb />in a manner that best meets the needs of<lb />the library personnel and the library com-<lb />munity of North Carolina. A strategic plan<lb />will be created to lead us into the 21st cen-<lb />tury and to strengthen the organization<lb />through activities designed to provide a<lb />model for continuous membership and<lb />organizational development.<lb /><lb />Suggestions made at the conference to<lb />consider a Retired Members Round Table<lb />and Friends of the Library group were<lb />mentioned to the board.<lb /><lb />Minutes<lb /><lb />The minutes for the October 1997 meet-<lb />ing were not available for approval. Min-<lb />utes will be mailed to Executive Board<lb />members along with revisions to the<lb />handbook. Those minutes and the Janu-<lb />ary minutes will be approved at the next<lb />board meeting.<lb /><lb />TreasurerTs Report<lb /><lb />New Treasurer Diane Kester presented<lb />charts highlighting third-quarter informa-<lb />tion on unrestricted funds, revenues, and<lb />expenditures, prepared by the previous<lb />treasurer. The 1998 proposed budget was<lb />also presented.<lb /><lb />Ross Holt pointed out that the confer-<lb />ence start-up cost of $10,000 (in the 1997<lb />budget) came out of the 1997 operating<lb />budget and will not be incurred in the<lb />1998 budget. He also cautioned board<lb />members to note that some projections in<lb />the budget are not substantiated. The<lb />1998 budget proposes an increase in<lb />membership dues. Also, the exact confer-<lb /><lb />ence revenue figures are not yet available,<lb />but will be shared at the next meeting.<lb /><lb />On February 5, Diane Kester, Wanda<lb />Brown, Beverley Gass, and Maureen<lb />Costello will attend training on Peachtree<lb />Software.<lb /><lb />Discussion was held about the need<lb />for monthly reports to be given to Round<lb />Table and Section leaders.<lb /><lb />Administrative Assistant Report<lb />Maureen Costello reported an end-of-the-<lb />year membership total of 1651. Some of<lb />those members joined during the confer-<lb />ence and have memberships extending<lb />through 1998. Membership in sections<lb />and round tables declined during 1997.<lb /><lb />Between January and March, member-<lb />ship renewal notices will be mailed.<lb /><lb />A discussion was held about obtaining<lb />e-mail addresses for members. Maureen<lb />pointed out that the official NCLA appli-<lb />cation requests this information.<lb /><lb />Section/Round Table Reports<lb />ChildrenTs Services Section<lb /><lb />Susan Adams reported that the ChildrenTs<lb />Services Section held its final meeting of the<lb />1995-97 biennium on August 25, 1997, at<lb />the Eva Perry Regional Library in Apex<lb />where plans were finalized for NCLA Con-<lb />ference activities. The October conference<lb />was very successful for CSS and included<lb />programs on North Carolina childrenTs<lb />book illustrators and mini-grants, as well as<lb />the CSS breakfast featuring Rosemary Wells.<lb />Fund-raising projects at the conference in-<lb />cluded sales of note cards, NC ChildrenTs<lb />Book Award seals, and CSS book bags.<lb /><lb />CSS has not met since the conference<lb />because it was felt to be valuable to have<lb />current budget reports and a sense of the<lb />ostate� of NCLA before the first meeting.<lb /><lb />When the CSS Board meets on Mon-<lb />day, January 26, they will be discussing<lb />the fate of the Section Newsletter oChap-<lb />book.� There is some question whether<lb />this publication needs to be continued, or<lb />whether some alternate form or format<lb />should be considered.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />The Board will begin planning for the<lb />CSS ooff-year� retreat/conference to be<lb />held in October 1998. Some of the themes<lb />being discussed include: reading trends and<lb />tips, learning games for groups, high-tech<lb />library services for children, and how to get<lb />organized and de-stressed. The conference<lb />will be open to all interested library work-<lb />ers and informational fliers will be sent out<lb />this summer.<lb /><lb />College and University Section<lb /><lb />Clarence Toomer named the newly elected<lb />members of the CUS Board for 1997-99.<lb />Their first meeting will be next month on<lb />the campus of UNC-Pembroke in the newly<lb />renovated and expanded Sampson-<lb />Livermore Library.<lb /><lb />Community and Junior College Section<lb />The new CJCS board members were con-<lb />tacted in January and asked to send ideas<lb />regarding the purpose and future of NCLA<lb />and the CJCS section for use at the NCLA<lb />Executive Board Retreat on January 22,<lb />1998. The first board meeting will be held<lb />at the Sheraton Research Triangle Park dur-<lb />ing the Learning Resources Association<lb />Conference, March 4-6, 1998.<lb /><lb />Documents Section<lb /><lb />The Documents Section NCLA Biennial<lb />Conference program was one of the best<lb />attended in recent memory. Over 100 per-<lb />sons attended a session on federal web re-<lb />sources for public, school, and small aca-<lb />demic libraries. Mary Horton (Wake Forest<lb />University), Nancy Kohlenbrander (West-<lb />ern Carolina University), and Linda Reida<lb />(Ruscola High School, Waynesville, NC)<lb />presented useful Web resources. The pro-<lb />gram was very well received. Documents<lb />Section members commented that there<lb />was new information for all!<lb /><lb />During the Documents Session Execu-<lb />tive Board meeting on December 12, 1997,<lb />the board agreed upon the spring and fall<lb />programs. In the spring, the Section will<lb />present a program on state and local gov-<lb />ernment information. The fall program will<lb />be on government information on CD-<lb />ROM and handling those products. Nancy<lb />Kohlenbrander as Vice Chair/Chair Elect is<lb />also responsible for program planning.<lb /><lb />Government information was the focus<lb />of the Fall 1997 issue of North Carolina Li-<lb />braries. Michael Van Fossen was the guest<lb />editor and many Documents Section mem-<lb />bers contributed to the issue. This issue of<lb />North Carolina Libraries provides all with a<lb />window on the changing nature of govern-<lb />ment information.<lb /><lb />At the December 1997 Executive Board<lb />meeting it was decided to press forward<lb />with plans for moving the sectionTs publi-<lb />cation The Docket to the World Wide Web.<lb />The sectionTs Web site is maintained at<lb />UNC-Chapel Hill (http://sunsite.unc.edu/<lb />reference/docs/ncladocs/index.html). The site<lb />is linked from the main NCLA web site. A<lb />move to the World Wide Web would allow<lb />the Section to cut costs and provide the<lb />opportunity for expansion without incur-<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />ring further cost.<lb /><lb />Library Administration and Management<lb />Section<lb /><lb />Martha Davis reported that on Decem-<lb />ber 5, the first LAMS board meeting was<lb />held. Since there was no representative to<lb />North Carolina Libraries, a decision was<lb />made to appoint a representative.<lb /><lb />A fall LAMS program was discussed, and<lb />ideas brainstormed. The board talked about<lb />working with the Membership Committee<lb />to increase their membership. Since that<lb />time, letters have been sent to many direc-<lb />tors of North Carolina libraries encourag-<lb />ing personal membership in LAMS and<lb />promoting membership for professional<lb />development among staff.<lb /><lb />Director Rhonda Channing attended<lb />the Council of LAM Affiliates at ALA Mid-<lb />Winter and got some good information.<lb /><lb />NC Association of School Librarians<lb /><lb />In a written report, Melinda Ratchford re-<lb />ported that the NCASL Executive Board<lb />met on December 1, 1997, in Greensboro.<lb />The Budget Committee met and approved<lb />the 1998 budget. The treasurer was in-<lb />structed to contact Beverley Gass about<lb />trying to get the federal withholding<lb />stopped.<lb /><lb />A letter had been written in October 1997<lb />to State Superintendent Mike Ward asking for a<lb />meeting with him and selected district library<lb />supervisors to discuss concerns relative to mon-<lb />ies available for print materials in public<lb />schools. Superintendent Ward has not re-<lb />sponded as of January 22, 1998.<lb /><lb />Karen Gavigan and Melinda Ratchford<lb />attended ALA Mid-Winter in New Orleans.<lb />A report will be given to the Executive<lb />Board in February in Charlotte, but it was<lb />felt among the regional attendees that Mid-<lb />Winter was not the most opportune time<lb />for Affiliate Assembly members to meet.<lb /><lb />Dr. Marilyn Shontz from UNC-G has<lb />agreed to chair the Research Committee for<lb />NCASL and will report back to the February<lb />Executive Board.<lb /><lb />The handbook will be revised during<lb />this biennium.<lb /><lb />NCASL plans to attend ALA Legislative<lb />Day in the spring of 1998 in Washington,<lb />D.C. Karen Gavigan, chair elect, reported<lb />that plans are well under way for the<lb />NCASL Conference on September 17-19,<lb />1998, in Raleigh at the Civic Center. The<lb />issue of August library sessions was dis-<lb />cussed and a decision will be made at the<lb />February Board meeting. The three August<lb />1997 sessions across the state were excep-<lb />tionally well attended and well received.<lb /><lb />NCASL Executive Board will meet on<lb />Tuesday, February 10, 1998, in Charlotte<lb />prior to NCAECT.<lb /><lb />NC Public Library Trustee Association<lb />There was no report.<lb /><lb />Public Library Section<lb /><lb />Ross Holt reported that committee chairs<lb />are being recruited and committees are be-<lb />ing organized. The planning committee<lb /><lb />will be meeting in early February.<lb /><lb />Reference and Adult Services Section<lb />Stephen Dew reported that at the NCLA<lb />Biennial Conference in October 1997 the<lb />Reference and Adult Services Section spon-<lb />sored two events. On Thursday, October 9,<lb />the Section sponsored its regular confer-<lb />ence program as well as a special confer-<lb />ence luncheon. The regular program was<lb />concerned with the subject oTechnostress,�<lb />and was presented by Sally Kalin and Katie<lb />Clark from Pennsylvania State University.<lb />The luncheon program was highlighted by<lb />a presentation from Joel Achenbach, a<lb />writer for the Washington Post, author of<lb />Why Things Are, and frequent guest on Na-<lb />tional Public RadioTs Morning Edition. Both<lb />programs were well attended, and evalua-<lb />tions were quite positive.<lb /><lb />The RASS Executive Committee met on<lb />Friday, December 12, 1997, at the UNC-<lb />Charlotte campus. The committee began<lb />its deliberations by discussing matters re-<lb />lated to the SectionTs two programs pre-<lb />sented at biennial conference, and after-<lb />wards it moved on to discussing prelimi-<lb />nary plans for a fall program to be held<lb />this year. RASS tentatively plans to present<lb />a program related to the impact of the NC-<lb />LIVE project on reference, and public ser-<lb />vices. Although the date has not yet been<lb />set, the program will most likely be held<lb />during October or early November.<lb /><lb />Resources and Technical Services Section<lb />Ginny Gilbert summarized the activities of<lb />the Section at the NCLA Biennial Confer-<lb />ence. The election of officers for the 1997-<lb />1999 board was held at the business meeting<lb />of the Section prior to their major program.<lb />The major program, attended by 120, was<lb />oPerspectives on Outsources of Technical<lb />Services Operations,� presented by Arnold<lb />Hirshon, Vice Provost for Information Re-<lb />sources, Lehigh University. Table Talks in-<lb />cluded oIncreasing User Input in Developing<lb />and Managing Collections,� facilitated by<lb />Teresa L. McManus, Fayetteville State Univer-<lb />sity (attendance: 36); oThe Web in Technical<lb />Services Operations,� facilitated by Eleanor<lb />Cook of Appalachian State University and<lb />Alan Keely, Wake Forest University (atten-<lb />dance: 40); and oPassport for Windows,�<lb />facilitated by Margaretta Yarborough, from<lb />the University of North Carolina at Chapel<lb />Hill (attendance: 35).<lb /><lb />Two awards were presented. Robert<lb />Galbreath received an award for the best<lb />technical services article in North Carolina<lb />Libraries for his article, oNailing Jell-O to<lb />the Wall? Collection Management in the<lb />Electronic Era,� North Carolina Libraries 55<lb />(Spring 1997), 19-21. Carrie McLean re-<lb />ceived the Resources &amp; Technical Services<lb />Student Recognition Award.<lb /><lb />The new board will have its initial<lb />meeting in February and begin planning a<lb />workshop to be held in the fall of 1998.<lb /><lb />A membership directory of the Section<lb />was distributed in the spring of 1997.<lb />There is a commitment to keep this direc-<lb />tory up-to-date.<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 71<lb /></p>
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        <p>The chair reported on the activities of<lb />RTSS at the Council of Regional Groups at<lb />ALA Mid-Winter in New Orleans. One of<lb />the ideas presented was keeping a listserv<lb />of speakers available for programs.<lb /><lb />New Members Round Table<lb /><lb />Tracy Babiasz reported that the New Mem-<lb />bers Round Table has not met since the<lb />conference. Speaker Doreen Sanders was<lb />very successful at the conference.<lb /><lb />Discussions about mentoring NCLA<lb />members who are first-year librarians, one<lb />of the action plans developed at the Janu-<lb />ary 22 retreat to increase membership,<lb />have started with LAMS.<lb /><lb />Committee chairs for three of the four<lb />standing committees have been named. A<lb />chair for the fourth standing committee and<lb />those interested in serving on a committee<lb />are still needed. The NCLA Web site contains<lb />job descriptions for those positions. Presi-<lb />dent Gass suggested that the committee vol-<lb />unteer list from the conference be checked<lb />for interested committee members.<lb /><lb />NC Library Paraprofessional Association<lb />Lou Bryant reported that there was an or-<lb />ganizational meeting on January 15 at Eva<lb />Perry Library. They are making a real effort<lb />to attract people who have never been in-<lb />volved before.<lb /><lb />They were very pleased with the over-<lb />whelming response to programs held this<lb />past year. Between 90 and 125 attended each.<lb /><lb />New programming will include training<lb />to help patrons use the Internet. A program<lb />chair is still needed.<lb /><lb />Round Table for Ethnic Minority Concerns<lb />There was no report.<lb /><lb />Round Table on Special Collections<lb /><lb />Last year a successful series of five regional<lb />workshops was held on the development of<lb />local history collections. RTSC is planning<lb />a series of three workshops this spring on<lb />how to administer oral history projects and<lb />programs. Workshops will be held in April,<lb />May, and June in Williamston, Pinehurst,<lb />and hopefully, Lenoir.<lb /><lb />Round Table on the Status of Women<lb />Marilyn Miller reported that their program<lb />at the conference featuring Margaret Marin<lb />was very well attended. This program was<lb />presented in collaboration with the Public<lb />Library Section.<lb /><lb />The second executive board meeting of<lb />this biennium will be held in February at<lb />which a discussion of the mission and objec-<lb />tives, and an evaluation of the activities and<lb />projects needed to ensure carrying out of the<lb />mission and objectives, will take place.<lb /><lb />A workshop in the area of motivation is<lb />being discussed for late spring.<lb /><lb />The first newsletter of the biennium is<lb />in the mail.<lb /><lb />Technology and Trends Round Table<lb />Eleanor Cook reported that a membership<lb />luncheon and Table Talk featured Richard<lb />Dougherty of the University of Michigan<lb /><lb />72 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />and a panel of experts discussing the North<lb />Carolina Information Highway.<lb /><lb />New board membersT names are posted<lb />on the Web site.<lb /><lb />No meetings have been scheduled as yet.<lb />Meetings will be planned after the Executive<lb />Board retreat which will determine the de-<lb />mands for the biennium. Technology and<lb />Trends sees its round table as a collaborative<lb />group, working with other sections, round<lb />tables, and committees in a service capacity.<lb />They have had a history of successful work-<lb />shops in training to use the Internet. Incom-<lb />ing chairs have already been contacted and a<lb />wide range of collaborative possibilities for<lb />this biennium exist.<lb /><lb />Committee Reports<lb />Archives<lb />Carrie Nichols of Meredith College will be<lb />serving as chairman of this committee.<lb />President Gass explained that it is the<lb />practice for each outgoing committee chair<lb />to pass to the current committee chair the<lb />files for the biennium just ending. Then, in<lb />two years the records being received now<lb />by committee chairs from predecessors will<lb />be sent to the Archives. Archival records<lb />are kept at the State Library.<lb /><lb />Conference<lb />Al Jones reported that the 1999 NCLA Bi-<lb />ennial Conference will be held September<lb />21-24, 1999, at the Benton Convention<lb />Center in Winston-Salem. The 2001 Con-<lb />ference will be held there also. Convention<lb />sites for 2003 and 2005 will be contacted<lb />within the next quarter. Sites to be sent<lb />proposals are Raleigh, Charlotte, Winston-<lb />Salem, and High Point.<lb />The following Subcommittee chairs for<lb />the 1999 Conference Planning Committee<lb />have been appointed and have accepted:<lb />¢ Phil Barton (Rowan Public Library), Program<lb />¢ Rodney Lippard (Catawba College Library),<lb />Exhibits<lb /><lb />¢ Gayle Fishel (Davidson College Public<lb />Relations), Publicity<lb /><lb />¢ Gerald Holmes (UNC-Charlotte), Recruitment<lb /><lb />e Ednita Bullock (NC A&amp;T University),<lb />Conference Store<lb /><lb />e Richard Wells (Randolph Public Library),<lb />Fundraising<lb /><lb />e Leland Park (Davidson College Library),<lb />Conference Advisor<lb /><lb />Decisions are pending on chairs for Lo-<lb />cal Arrangements and Registration.<lb /><lb />The full committee will meet at<lb />Catawba College in the spring to decide on<lb />the theme for the conference. Subcommit-<lb />tee chairs will appoint members. The full<lb />conference committee will begin monthly<lb />meetings in September 1998.<lb /><lb />A request was made of the Executive<lb />Board that Al Jones be e-mailed or called<lb />with the names of those reponsible for pro-<lb />gram planning from each section and<lb />round table.<lb /><lb />Constitution, Codes and Handbook<lb />There was no report.<lb /><lb />Finance<lb />There was no report.<lb /><lb />Governmental Issues<lb />There was no report.<lb /><lb />Intellectual Freedom<lb /><lb />Gene Lanier reported that since the confer-<lb />ence, the IF Committee has received three<lb />to four challenge calls per month.<lb /><lb />IF is helping libraries update selection<lb />policies and formulating Internet Use Poli-<lb />cies. The term oAcceptable� is being<lb />dropped from this terminology. To follow<lb />up on changes, members can connect to<lb />ALA.ORG, then click on Offices, then click<lb />on OIF to view documents, the Library Bill<lb />of Rights, and interpretations.<lb /><lb />New committee members will be posted<lb />on the NCLA-L listserv and can be con-<lb />tacted for challenges. The IF Committee<lb />can send documentation to support librar-<lb />ies as needed during challenges.<lb /><lb />Leadership Institute<lb />The LI Committee is still in the develop-<lb />ment stages.<lb /><lb />The two leaders who conducted the<lb />1996 Institute will be returning to lead this<lb />yearTs Institute, tentatively scheduled for<lb />Thursday, November 5, through Sunday,<lb />November 8, 1998.<lb /><lb />Marketing and Publications<lb />Carol Freeman reported that committee<lb />members have been contacted.<lb /><lb />The committee is looking for volunteers<lb />with expertise in Web pages or electronic<lb />newsletters.<lb /><lb />Membership<lb /><lb />Peggy Quinn, Membership Chair, reported<lb />that this committee is still forming. A firm<lb />date has not been set for the first meeting.<lb /><lb />Nominating<lb />There was no report.<lb /><lb />Scholarships<lb />There was no report.<lb /><lb />Special Projects<lb />There was no report.<lb /><lb />NCLA Development Committee<lb />Ross Holt explained the purposes of the<lb />NCLA Development Committee:<lb /><lb />1. To serve as a source of expertise and<lb />advice on fundraising for NCLA, its sec-<lb />tions, round tables and committees;<lb /><lb />2. To build relationships with potential do-<lb />nors including corporations, individuals, phil-<lb />anthropic organizations and other groups;<lb /><lb />3. To educate sections, round tables, com-<lb />mittees and members of NCLA about the<lb />practices associated with development;<lb /><lb />4. To serve as a vehicle for liaison among<lb />various NCLA groups raising funds for spe-<lb />cial projects;<lb /><lb />5. To develop an endowment for North<lb />Carolina Libraries.<lb /><lb />In addition to committee members<lb />drawn from the general membership, the<lb />committee wil include a member of the<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />Finance Committee, a member of the<lb />Conference Fundraising Committee and<lb />members of any other NCLA group raising<lb />funds for special projects, such as the<lb />Leadership Institute. Peter Keber has also<lb />agreed to serve.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />The North Carolina Libraries editorial board<lb />held its annual retreat in November. During<lb />the retreat, new issues of the journal were<lb />planned. After several rather major prob-<lb />lems, the conference issue will be out in a<lb />couple of weeks.<lb /><lb />Many NCLA Sections and Round Tables<lb />may be contemplating a change in their<lb />editorial board representation. Before doing<lb />so, please contact Frances Bradburn, editor.<lb /><lb />New Business<lb />President Gass reviewed the goals, objec-<lb />tives, and action plans brainstormed at the<lb />retreat. Goals and objectives are as follows:<lb />Goal 1: Increase membership.<lb />Objective: Create a perception of worth<lb />Objective: Actively recruit library school<lb />students<lb />Goal 2: Intellectual Freedom<lb />Objective: Continue advocacy for Intel-<lb />lectual Freedom<lb />Objective: To educate the public about<lb />freedom of information<lb />Objective: Form coalitions with other local,<lb />regional, state, national organizations to<lb />promote intellectual freedom issues<lb />Goal 3: Continuing Education<lb />Objective: Increase accessibility of con-<lb />tinuing education to all members<lb />Objective: Learn how to market and pro-<lb />mote continuing education opportunities<lb />Objective: Identify and maximize con-<lb />tinuing education resources<lb />Objective: Encourage administrators to<lb />promote Continuing Education<lb />Goal 4: Communication with Membership<lb />Objective: Electronic access<lb />Objective: Develop an electronic news-<lb />letter to include continuing education,<lb />advocacy, legislation, committee/<lb />round table/section minutes and an-<lb />nouncements, news releases and jobs.<lb /><lb />With respect to the Goal 4 Objective to<lb />Communicate with the membership to<lb />oDevelop an electronic newsletter to in-<lb />clude continuing education, advocacy, legis-<lb />lation, committee/round table/section min-<lb />utes and announcements, news releases and<lb />jobs,� Ross Holt moved to ask the Market-<lb />ing and Publication Committee to examine<lb />the possibility of a monthly or bimonthly<lb />newsletter or report. They further were<lb />asked to determine the best format for de-<lb />livery (electronic or print), and return with<lb />a recommendation to the Executive Board.<lb />The Marketing and Publication Committee<lb />was authorized to take a survey of the mem-<lb />bership if necessary. Special funding for<lb />such a survey can be requested.<lb /><lb />The motion was seconded and carried.<lb /><lb />Discussion clarified that the NCLA<lb />Web page is an ad-hoc subcommittee of<lb />the Marketing and Publication Commit-<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />tee. President Gass was questioned if sec-<lb />tion, round table, and committee chairs<lb />turned in a list of meeting dates to<lb />Maureen. If schedules were channeled to<lb />her, and Maureen worked with the Web-<lb />master to have those dates posted, some<lb />of the immediacy discussed for newsletter<lb />items could be addressed. Maureen noted<lb />that an NCLA calendar was set up through<lb />the year 2002. President Gass reminded all<lb />members of the importance of checking<lb />the master calendar for conflicts before<lb />scheduling meetings and activities.<lb /><lb />Dave Fergusson suggested that the<lb />Marketing and Publication Committee is<lb />one that has two completely separate<lb />functions, and that perhaps it should be<lb />split into two committees - the Marketing<lb />Committee and the Communications<lb />Committee, which would include all<lb />forms of communication. He also ex-<lb />pressed concern that the committeeTs re-<lb />sponsibilities were too large. Another<lb />comment was made that marketing per-<lb />haps should belong with the Develop-<lb />ment Committee. The point was made<lb /><lb />that the Marketing and Publications Com-<lb />mittees had been joined after some effort.<lb />President Gass announced that a decision<lb />to split the committee could not be<lb />quickly made, but acknowledged that the<lb />marketing element and communication<lb />element and their relationships to Devel-<lb />opment were items to be addressed.<lb /><lb />Discussion was held about the need<lb />for a Continuing Education committee to<lb />serve all sections and round tables, con-<lb />cluding that members just need access to<lb />a general NCLA calendar of events.<lb /><lb />A Continuing Education oevent� held<lb />on the off-year from the conference was<lb />proposed. This event would be as low-cost<lb />as possible, held at a community college<lb />instead of a conference center, and draw<lb />on the expertise of NCLA members. Dis-<lb />cussion will continue.<lb /><lb />The meeting was adjourned at 12:00.<lb /><lb />" Respectfully submitted<lb />Liz Jackson<lb /><lb />ABOUT THE AUTHORS ...<lb /><lb />Robert G. Anthony, Jr.<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., Wake Forest University; M.S.L.S. University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill<lb />Position: Curator, North Carolina Collection, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill<lb /><lb />James V. Carmichael, Jr.<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., M.L.S., Emory University; Ph.D., University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill<lb />Position: Associate Professor, Department of Library and Information Studies, University<lb /><lb />of North Carolina-Greensboro<lb /><lb />Thomas Kevin B. Cherry<lb /><lb />Education: B.S., M.A., M.S.L.S., University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill<lb />Position: Local History Librarian, Rowan Public Library<lb /><lb />Gillian M. Debreczeny<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., University of London; M.L.S., University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill<lb />Position: Librarian, School of Information and Library Science, University of North<lb /><lb />Carolina-Chapel Hill<lb /><lb />Plummer Alston Jones, Jr.<lb /><lb />Education: B.Mus., East Carolina University; M.S., Drexel University; Ph.D., University of<lb /><lb />North Carolina-Chapel Hill<lb /><lb />Position: Director of Library Services and Professor, Catawba College<lb /><lb />Eileen McGrath<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., Saint Lawrence University; M.A., Vanderbilt Univeristy; M.L.S. , George<lb /><lb />Peabody College<lb /><lb />Position: Collection Management Librarian, North Carolina Collection, University of<lb /><lb />North Carolina-Chapel Hill<lb /><lb />Rose Simon<lb /><lb />Education: A.B., Ph.D., University of Rochester; M.A., University of Virginia; M.S.L.S.,<lb />University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill<lb /><lb />Position: Director of Libraries, Salem College<lb /><lb />Patrick M. Valentine<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., M.L., University of South Carolina; Ph.D., Tulane University<lb />Position: Director, Wilson County Public Library<lb /><lb />Maurice C. York<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., M.A., M.S.L.S., University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill<lb /><lb />Position: North Carolina Librarian, East Carolina University<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 4%<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Nort Caro.ina Liprary ASSOCIATION 1997-1999 ExECUTIVE BOARD<lb /><lb />PRESIDENT<lb /><lb />Beverley Gass<lb /><lb />M.W. Bell Library<lb /><lb />Guilford Technical College<lb />P.O. Box 309<lb /><lb />Jamestown NC 27282-0309<lb /><lb />Telephone: 336/334-4822<lb />x2434<lb />Fax: 336/841-4350<lb /><lb />GASSB@GTCC.CC.NC.US<lb /><lb />VICE PRESIDENT/<lb /><lb />PRESIDENT ELECT<lb /><lb />Plummer Alston ~AlT Jones, Jr.<lb />Catawba College<lb /><lb />2300 W. Innes Street<lb />Salisbury, NC 28144<lb /><lb />Telephone: 704/637-4449<lb />Fax: 704/637-4204<lb />PAJONES@CATAWBA.EDU<lb />SECRETARY<lb /><lb />Elizabeth J. Jackson<lb />West Lake Elementary School<lb /><lb />207 Glen Bonnie Lane<lb />Apex, NC 27511<lb /><lb />Telephone: 919/380-8232<lb />LIZ@MAIL.WLE.APEX.K12.NC.US<lb />TREASURER<lb /><lb />Diane D. Kester<lb /><lb />East Carolina University<lb />105 Longview Drive<lb />Goldsboro, NC 27534-8871<lb /><lb />Telephone: 919/328-6621<lb /><lb />Fax: 919/328-4638<lb /><lb />LSDDKEST@EASTNET.EDUC.ECU.EDU<lb />DIRECTORS<lb /><lb />Vanessa Work Ramseur<lb />Hickory Grove<lb /><lb />7209 E. W.T. Harris Blvd.<lb />Charlotte, NC 28227<lb /><lb />Telephone: 704/563-9418<lb />Fax: 704/568-2686<lb />VWR@PLCMC.LIB.NC.US<lb />Ross Holt<lb /><lb />Raldolph Public Library<lb /><lb />201 Worth Street<lb /><lb />Asheboro, NC 27203<lb />Telephone: 336/318-6806<lb />Fax: 336/3186823<lb />RHOLT@NCSL.DCR.STATE.NC.US<lb /><lb />ALA COUNCILOR<lb /><lb />Jacqueline B. Beach<lb /><lb />Craven-Pamlico-Carteret<lb />Regional Library<lb /><lb />400 Johnson<lb /><lb />New Bern, NC 28560<lb /><lb />Telephone: 919/823-1141<lb /><lb />Fax: 919/638-7817<lb /><lb />724 " Spring 1998<lb /><lb />SELA REPRESENTATIVE<lb /><lb />Nancy Clark Fogarty<lb /><lb />Jackson Library<lb />UNC-Greensboro<lb /><lb />Greensboro, NC 27412<lb />Telephone: 336/334-5419<lb />Fax: 336/334-5097<lb />FOGARTYN@IRIS.UNCG.EDU<lb /><lb />EDITOR, North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />Frances Bryant Bradburn<lb />Evaluation Services<lb /><lb />NC Dept. of Public Instruction<lb />301 N. Wilmington Street<lb />Raleigh, NC 27601-2825<lb />Telephone: 919/715-1528<lb />Fax: 919/715-4762<lb />FBRADBUR@DPL.STATE.NC.US<lb /><lb />PAST-PRESIDENT<lb /><lb />David Fergusson<lb /><lb />Forsyth County Public Library<lb />660 W. Fifth Street<lb />Winston-Salem NC 27101<lb />Telephone: 336/727-2556<lb />Fax: 336/727-2549<lb /><lb />D_FERGUSSON@FORSYTH.LIB.NC.US<lb /><lb />ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT<lb /><lb />Maureen Costello<lb /><lb />North Carolina Library Association<lb />c/o State Library of North Carolina<lb />Rm. 27 109 E. Jones St.<lb /><lb />Raleigh, NC 27601-1023<lb />Telephone: 919/839-6252<lb />Fax: 919/839-6252<lb />MCOSTELLO@NCSLDCRSTATENCUS<lb /><lb />SECTION CHAIRS<lb /><lb />CHILDRENTS SERVICES SECTION<lb /><lb />Susan Adams<lb /><lb />Southeast Regional Library<lb />908 7th Avenue<lb /><lb />Garner, NC 27529<lb /><lb />Telephone: 919/662-6635<lb />Fax: 919/662-2270<lb />STORYSUZ@AOL.COM<lb /><lb />COLLEGE anp UNIVERSITY SECTION<lb /><lb />Clarence Toomer<lb /><lb />Mary Livermore Library<lb />UNC-Pembroke<lb />Pembroke, NC 28372<lb /><lb />Telephone: 910/521-6212<lb />Fax: 910/521-6547<lb />TOOMER@NAT.PEMBROKE<lb /><lb />COMMUNITY anp JUNIOR<lb />COLLEGE LIBRARIES SECTION<lb /><lb />Martha E. Davis<lb /><lb />M. W. Bell Library<lb /><lb />Guilford Tech. Comm. College<lb />P. O. Box 309<lb /><lb />Jamestown, NC 27282-0309<lb />Telephone: 336/334-4822<lb />Fax: 336/841-4350<lb />DAVISM@GTCC.CC.NC.US<lb /><lb />DOCUMENTS SECTION<lb />Ann Miller<lb />Perkins Library<lb />Duke University<lb />Durham, NC 27708-0177<lb /><lb />Telephone: 919/660-5855<lb />Fax: 919/660-2855<lb />AEM@MAIL.LIB.DUKE.EDU<lb /><lb />LIBRARY ADMINISTRATION anp<lb />MANAGEMENT SECTION<lb />Rhoda Channing<lb />Z. Smith Reynolds Library<lb />Box 7777<lb />Wake Forest University<lb />Winston-Salem, NC 27109-7777<lb /><lb />Telephone: 336/759-5090<lb />Fax: 336/759-9831<lb />CHANNING@WFU.EDU<lb /><lb />NORTH CAROLINA ASSOCIATION<lb />OF SCHOOL LIBRARIANS<lb />Malinda Ratchford<lb />Gaston County Schools<lb />366 W. Garrison Blvd.<lb />Gastonia, NC 28052<lb />Telephone: 704/866-6251<lb />Fax: 704/866-6194<lb />MELEIS@AOL.COM<lb /><lb />NORTH CAROLINA PUBLIC<lb /><lb />LIBRARY TRUSTEES ASSOCIATION<lb /><lb />Peter Keber<lb /><lb />Public Library of Charlotte/<lb />Mecklenburg County<lb /><lb />310 North Tryon Street<lb /><lb />Charlotte, NC 28202<lb /><lb />Telephone: 704/386-5086<lb />Fax: 704/386-6444<lb />PK@PLCMC.LIB.NC.US<lb /><lb />PUBLIC LIBRARY SECTION<lb />Steve Sumerford<lb />Glenwood Branch Library<lb />1901 W. Florida Street<lb />Greensboro, NC 27403<lb />Telephone: 336/297-5002<lb />Fax: 336/297-5005<lb />GLENWOOD@NR.INFI.NET<lb /><lb />REFERENCE anp ADULT SERVICES<lb />Stephen Dew<lb />Atkins Library<lb />UNC-Charlotte<lb />Charlotte, NC 28223<lb />Telephone: 704/547-2806<lb />Fax: 704/547-2322<lb />SHDEW@UNCCV.UNCC.EDU<lb /><lb />RESOURCES anp TECHNICAL<lb />SERVICES SECTION<lb />Ginny Gilbert<lb />Perkins Library<lb />Duke University<lb />230C Box 90191<lb />Durham, NC 27708<lb />Telephone: 919/660-5815<lb />Fax: 919/684-2855<lb />VAG@MAIL.LIB.DUKE.EDU<lb /><lb />ROUND TABLE CHAIRS<lb /><lb />NEW MEMBERS ROUND TABLE<lb />Tracy Babiasz<lb />Durham County Library<lb />300 N. Roxboro Street<lb />PO Box 3809<lb />Durham, NC 27702-3809<lb />Telephone: 919/560-0191<lb />Fax: 919/560-0137<lb />TBABIASZ@NCSL.DCR.STATE.NC.US<lb /><lb />NORTH CAROLINA LIBRARY<lb />PARAPROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATION<lb />Lou Bryant<lb />Eva Perry Regional Library<lb />2100 ShepherdTs Vineyard<lb />Apex, NC 28502<lb /><lb />Telephone: 919/387-2100<lb />Fax: 919/387-4320<lb />LBRYANT@WAKE.NC.US<lb /><lb />ROUND TABLE FOR ETHNIC<lb />MINORITY CONCERNS<lb />Barbara Best-Nichols<lb />Reichold Chemicals, Inc.<lb />6124 Yellowstone Drive<lb />Durham, NC 27713-9708<lb />Telephone: 919/990-8054<lb />Fax: 919/990-7859<lb />BARBARA.BEST-NICHOLS<lb />@REICHOLD.COM<lb /><lb />ROUND TABLE ON SPECIAL<lb />COLLECTIONS<lb />Maury York<lb />Joyner Library<lb />East Carolina University<lb />Greenville, NC 27858<lb />Telephone: 252/328-6601<lb />YORKM@MAIL.ECU.EDU<lb /><lb />ROUND TABLE ON THE STATUS<lb /><lb />OF WOMEN IN LIBRARIANSHIP<lb />Marilyn Miller ;<lb />4103 Friendly Avenue<lb />Greensboro, NC 27410<lb />Telephone: 336/299-8659<lb />Fax: 336/334-5060<lb />M_MILLER@HAMLET.UNCG.EDU<lb /><lb />TECHNOLOGY AND TRENDS<lb />ROUND TABLE<lb />Eleanor I. Cook<lb />Belk Library<lb />Appalachian State University<lb />Boone, NC 28606<lb /><lb />Telephone: 704/262-2786<lb />Fax: 704/262-2773<lb />COOKEI@APPSTATE.EDU<lb /><lb />NCLA<lb /><lb />North Carolina Library Association<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />EDITORIAL STAFF<lb /><lb />Editor<lb />FRANCES BRYANT BRADBURN<lb />Evaluation Services<lb />NC Dept. of Public Instruction<lb />301 N. Wilmington Street<lb />Raleigh, NC 27601-2825<lb />(919) 715-1528<lb />(919) 715-4823 (FAX)<lb />fbradbur@dpi.state.nc.us<lb /><lb />Associate Editor<lb />ROSE SIMON<lb />Dale H. Gramley Library<lb />Salem College<lb />Winston-Salem, NC 27108<lb />(336) 917-5421<lb />simon@sisters.salem.edu<lb /><lb />Associate Editor<lb />JOHN WELCH<lb />Division of State Library<lb />109 East Jones Street<lb />Raleigh, NC 27601-2807<lb />(919) 733-2570<lb />jwelch@hal.dcr.state.nc.us<lb /><lb />Book Review Editor<lb />DOROTHY DAVIS HODDER<lb />New Hanover Co. Public Library<lb />201 Chestnut Street<lb />Wilmington, NC 28401<lb />(910) 341-4389<lb />dhodder@co.new-hanover.nc.us<lb /><lb />Lagniappe Editor<lb />PLUMMER ALSTON JONES, JR.<lb />Corriher-Linn-Black Library<lb />Catawba College ,<lb />2300 W. Innes Street<lb />Salisbury, NC 28144<lb />(704) 637-4449<lb />pajones@catawba.edu<lb /><lb />Indexer<lb />MICHAEL COTTER<lb />Joyner Library<lb />East Carolina University<lb />Greenville, NC 27858-4353<lb />(252) 328-0237<lb />cottermi@mail.ecu.edu<lb /><lb />Advertising Manager<lb />HARRY TUCHMAYER<lb />New Hanover Co. Public Library<lb />201 Chestnut Street<lb />Wilmington, NC 28401<lb />(910) 341-4036<lb /><lb />Between Us Editor<lb />KEVIN CHERRY<lb />Rowan Public Library<lb />P.O. Box 4039<lb />Salisbury, NC 28145-4039<lb />(704) 638-3021<lb />kcherry@ncsl.dcr.state.nc.us<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />ChildrenTs Services<lb />MELVIN K. BURTON<lb /><lb />Public Library of Charlotte &amp; Mecklenburg<lb /><lb />North County Regional Library<lb />16500 Holly Crest Lane<lb />Huntersville, NC 28078<lb /><lb />(704) 895-8178<lb />mburton@plcmce.lib.nc.us<lb /><lb />College and University<lb />ARTEMIS KARES<lb />Joyner Library<lb />East Carolina University<lb />Greenville, NC 27858-4353<lb />(252) 328-2263<lb />karesa@mail.ecu.edu<lb /><lb />Community and Junior College<lb />BARBARA MILLER MARSON<lb />Paul H. Thompson Library<lb />Fayetteville Tech. Comm. College<lb />PO Box 35236<lb />Fayetteville, NC 28303<lb />(910) 678-8253<lb /><lb />Documents<lb />MICHAEL VAN FOSSEN<lb />Reference Documents<lb />Davis Library CB #3912<lb />University of North Carolina<lb />Chapel Hill, NC 27599<lb />(919) 962-1151<lb />vanfosen.davis@mhs.unc.edu<lb /><lb />Library Administration and<lb />Management Section<lb />JOLINE EZZELL<lb />Perkins Library<lb />Duke University<lb />Durham, NC 27708-0175<lb />(919) 660-5925<lb />jre@mail.lib.duke.edu<lb /><lb />New Members Round Table<lb />RHONDA FLORENCE<lb />Florence Elementary School<lb />High Point, NC 27265<lb />(336) 819-2120<lb /><lb />rholbroo@guilford.k12.nc.us<lb /><lb />N.C. Asso. of School Librarians<lb />DIANE KESSLER<lb />Durham Public Schools<lb />808 Bacon St.<lb />Durham, NC 27703<lb />(919) 560-2360<lb />kesslerd@bacon.durham.k12.nc.us<lb /><lb />North Carolina Library<lb />Paraprofessional Association<lb /><lb />SHARON NOLES<lb /><lb />Southeast Regional Library in Garner<lb />908 7th Avenue<lb /><lb />Garner, NC 27529<lb /><lb />(919) 894-8322<lb /><lb />Public Library Section<lb />ROSS HOLT<lb />Randolph Public Library<lb />201 Worth St.<lb />Asheboro, NC 27203<lb />(336) 318-6806<lb />trholt@ncsl.dcr.state.nc.us<lb /><lb />Reference/Adult Services<lb />SUZANNE WISE<lb />Belk Library<lb />Appalachian State University<lb />Boone, NC 28608<lb />(704) 262-2798<lb />wisems@appstate.edu<lb /><lb />Resources and Technical Services<lb />PAGE LIFE<lb />Davis Library CB#3914<lb />UNC-Chapel Hill<lb />Chapel Hill, NC 27514-8890<lb />(919) 962-0153<lb />page_life@unc.edu<lb /><lb />Round Table for Ethnic Minority Concerns<lb /><lb />BRIGITTE BLANTON<lb />Greensboro Public Library<lb />PO Box 3178<lb /><lb />Greensboro, NC 27402-3178<lb />(336) 373-2716<lb />ncs0921@interpath.com<lb /><lb />Round Table on Special Collections<lb />MEGAN MULDER<lb />Wake Forest University Library<lb />PO Box 7777 Reynolda Station<lb />Winston-Salem, NC 27109-7777<lb />(336) 758-5091<lb />mulder@wfu.edu<lb /><lb />Round Table on the Status of Women<lb />in Librarianship<lb /><lb />JOAN SHERIF<lb /><lb />Northwestern Regional Library<lb />111 North Front Street<lb /><lb />Elkin, NC 28621<lb /><lb />(336) 835-4894<lb />jsherif@ncsl.dcr.state.nc.us<lb /><lb />Technology and Trends<lb />DIANE KESTER<lb />Library Studies and Ed. Technology<lb />East Carolina University<lb />Greenville, NC 27858-4353<lb />(252) 328-4389<lb />Isddkest@eastnet.educ.ecu.edu<lb /><lb />Wired to the World Editor<lb />RALPH LEE SCOTT<lb />Joyner Library<lb />East Carolina University<lb />Greenville, NC 27858-4353<lb />(252) 328-0235<lb />scottr@mail.ecu.edu<lb /><lb />Trustees<lb />ANNE B. WILGUS<lb />N.C. Wesleyan College<lb />Rocky Mount, NC 27804<lb />(252) 442-2662<lb />(252) 977-3701 (FAX)<lb /><lb />Spring 1998 " 49<lb /></p>
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          <lb />NLA. North Carotina Library Association<lb /><lb />Use the application below to enroll as a member of the North Carolina Library Asssociation or to renew your<lb />membership. All memberships are for one calendar year. THE MEMBERSHIP YEAR IS JANUARY 1 THROUGH<lb />DECEMBER 31. If you join during the last quarter of the year, membership covers the next year.<lb /><lb />Dues (see below) entitle you to membership in the Association and to one section or round table. For each<lb />additional section or round table, add $5.00. Return this form with your check or money order, payable to<lb />North Carolina Library Association.<lb /><lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />NCLA DUES |<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb /><lb />(Membership and One Section or Round Table)<lb />m FULL-TIME LIBRARY SCHOOL m LIBRARY PERSONNEL<lb />STUDENTS (two years only) .... $10 Banningup to. $15,000 2... keene $15<lb />Earning $15,001 to $25,000........... $25<lb />m RETIRED LIBRARIANS ............. $15 Earning $25,001 to $35,000 ......... $30<lb />m NON-LIBRARY PERSONNEL: Earning $35,001 to $45,000 a isreielgsisiets $35<lb />(Trustee, Non-salaried, or Friends Earning $45,001 and above........... $40<lb />of Libraries member) ............... $15<lb />m INSTITUTIONAL (Libraries &amp; m CONTRIBUTING (Individuals, Associations,<lb />Library/Education-related ; and Firms interested in the work of<lb />BUSINESSES) ca cn a tern ene. $50 IN (GY Bik eae aR nce irerenetnn ee cenee esha $100<lb /><lb />NORTH CAROLINA LIBRARY ASSOCIATION<lb /><lb />please print or type CHECK SECTIONS AND ROUND TABLES<lb />New membership ____ Renewal ONE INCLUDED IN BASIC DUES. Add $5.00 for<lb />each additional section or round table.<lb />Membership Number if Renewal ChildrenTs Services<lb />_._" College &amp; University Section<lb />Name ___ Community &amp; Junior College Libraries Section<lb />Last First Middle<lb /><lb />Documents Section<lb /><lb />Library Administration &amp; Management<lb />NC Association of School Librarians<lb />NC Public Library Trustees Association<lb />Public Library Section<lb /><lb />Reference &amp; Adult Services Section<lb /><lb />Title<lb /><lb />Library<lb /><lb />Business Address<lb /><lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />|<lb />Resources and Technical Services Section |<lb />New Members Round Table |<lb />NC Library Paraprofessional Association |<lb />|<lb /><lb />|<lb /><lb />|<lb /><lb />|<lb /><lb />|<lb /><lb />|<lb /><lb />|<lb /><lb />|<lb /><lb />|<lb /><lb />|<lb /><lb />|<lb /><lb />|<lb /><lb />|<lb /><lb />|<lb /><lb />|<lb /><lb />|<lb /><lb />Cit Stat Zi<lb />6s = "P Round Table for Ethnic Minority Concerns<lb /><lb />Round Table on Special Collections<lb /><lb />Daytime Telephone Number<lb />ye P oe Round Table on the Status of Women in Librarianship<lb /><lb />Area Code ary,<lb />~~ Technology &amp; Trends Round Table<lb />Mailing Address (if different from above) AMOUNT ENCLOSED: (SEE ABOVE)<lb />$ Membership and one section/round table<lb /><lb />TYPE OF LIBRARY I WORK IN: $5.00 for each additional section/round table<lb /><lb />___ Academic<lb /><lb />___ Public $ TOTAL (PLEASE DO NOT SEND CASH)<lb /><lb />_¥seSchool<lb /><lb />=, Special<lb /><lb />Other<lb /><lb />Mail to: North Carolina Library Association<lb /><lb />c/o State Library of North Carolina<lb />109 East Jones Street<lb />Raleigh, NC 27601-1023<lb />| THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT, NCLA Office Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-1 Telephone (Voice &amp; FAX) 919/839-NCLA<lb /><lb />SE<lb /></p>
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          <lb />The Southeast in Early Maps<lb />WILLIAM P. CUMMING<lb /><lb />Third edition, revised and<lb /><lb />enlarged by Louis De Vorsey, Jr.<lb /><lb />A stunning new edition of the classic<lb />reference on the cartography of southeastern<lb />North America before the Revolution. Newly<lb />designed, this handsome volume now<lb /><lb />features a full-color gallery of 24 maps.<lb />-2371-6 May $90 cloth<lb /><lb />9 x 12, 24 color / 96 b&amp;w illus.<lb /><lb />Fred W. Morrison Series in Southern Studies<lb /><lb />Slave Counterpoint<lb /><lb />Black Culture in the Eighteenth-Century<lb />Chesapeake and Lowcountry<lb /><lb />Puitip D. MORGAN<lb /><lb />A pathbreaking account of the two major<lb />slave societies in British America.<lb /><lb />oA landmark in the study of southem slavery.<lb />... Refreshingly free of jargon and cant.�"<lb /><lb />Eugene D. Genovese<lb /><lb />-2409-7 Apr $49.95 cloth<lb /><lb />-4717-8 Apr $21.95 paper<lb /><lb />27 illus., 9 maps<lb /><lb />Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early<lb />American History &amp; Culture, Williamsburg, Va.<lb /><lb />A Separate Canaan<lb /><lb />The Making of an Afro-Moravian World in<lb />North Carolina, 1763-1840<lb /><lb />Jon F. SENSBACH<lb /><lb />o[Uncovers] the exceptional, if short-lived,<lb />efforts of German Moravian settlers to estab-<lb />lish . . . a unique model of interracial fellow-<lb /><lb />ship.�"Sylvia R. Frey, Tulane University<lb />-2394-5 Mar $45 cloth<lb /><lb />-4698-8 Mar $17.95 paper<lb /><lb />Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early<lb />American History &amp; Culture, Williamsburg, Va<lb /><lb />THE UNIVERSITY OF<lb />NORTH CAROLINA PRESS<lb /><lb />Chapel Hill * Phone (800) 848-6224<lb />Fax (800) 272-6817<lb />http://sunsite.unc.edu/uncpress/<lb /><lb />ISBN 0-8078 .-<lb /><lb />nantes<lb /><lb />REVISED<lb />&amp;<lb /><lb />bam�<lb /><lb />DAVID STICK<lb /><lb />~ An Outer Banks Reader<lb /><lb />: SELECTED AND EDITED BY DAVID STICK<lb /><lb />. More than 60 selections from 4 centuries of<lb /><lb />* the best writing about N.C.T barrier islands.<lb /><lb />: oAn essential volume to every shelf of North<lb />. Carolina history. . . . So interesting I couldn't<lb />* stop reading.� "William Friday<lb /><lb />! -2420-8 June $29.95 cloth<lb /><lb />_ ~4726-7 June $16.95 paper<lb /><lb />: North Carolina Beaches<lb /><lb />. GLENN Morris<lb /><lb />* Revised and Updated Edition<lb /><lb />: An island-by-island, beach-by-beach tour of<lb /><lb />. more than 300 miles of coastline: where to go,<lb /><lb />how to get there, what you'll find, and what<lb /><lb />~you'll need. Sprinkled in are entertaining<lb />«essays on such topics as tides and bird life.<lb /><lb />oThe consummate N.C. beach guide.�"State<lb /><lb /> -4683-X Mar $17.95 paper<lb />» 48 illus., 42 maps<lb /><lb />North CarolinaTs<lb />Hurricane History<lb /><lb />: JAY BARNES<lb /><lb />Revised and Updated Edition<lb />~Everybody's favorite hurricane book, now<lb />: including Fran and Bertha.<lb /><lb />oThe best book ever produced about hurri-<lb /><lb />* canes.�"Southern Book Trade<lb /><lb />: -2416-X June $34.95 cloth<lb />-4728-3 June $18.95 paper<lb /><lb />: 84x10, 230 illus., 45 maps<lb /><lb />A Paul Green [<lb /><lb />Reader<lb /><lb />LAURENCE G. AVERY,<lb />EDITOR<lb /><lb />A collection of short<lb />stories, essays, letters,<lb />and plays, including a<lb />selection from The<lb />Lost Colony, by North<lb />Carolina's Pulitzer<lb />Prize-winning native<lb />son and advocate for<lb /><lb />social reform.<lb />o{A] brilliant achievement.�"John Ehle<lb />-2386-4 May $39.95 cloth<lb /><lb />-4708-9 May $17.95 paper<lb /><lb />Chapel Hill Books<lb /><lb />AUL<lb />GREEN<lb />Reader<lb /><lb />EMAL HER AR RRA TE HE<lb /><lb />Laurence G. Avery<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />Living Stories of<lb /><lb />the Cherokee if<lb />: BARBARA R. DUNCAN, PRN E<lb /><lb />With stories told by Davey Arch, Robert Bushyhead,<lb />Edna Chekelelee, Marie Junaluska, Kathi Smith<lb />Littlejohn, and Freeman Owle<lb /><lb />In this, the first major collection of Cherokee<lb />stories in nearly a century, six celebrated Eastern<lb />Cherokee storytellers present 72 traditional and<lb /><lb />contemporary tales.<lb />-2411-9 June $29.95 cloth<lb />-4719-4 June $15.95 paper<lb /><lb />Quilts, Coverlets, and<lb />Counterpanes<lb /><lb />Bedcoverings from the Museum of Early<lb />Southern Decorative Arts and Old Salem<lb />Collections<lb /><lb />PAULA W. LOCKLAIR<lb /><lb />Artistic expression in everyday textiles from<lb />18th- and 19th-century America.<lb /><lb />ISBN 1-879704-04-8 Nov $16.95 paper<lb /><lb />8'%4 x 11, 62 color plates, 5 b&amp;w photos<lb />Distributed for Old Salem, Inc.<lb /><lb />Selling Tradition<lb /><lb />Appalachia and the Construction of an<lb />American Folk, 1930-1940<lb /><lb />JANE S. BECKER<lb /><lb />Examines the reemergence of Southern Appa-<lb />lachian handicraft traditions in the late 1930s<lb />and the cultural politics involved in adapting<lb /><lb />tradition to the needs of consumer culture.<lb />-4715-1 July $55 cloth<lb /><lb />The Temptation<lb />Edgar Tolson and the Genesis of 20th-Century<lb />Folk Art<lb /><lb />Jutta S. ARDERY<lb />Charting the rise of folk<lb />art through the meteoric<lb />career of Kentucky<lb /><lb />wood-carver Edgar<lb />Tolson.<lb /><lb />-2397-X Apr $45 cloth<lb />-4700-3 Apr $19.95 paper<lb />7x 10, 10 color/77 b&amp;w<lb />illus.<lb /><lb />) Dit OY<lb /><lb />TUT Ai tv<lb /></p>
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          <lb />Upcoming Issues<lb /><lb />Summer 1998 Turning Point:<lb />An Oral North Carolina History of Librarianship<lb /><lb />Fall 1998 Advise and Consult<lb />Artemis Kares, Guest Editor<lb /><lb />Winter 1998 ChildrenTs Services<lb />Beth Hutchison and Mel Burton, Guest Editors<lb /><lb />Spring 1999 Outreach<lb /><lb />Summer 1999 North Carolina Writers<lb /><lb />Fall 1999 Life and Limb (security issues)<lb />Winter 1999 Conference Issue<lb /><lb />Spring 2000 The Millennium: Celebration or Disaster<lb /><lb />Unsolicited articles dealing with the above themes or any issue of interest to North Carolina<lb />librarians are welcomed. Please contact the editor for manuscript guidelines and deadlines.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries, published four times a year, is the official publication of the North<lb />Carolina Library Association. Membership dues include a subscription to North Carolina<lb />Libraries. Membership information may be obtained from the Administrative Assistant of<lb />NCLA. Subscription rates are $32.00 per year, or $10.00 per issue, for domestic<lb />subscriptions; $50.00 per year, or $15.00 per issue, for foreign subscriptions. Backfiles are<lb />maintained by the editor. Microfilm copies are available through University Microfilms.<lb />North Carolina Libraries is indexed by Library Literature and publishes its own annual index.<lb />Editorial correspondence should be addressed to the editor; advertisement<lb />correspondence should be addressed to the advertising manager. Articles are juried.<lb /><lb /></p>
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