Women Librarians Who Settled the Wild West

Images via Cowgirl Hall of Fame
Corrinne4.jpgHenderson2.jpgwade-2-wooley.jpg

- ---Front Page Story Posted Tuesday December 9th at LIS News.
A timid, hair-wrapped-in-a-bun, pince-nez-wearing spinster (with a cardigan sweater). Is that the image you have of a librarian from 100 years ago? Hell no, they were gun-toting, horseback-riding, walk-2-miles-to-work-in-a-blizzard type of woman. Those were the kind of librarians who settled the West. Fascinating bit of history via the Chicago Tribune. Around the turn of the 20th century, graduates of the University of Illinois Graduate School of Library and Information Science (then called the Illinois Library School) headed to places like Texas, North Dakota, Idaho and Oregon. Lisa Renee Kemplin, senior library specialist at the University of Illinois, looks through Ida Kidder's 1908 letter from Salem, Ore., at the Archives Research Center in Urbana. The letter and other documents catalog UI librarians' trips to the West 100 years ago.

Source: COSWL Cause
ALA Committee on the Status of Women in Librarianship

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by University of Minnesota Law Library published on December 10, 2008 8:35 AM.

Legal Incentives for Organ Donation was the previous entry in this blog.

RAQ: Recently Asked Questions is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.