The Justin Winsor Prize is awarded by the Library History Round Table of the American Library Association for the year's best library history essay. The award was established in 1978 and named for the American Library Association's first president, Justin Winsor. Winsor (1831–1896) was a prominent writer, historian, and the long-time Librarian at Harvard University.
The Library History Round Table also sponsors the Eliza Atkins Gleason Book Award.[1]
The Library History Round Table official peer-reviewed journal is Libraries: Culture, History, and Society.[2]
LHRT News and Notes is the blog of the Library History Round Table.[3]
The Library History Round Table publishes the "Bibliography of Library History" database.[4]
The Library History Round Table, was established in 1947. Historical articles appeared on the 50th anniversary in the journal, Libraries & Culture [5] and the 75th in the journal, Libraries: Culture, History, and Society .[6][7]
Justin Winsor Prize | Date | Title | |
---|---|---|---|
Alex H. Poole | 2024 | ”If I’m fighting for myself, it is so that whoever stands on my shoulders can go further than I”: The Intellectual Community of Black Women Children’s Librarians in the mid-Twentieth Century United States.” | |
Madison Ingram | 2023 | "Chief Hope of Democracy: Educational Influences on the Segregated Carnegie Libraries of Atlanta." | |
Alex H. Poole | 2022 | “Will the day ever come when we will be judged on our merit and not on our blackness?” The Rise of the Black Caucus of the American Library Association, 1970-1975.” [8] | |
Jennifer Burek Pierce | 2021 | More Than a Room with Books: The Development of Author Visits for Young People in Mid-Century U.S. Public Libraries.[9] | |
Julie Park | 2020 | Infrastructure Story: The Los Angeles Central Library’s Architectural History.[10] | |
Steven Knowlton | 2019 | A Rapidly Escalating Demand: Academic Libraries and the Birth of Black Studies Programs.[11] | |
No Award | 2018 | ||
Alexander Ames | 2017 | The 'Spirit of The Fatherland': German-American Culture And Community in the Library and Archive of the German Society of Pennsylvania, 1817-2017.[12] | |
Steven A. Knowlton | 2016 | Since I was a citizen, I had the right to attend the library: the key role of the public library in the civil rights movement in Memphis.[13] | |
Sharon McQueen | 2015 | The Feminization of Ferdinand: Perceptions of Gender Nonconformity in a Classic Children’s Picture Book.[14] | |
Kate Stewart | 2014 | The Man in the Rice Paddies Had Something to READ: Military Libraries and Intellectual Freedom in the Vietnam War.[15] | |
Nicola Wilson Boots | 2013 | Book-Lovers' library, the Novel, and James Hanley's The Furys (1935).[16] | |
Ashley Maynor | 2012 | All the World’s Memory: Implications for the Internet as Archive and Portal for Our Cultural Heritage.[17] | |
Cody White | 2011 | Rising from the Ashes: Lessons Learned from the Impact of Proposition 13 on Public Libraries in California.[18] | |
Pamela R. Bleisch | 2010 | Spoilsmen and Daughters of the Republic: Political Interference in the Texas State Library during the tenure of Elizabeth Howard West, 1911-1925.[19] | |
Richard LeComte | 2009 | Writers Blocked: The Debate Over Public Lending Right in the United States During the 1980s.[20] | |
Jeremy Dibbell | 2008 | A Library of the Most Celebrated & Approved Authors: The First Purchase Collection of Union College.[21] | |
Jean L. Preer | 2007 | Promoting Citizenship: Librarians Help Get Out the Vote in the 1952 Presidential Election.[22] | |
No award | 2006 | ||
Donald C. Boyd | 2005 | The Book Women of Kentucky: The WPA Pack Horse Library Project, 1935-1943.[23] | |
Joyce M. Latham | 2004 | Clergy of the Mind: William S. Learned, the Carnegie Corporation, and the American Library Association.[24] | |
No award | 2003 | ||
Marek Sroka | 2002 | The Destruction of Jewish Libraries and Archives in Crakow (Krakow) During World War II.[25] | |
No award | 2001 | ||
No award | 2000 | ||
Christine Pawley | 1999 | Advocate for Access: Lutie Stearns and the Traveling Libraries of the Wisconsin Free Library Commission, 1895-1914.[26] | |
No award | 1998 | ||
Cheryl Knott Malone | 1997 | Houston's Colored Carnegie Library, 1907-1922.[27] | |
Wayne A. Wiegand | 1996 | The Amherst Method: The Origins of the Dewey Decimal Classification Scheme.[28] | |
No award | 1995 | ||
No award | 1994 | ||
No award | 1993 | ||
Joanne E. Passet | 1992 | Men in a Feminized Profession: The Male Librarian, 1887-1921.[29] | |
Margaret Stieg | 1991 | Post-War Purge of the German Public Libraries, Democracy, and the American Reaction.[30] | |
John V. Richardson Jr. | 1990 | Teaching General Reference Work: The Essential Paradigm, 1890-1900.[31] | |
Frederick J. Stielow | 1989 | Librarians, Warriors, and Rapprochement: Carl Milam, Archibald MacLeish, and World War II.[32] | |
Brother Thomas O'Connor | 1988 | Library Service to the American Committee to Negotiate Peace and to the Preparatory Inquiry, 1917-1919.[33] | |
Rosalee McReynolds | 1987 | American Nervousness and Turn of the Century Librarians.[34] | |
Ronald Blazek | 1986 | Adult Education and Economic Opportunity in the Gilded Age: The Library, the Chautauqua, and the Railroads in DeFuniak Springs, Florida.[35] | |
No award | 1985 | ||
Lawrence Joseph Yeatman | 1984 | Literary Culture and the Role of Libraries in Democratic America: Baltimore, 1815-1940 [36] | |
Robert S. Martin | 1983 | Maurice F. Tauber’s ‘Louis Round Wilson’: An Analysis of a Collaboration [37] | |
Pamela Spence Richards and Wayne A. Wiegand. | 1982 | Richards: “‘Aryan Librarianship’: Academic and Research Libraries under Hitler.”;[38] Wiegand: "British Propaganda in American Libraries, 1914-1917."[39] | |
Mary Niles Maack | 1981 | Women Librarians in France: The First Generation Maack,[40] | |
No award | 1980 | ||
Dennis Thompson | 1979 | The Private Wars of Chicago’s Big Bill Thompson.[41] |
References