List of presidents of the Bibliographical Society of America
Appearance
The Bibliographical Society of America (BSA) fosters the study of books and manuscripts. It was established in 1904.
The first president was William Coolidge Lane. The first woman president was Ruth Mortimer in 1988.
Name | Term | Other accomplishments |
---|---|---|
William Coolidge Lane[1] | 1904-1909 | Librarian Harvard University, 1898–1928, President American Library Association, 1898–1899. |
Azariah Smith Root[2] | 1909-1910 | Director, Oberlin College Library, 1890–1927. President, American Library Association, 1921–1922. |
William Dawson Johnston.[3] | 1910-1912 | Historian of the Library of Congress,[4] Director, Columbia University Libraries, 1909–1913. |
Charles Henry Gould[5] | 1912-1913 | University librarian at McGill University, president of the American Library Association, 1908–1909. |
Andrew Keogh[6] | 1909-1914 | Director, Yale University Library, 1916–1938, president of the American Library Association, 1929–1930. |
Carl B. Roden[7] | 1914-1916 | Director, Chicago Public Library, 1918–1950, President, American Library Association, 1927–1928. |
George Watson Cole[8] | 1916-1921 | Director of the Huntington Library |
William Warner Bishop[9] | 1921-1923 | President, American Library Association, 1918–1919, President, International Federation of Library Associations[10] |
Azariah Smith Root | 1923-1926 | Also served as BSA president, 1909–1910. |
Herman H. B. Meyer[11] | 1926-1929 | Library of Congress in several positions including Chief Bibliographer, President, American Library Association, 1924–1925. |
Harry M. Lydenberg[12] | 1929-1931 | Director New York Public Library, 1934–1941,[13] President, American Library Association, 1932–1933. |
Lawrence C. Wroth[14] | 1931-1933 | Director, John Carter Brown Library,1924-1957, author of The Colonial Printer.[15] |
Augustus Hunt Shearer[16][17] | 1933-1936 | Director of the Grosvenor Library in Buffalo, NY, 1917–1941.[18][19] |
Leonard Leopold Mackall [20][21] | 1936-1937 | President, Georgia Historical Society.[22] |
Earl Gregg Swem[23] | 1937-1938 | Librarian, College of William & Mary, Earl Gregg Swem Library named for him. Bibliographer of Virginia history.[24] |
Victor Hugo Paltsits.[25] | 1938-1939 | Keeper of Manuscripts, New York Public Library |
Randolph Greenfield Adams[26] | 1940-1941 | Director, William L. Clements Library,University of Michigan[27] |
Thomas W. Streeter | 1942-1943. | Book collector, philanthropist, chairman, Friends Dartmouth College Library, Associate John Carter Brown Library, Council of Fellows, Pierpont Morgan Library; director, Friends Huntington Library; visiting committees Yale, Princeton, and Harvard, McGregor Library; fellow,California Historical Society; council, Grolier Club, trustee New York Historical Society, and president, American Antiquarian Society.[28] |
Robert W. G. Vail [29] | 1944-1945 | Librarian, American Antiquarian Society, 1930–1939; Director, New York Historical Society, 1944–1960. Editor, Bibliotheca Americana. [30] |
William A. Jackson [31][32] | 1946-1947 | Director Harvard University, Houghton Library of Rare Books and Manuscripts,1942-1964;[33] Gold Medal of the Bibliographical Society, 1965.[34][35] |
LeRoy E. Kimball[36] | 1948- 1949 | New York University,comptroller; President of the Modern Language Association of America; President, New York Historical Society.[37] |
James T. Babb [38] | 1950-1952 | Director, Yale University Library; Selected books for the White House at the request of Jacqueline Kennedy[39] |
Curt F. Bühler[40][41] | 1953 -1954 | Keeper of Books at the Pierpont Morgan Library; President, American Council of Learned Societies |
Lawrence Clark Powell | 1955 | University Librarian, UCLA Library, 1944- 1961, head librarian, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, 1944–1966, author.[42] |
John D. Gordan[43] | 1956-1957 | Chief of the Berg Collection of English and American Literature New York Public Library |
Donald F. Hyde[44][45] | 1958-1959 | Bibliophile, attorney, President, Grolier Club. |
Frederick Baldwin Adams Jr.[46] | 1960-1961 | Director, Pierpont Morgan Library, 1948 - 1969; president, Grolier Club. |
C. Waller Barrett[47] | 1962-1963 | Bibliophile, shipping magnate, founder of the Barrett Library of American Literature at the University of Virginia, President American Antiquarian Society.[48] |
Herman W. Liebert [49] | 1964 -1965 | Librarian of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University.Chairman of the Yale Edition, Works of Samuel Johnson, President of the Grolier Club. |
Edwin Wolf II[50] | 1966-1967 | Librarian, Library Company of Philadelphia,[51] author.[52] |
Frederick R. Goff[53] | 1968 -1969 | Chief of the Rare Book Division, Library of Congress, author [54][55] |
Robert H. Taylor[56] | 1970- 1971 | Bibliophile,[57]Robert H. Taylor Collection, president, Grolier Club, the Keats-Shelley Association of America. |
James J. Heslin [58] | 1972-1973 | Director New York Historical Society,[59] author.[60][61] |
William H. Bond [62] | 1974- 1975 | Librarian, Houghton Library Harvard University[63] |
Stuart B. Schimmel* [64] | 1976- 1977 | Book collector--"one of the great American collectors of the latter decades of the twentieth century".[65]The Stuart B. Schimmel Collection of the Book Arts[66][67] |
Thomas R. Adams[68] | 1978-1980 | Librarian of John Carter Brown Library, curator Van Pelt-Dietrich Library, University of Pennsylvania, author,[69][70] |
Marcus Allen McCorison [71] | 1980-1984. | Librarian, director and president American Antiquarian Society; Chief Rare Book Librarian, Dartmouth College;author [72][73][74] |
G. Thomas Tanselle[75] | 1985-1988. | Professor University of Wisconsin; vice president of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, scholar, bibliographer, and book collector.[76][77] |
Ruth Mortimer | 1988-1992 | Curator Smith College rare books collection, named the Mortimer Rare Book Collection in her honor; curator Harvard University; author,[80][81] |
William P. Barlow Jr.[82] | 1992-1996 | Certified public accountant and partner at Barlow & Hughan, San Francisco, Master of the Press at the Roxburghe Club, faculty of the Rare Book School.[83][84] |
Roger E. Stoddard [85] | 1996-2000 | Houghton Library, Harvard University curator of rare books[86][87] |
Hope Mayo, president during centenary of the BSA[88] | 2004-2008 | Philip Hofer Curator of Printing and Graphic Arts at Houghton Library, Harvard University.[89][90][91] |
John Bidwell | 2004-2008 | Astor Curator and Department Head of Printed Books and Bindings, Morgan Library & Museum; Curator Graphic Arts Division, Princeton University Library; Librarian, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, UCLA.[92][93][94] |
John Neal Hoover [95] | 2008-2011 | Head of Special Collections and Rare Book Librarian St. Louis Mercantile Library Association; author.[96][97] |
Claudia Funke | 2012-2014 | Avery Chief Curator, Huntington Library, Curator Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library, Columbia University.[98] |
Martin Antonetti | 2015-2017 | Director Charles Deering Memorial Library of Special Collections and University Archives at Northwestern University Library; Curator of Rare Books, Smith College; Librarian and Director of the Grolier Club.[99][100] |
Barbara A Shailor | 2018-2021 | Director, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University,author.[101] |
Caroline Duroselle-Melish [102] | 2022 | Andrew W. Mellon Curator of Early Modern Books and Prints Folger Shakespeare Library; Assistant Curator Houghton, Harvard University, author.[103][104] |
Kinohi Nishikawa, Princeton University | 2024- | Effron Center for the Study of America, Princeton University Professor of English and African American Studies, author[105][106] |
References
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- ^ Bishop, William Warner. “Azariah Root Smith.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 22, no. 1 (1928): 66–68.
- ^ William Dawson Johnston Papers. A Finding Aid to the Collection in the Library of Congress. Container number, William Dawson Johnston Papers, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C
- ^ Johnston, W. (William). History of the Library of Congress. Volume I, 1800-1864. Washington: Govt. Print. Off., 1904.
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- ^ Grosvenor library, Buffalo, N.Y. 1941. Augustus Hunt Shearer, February 21, 1878-May 31, 1941, Librarian of the Grosvenor Library, 1917-1941 .. Buffalo, N.Y.: Grosvenor library.
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- ^ Grosvenor Library. (1918-1956). Grosvenor Library Bulletin. Buffalo, N.Y.: Grosvenor Library.
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- ^ Malloch, Archibald. “DEATH OF MR. LEONARD L. MACKALL. Consultant in Bibliography.” The Georgia Historical Quarterly 22, no. 1 (1938): 16–21.
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- ^ Swem, E. G., John M. Jennings, James Albert Servies, and Virginia 350th Anniversary Celebration Corporation. 1957. A Selected Bibliography of Virginia, 1607-1699. Williamsburg, Va.: Virginia 350th Anniversary Celebration Corp.
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- ^ Kaser, David (1978). "Adams, Randolph Greenfield". In Wynar, Bohdan S. (ed.). Dictionary of American Library Biography. Littleton, CO: Libraries Unlimited. pp. 2–3.
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- ^ ROBERT VAIL DIES; BIBLIOGRAPHER, 76: PAST HEAD OF STATE LIBRARY LED N.Y. HISTORICAL SOCIETY. New York Times (1923-). 1966 Jun 23 1966/06/23/:37.
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- ^ "Prof. Willian A. Jackson Dies; Harvard's Houghton librarian." New York Times 1964 Oct 19 1964/10/19/:33.
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- ^ Kimball, LeRoy E. 1955. “Time Will Away.” PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 70 (2): 3–6.
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- ^ Babb, James T., and White House Historical Association. 1967. The White House Library : A Short-Title List. Washington, D.C.: The White House Historical Association.
- ^ "Obituary of Dr Curt F Buhler, authority on the art and history of the printed book". The Times. August 19, 1985.
- ^ Kristeller, Paul Oskar. “In Memoriam: Curt F. Bühler.” Renaissance Quarterly 39, no. 4 (1986): 820–21.
- ^ Rosenberg Betty. 1966. Checklist of the Published Writings of Lawrence Clark Powell. Los Angeles: University of California.
- ^ Gordan, John D., and Sean Adams. 1987. The Scholar-Adventurer : A Tribute to John D. Gordan (1907-1968) on the 80th Anniversary of His Birth : With Six of His Essays. New York: New York Public Library : Distributed by the Pub. Center for Cultural Resources.
- ^ R. F. M., and J. M. E. “DONALD FRIZELL HYDE 1909-1966.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 60, no. 1 (1966): 101–101.
- ^ Blumenthal, Joseph, Donald Hyde, Grolier Club, Spiral Press, and Meriden Gravure Company. 1970. Eighteenth-Century Studies in Honor of Donald F. Hyde. Edited by W. H. Bond. New York: Grolier Club.
- ^ Bidwell, John (2001). FREDERICK BALDWIN ADAMS, JR (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. pp. 498–502. Retrieved 19 May 2024.
- ^ Crane, Joan St C. 1991. In Memoriam: C. Waller Barrett. [New York]: Gazette of the Grolier Club.
- ^ Barrett, Clifton Waller, Robert H. Taylor, and University of Virginia Printing Office. 1981. A Salute to Clifton Waller Barrett on His Eightieth from Friends & Admirers. Charlottesville, Va.
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- ^ Knoles, T. “Edwin Wolf, 2nd - In Memoriam.” Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 109 (1999): 271–77.
- ^ Whipkey, Harry E. “NEWS AND COMMENT.” Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies 42, no. 3 (1975): 242–47.
- ^ Wolf, Edwin. 1991. An Autobiographical Sketch Written in 1987 and A Bibliography of the Published Writings of Edwin Wolf 2nd. Philadelphia: Library Co. of Philadelphia.
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- ^ Goff, Frederick Richmond, and Bibliographical Society of America. 1964. Incunabula in American Libraries; a Third Census of Fifteenth-Century Books Recorded in North American Collections. Edited by Margaret Bingham Stillwell. New York: Bibliographical Society of America.
- ^ Goff, Frederick Richmond. 1971. The Permanence of Johann Gutenberg. [Austin]: Humanities Research Center, University of Texas at Austin; [distributed by University of Texas Press].
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- ^ Albin Krebs and Robert McG. Thomas Jr. Notes on people; time for a change at the historical society. New York Times. 1981 Aug 14 1981/08/14/
- ^ Heslin, James J.(1957) “Imprints on History: Book Publishers and American Frontiers.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America:175-177.
- ^ Heslin, James J. (1965). “The Lessons of History.” American Jewish Historical Quarterly 55 (2): 150–56.
- ^ William H. Bond, librarian of Harvard University's Houghton Library since 1965, retired in June. He joined the Harvard staff in 1946. Bond is a past president of the Bibliographical Society of America. "Currents.” American Libraries 13, no. 8 (1982): 552–552.
- ^ Houghton Library, W. H. Bond, Harvard College Library, and Harvard University Press. 1967. The Houghton Library, 1942-1967: A Selection of Books and Manuscripts in Harvard Collections. Cambridge: Harvard College Library [distributed by Harvard University Press].
- ^ Hoover, John Neal. “Stuart B. Schimmel: 16 May 1925–4 January 2013.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 107, no. 2 (2013): 142–45
- ^ Stuart B. Schimmel, “Collectors in My Library,” The Private Library, 6th ser., 2, no. 4 (2009): 153
- ^ John Dreyfus, The Stuart B. Schimmel Collection of the Book Arts. (New York: Christie, Manson and Woods International, Inc., 1991)
- ^ Schimmel, Stuart. “Stuart Schimmel President, 1976–8.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 99, no. 3 (2005): 382–83.
- ^ “Thomas R. Adams President, 1978–80.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 99, no. 3 (2005): 384–86.
- ^ Adams, Thomas Randolph. 1969. Bibliotheca Americana : A Merry Maze of Changing Concepts. [Chicago]: [University of Chicago Press].
- ^ Adams, Thomas Randolph. The American Controversy : A Bibliographical Study of the British Pamphlets about the American Disputes, 1764-1783. Providence: Brown University Press, 1980.
- ^ Winship, Michael. “Marcus Allen McCorison: 17 July 1926–3 February 2013.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 107, no. 2 (2013): 146–50.
- ^ McCorison, Marcus A., and American Antiquarian Society. 1963. Vermont Imprints, 1778-1820; a Checklist of Books, Pamphlets, and Broadsides, Compiled by Marcus A. McCorison. Worcester [Mass.]: American Antiquarian Society.
- ^ McCorison, Marcus A. 1984. “Bibliography and Libraries at the Brink: A Jeremiad.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 78 (2): 127–36.
- ^ McCorison, Marcus A., and American Antiquarian Society. 1973. Book Trade Labels at the American Antiquarian Society. Worcester, Mass.: The Society.
- ^ VanWingen, Peter M. “MINUTES OF THE BIBLIOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA ANNUAL MEETING, 1985.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 79, no. 2 (1985): 273–75.
- ^ Tanselle, G. Thomas. 2021. Books in My Life. Edited by David L. Vander Meulen. Charlottesville: The Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia.
- ^ Tanselle, G. Thomas. 2009. Bibliographical Analysis: A Historical Introduction. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
- ^ "Obituary: Ruth Mortimer". The Independent. 1994-02-26. Retrieved 2024-05-20.
- ^ Mortimer, Ruth, and Michèle Valerie Cloonan. 1997. Books Illustrated : Presentations from the Symposium Celebrating the Work of Ruth Mortimer Held at Smith College, April 12–13, 1996. Northampton, Mass.: Smith College.
- ^ Harvard University, and Ruth Mortimer. 1974. Harvard College Library Department of Printing and Graphic Arts Catalogue of Books and Manuscripts. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
- ^ Mortimer, Ruth. “St. Catherine of Siena and the Printed Book.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 86, no. 1 (1992): 11–22.
- ^ “Wm. P. Barlow, Jr. President, 1992—6.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 99, no. 3 (2005): 394–97.
- ^ Barlow, Wm. P. “On the Private Collecting of Book Catalogues.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 102, no. 4 (2008): 547–55.
- ^ Barlow, Wm. P. “Bibliography and Bibliophily.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 90, no. 2 (1996): 139–50.
- ^ Stoddard, Roger E., and Thornwillow Press. 2000. Roger Eliot Stoddard at Sixty-Five: A Celebration. New York: Thornwillow Press.
- ^ Stoddard, Roger E. 2002. A Library-Keeper’s Business : Essays. Edited by Carol Zeman Rothkopf. New Castle: Oak Knoll Press.
- ^ Stoddard, Roger E., Alastair Johnson, Poltroon Press, and Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America. 2005. No More Mr. Nice Guy ; or, How to Get along When Roger’s Not around Any More : A Farewell Address to the Antiquarian Booksellers’ Association of America, 30 April 2005, at the Grolier Club. New York City: Antiquarian Booksellers’ Association of America.
- ^ “Hope Mayo President, 2000-4.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 99 (3): 400–403.
- ^ Mayo, Hope, and Sunil Sharma. “The E.A. Lowe papers at the Pierpont Morgan Library.” Scriptorium 46, no. 1 (1992): 90–107.
- ^ Moss, Kathleen Whalen. “Decorated Book Papers, Being an Account of Their Designs and Fashions. 4th Ed. Rosamond B. Loring , Hope Mayo.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 103, no. 2 (2009): 254–56.
- ^ Mayo, Hope. 1985. Descriptive Inventories of Manuscripts Microfilmed for the Hill Monastic Manuscript Library / Austrian Libraries / Hill Monastic Manuscript Library, Saint John’s University Vol. III, Herzogenburg / by Hope Mayo. Descriptive Inventories of Manuscripts Microfilmed for the Hill Monastic Manuscript Library. Collegeville, Minn.: Hill Monastic Manuscript Library, Saint John’s University.
- ^ Paper and Type: Bibliographical Essays (Charlottesville: The Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia, 2019)
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- ^ Bidwell, John. “BSA PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS: Biographical Dictionaries of the Book Trades.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 102, no. 4 (2008): 421–44.
- ^ John Neal Hoover: Hoover Endowed Mercantile Library Executive Director University of Missouri St. Louis.
- ^ St Louis Mercantile Library Association, and Grolier Club. 2010. Lives on the Mississippi : Literature and Culture along the Great River from the Collections of the St. Louis Mercantile Library Association : A Checklist for an Exhibition Held at the Grolier Club in New York, February 23-May 1, 2010. St. Louis, Mo.: St. Louis Mercantile Library at the University of Missouri-St. Louis.
- ^ Hoover, JN. “Roughing It; Printing and the Press in the West: Notes on the Centennial Conference in St. Louis, 14 October 2004.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 99, no. 3 (2005): 405–9.
- ^ Grolier Club, G. Thomas Tanselle, and Jerry Kelly. 2000. Grolier 2000 : A Further Grolier Club Biographical Retrospective in Celebration of the Millennium. Edited by Claudia Funke. New York: Grolier Club.
- ^ Antonetti, Martin. “Typographic Ekphrasis: The Description of Typographic Forms in the Nineteenth Century.” Word & Image (London. 1985) 15, no. 1 (1999): 41–53.
- ^ Boss, Thomas G., Martin Antonetti, Jerry Kelly, and Grolier Club. 2004. Bound to Be the Best : The Club Bindery, Catalogue of an Exhibition at the Grolier Club. Boston: Thomas G. Boss Fine Books.
- ^ Shailor, Barbara A. The Medieval Book. Toronto ; University of Toronto Press in association with the Medieval Academy of America, 1991.
- ^ Caroline Duroselle-Melish Folger Shakespeare Library.
- ^ Duroselle-Melish, Caroline. 2006. “Gudrun Zapf von Hesse: Bindings, Handwritten Books, Typefaces, Examples of Lettering, and Drawings . Hans A. Halbey.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 100 (2): 288–89.
- ^ Duroselle-Melish, Caroline, and David A. Lines. 2015. “The Library of Ulisse Aldrovandi (†1605): Acquiring and Organizing Books in Sixteenth-Century Bologna.” The Library 16 (2): 133–61.
- ^ Nishikawa, Kinohi. 2018. Street Players : Black Pulp Fiction and the Making of a Literary Underground. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
- ^ Nishikawa, Kinohi. 2022. “Mumbo Jumbo ’s Paratextual Condition.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 116 (2): 215–54.