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George Heron Milne (3 July 1887 - Oct 25, 1948) worked at the Library of Congress for 39 years and was chief of the Congressional Reading Room from 1937 to 1948. He served as librarian for many years at the Cosmos Club in Washington, D.C.

Milne worked as a messenger for The Evening Star newspaper from 1902 to 1905 and then was employed by the Philip T. Hall haberdashery firm from 1906 to 1909. He was hired as a messenger by the Library of Congress in November 1909, serving in the general reading room. In 1917, he was transferred to the congressional reading room and became chief there in 1937. Milne was born in Washington, D.C., to well-known interior decorator Alexander Milne (1847 - 1927) and Isabella Metcalf (1854 - 1922). He married Ella Baldwin Lower of Cleveland, Ohio, in 1917. [1]

His bride's brother was a co-author, with Milne and J. Bentley Mulford, of a bibliography entitled The Dramatic Books and Plays Published During 1912-1916 and 1921.

As a boy, Milne would trek through the woodlands near Washington, D.C., in search of species of plants not generally known. In later life, it was said that Milne knew the names of all domestic flowers and plants and most wildflowers and could spot them at a glance. Rep. Daniel A. Reed (R ) of New York said that Milne, as a child, visited the White House on many occasions with his father and “developed a mutual friendship” with the children of President Theodore Roosevelt. [2]

Rep. Brooks Hays (D) of Arkansas said, “The number of Members he personally assisted in the 31 years of his service... must almost equal the number who have served in the Congress during that time. His quiet telephone voice has been known to vitually every member of Congress and certainly to every secretary on Capitol Hill. (From 1917) until one week before his death, George Milne, day and night, year in and year out, served the Congress with a devotion, a vigor and a technical skill which has seldom been equaled.”

Late in Milne's career, the Director of Legislative Services wrote, "Mr. Milne is almost ideal as custodian of the congressional reading room. He makes the problems of Members of Congress his own and gives them the kind of superservice that they greatly appreciate ... his spirit and devotion to his work are almost too much and are sometimes carried to the detriment of his health." Milne served until week before he died in Suburban Hospital after a heart attack. [3]

Milne’s father, Alexander, emigrated from Aberdeen, Scotland, in 1871, and became a recognized authority on old colony furniture. Alexander Milne was in charge of decorating the catafalque on which President William McKinley rested while lying in state in 1901. He was a subcontractor during a major remodel of the White House. [4]


References

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  2. ^ 2
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  4. ^ 4

1) The Evening Star, Washington, D.C., Oct. 26, 1948

2) Congressional Record -- Appendix A28, Jan. 5, 1949

3) Congressional Record -- House, 1949, p. 165

4) The Evening Star, Washington, D.C., April 4, 1927