A True Politician: Rebecca Browning Rankin, Municipal Reference Librarian of the City of New York, 1920-1952

A True Politician: Rebecca Browning Rankin, Municipal Reference Librarian of the City of New York, 1920-1952

by Barry W. Seaver
A True Politician: Rebecca Browning Rankin, Municipal Reference Librarian of the City of New York, 1920-1952

A True Politician: Rebecca Browning Rankin, Municipal Reference Librarian of the City of New York, 1920-1952

by Barry W. Seaver

Paperback

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Overview

Rebecca Browning Rankin was a politician in the best sense of the word. She supervised the New York Municipal Reference Library for 32 years until her retirement in 1952. Serving in many key policy-making positions, both on mayoral committees and in professional organizations, Rankin was an excellent lobbyist for the role of information in educating the electorate. She published over fifty articles and books on aspects of city government and libraries, and delivered weekly radio speeches on WNYC from 1928 to 1938.

Her career as a librarian, author and radio commentator demonstrates the use of research in the formation of public policy decisions and provides a unique perspective on politics in New York. Rankin also served as president of several library organizations including the Special Libraries Association, which she led to national status during her tenure. During the Depression, she established the Association's employment service and worked with Mayor Fiorello La Guardia and other library officials to provide pensions for public librarians in New York City. Rankin and La Guardia shared the belief that government should carry out the will of the people and care for their needs, and the two worked together to make this a reality.

Quotations from primary sources in the archives of the New York Public Library and the City of New York give the book a strong narrative style. Focusing on Rankin's efforts to document New York City's past as its unofficial historian, the book examines the city's political history during the first half of the twentieth century and illuminates the relationship of the local government with one of its great cultural institutions, the New York Public Library.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780786416349
Publisher: McFarland & Company, Incorporated Publishers
Publication date: 11/25/2003
Pages: 224
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 10.00(h) x 0.45(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Barry W. Seaver is a librarian at the Durham County (North Carolina) Public Library. He is the editor of Civic Duty: The Newsletter of the North Carolina Civic Education Consortium.

Table of Contents

Preface1
List of Abbreviations5
Introduction: The Progressive Movement and Municipal Reference Libraries7
Prologue: Rebecca Browning Rankin13
Part 1
IRankin and the Municipal Reference Library27
IIRankin and the Special Libraries Association47
IIIThe Municipal Reference Library, Civic Education and WNYC76
Part 2
IVRankin and Mayor La Guardia: Publications and Policies111
VRankin and La Guardia: Pensions and Committees134
VIInternational Affairs and the Creation of the Municipal Archives161
Conclusion: Rankin, a True Politician in the Best Sense of the Word173
Epilogue178
Notes181
Bibliography211
Index215
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