American Library Association Honorary Membership Explained

Honorary Membership conferred by the American Library Association is the Association's highest award.[1] "Honorary membership may be conferred on a living citizen of any country whose contribution to librarianship or a closely related field is so outstanding that it is of lasting importance to the advancement of the whole field of library service. It is intended to reflect honor upon the ALA as well as upon the individual."[2] The Honorary Membership award was established in 1879.

The first Honorary Memberships were bestowed in 1879 to Charles William Eliot, President of Harvard University and Frederick O. Prince Trustee of the Boston Public Library.[3]

Honorary MembershipDateMajor accomplishments
Dolly Parton2023Founder, Imagination Library, award-winning singer-songwriter, actress, businesswoman and philanthropist. Longstanding support and commitment to inspiring a love of books and reading.
Maureen Sullivan2022President, American Library Association, President Association of College and Research Libraries, President, Library Leadership and Management Association.
James G. Neal2022President and Treasurer, American Library Association
Robert Wedgeworth2021
No Awards 2019–2020
Carla Hayden2018Librarian of Congress
Ann K. Symons2017President and Treasurer, American Library Association
No Award2015–2016
2014President and Treasurer, American Library Association, Joseph W. Lippincott Award, Founder, Neal-Schuman Publishers.
No Award2013
Jack Reed2012U. S. Senator, (D. RI)[4]
Betty J. Turock2011President, American Library Association, ALA SPECTRUM founder,[5] Professor & Dean, Rutgers School of Communication and Information.
2011Founder of Ethiopia Reads
No award2010
Judith F. Krug2009Director, Office for Intellectual Freedom, American Library Association, Director Freedom to Read Foundation
Pat Mora2008Poet, author, founder of El día de los niños, el día de los libros[6] [7]
Effie Lee Morris2008President, Public Library Association, pioneering public library services for minorities and the visually-impaired.[8]
2008President, American Library Association, executive director, American Library Association, library historian.
David Cohen2007Contributions to multicultural librarianship and intellectual freedom[9]
Alice L. Hagemeyer2007Passionate, lifelong interest in promoting information about the language, culture and achievements of deaf individuals.[10]
Anita R. Schiller 2007Groundbreaking efforts to enhance the status of women in librarianship.[11]
Alphonse F. Trezza 2007Executive Director of the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science, Director of the Illinois State Library.[12]
Robert D. Stueart2006President, Association for Library and Information Science Education, Beta Phi Mu Award.[13]
2005Professor, founder of the American Indian Library Association, Beta Phi Mu Award.[14]
2005Director, Maryland State Library, Command Librarian for the U.S. Army in Heidelberg, Germany, Maryland Women's Hall of Fame[15]
2004For his accomplishments as a cataloging theorist and practitioner and for his commitment to making catalog records accessible to library users.[16]
Norman Horrocks2004Director, School of Information Management, Dalhousie University, Officer of the Order of Canada.[17]
Barbara Gittings2003Lifelong commitment to developing positive images of gays and lesbians in the literature and on library shelves and to ensuring equal access to information for all people.[18]
Samuel F. Morrison2003Director, Broward County Library, founded the African-American Research Library and Cultural Center, Chief librarian Chicago Public Library oversaw design and construction, Harold Washington Library Center.[19] [20]
2003Notable contributions to the profession as a librarian, educator and library trustee, her leadership role at the local, state, national and international levels, and unstinting contributions to the education of children and young adults.[21] [22]
2002President, American Library Association, President Black Caucus of the American Library Association[23]
2002Cataloging theorist ranked among the greatest minds in library science. Groundbreaking work devoted to modern cataloging in the 20th century place him with Antonio Panizzi and Charles Cutter.[24]
2001Founder of REFORMA, Professor, University of Arizona, Founder Trejo Foster Foundation for Hispanic Library Education.
2000Chairperson of the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science.[25]
Vartan Gregorian2000President, New York Public Library.[26]
No Award1999
Wendell Ford1998 U.S. Senator (D, KY). Library champion. Quote, “If information is the currency of democracy, then libraries are the banks.”[27]
Bill Gates1998Funding free, public computer and Internet access in public libraries.Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.[28]
Melinda Gates1998 Funding free, public computer and Internet access in public libraries. Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.[29]
K. Wayne Smith1998President and CEO of OCLC, CEO at World Book Encyclopedia.[30]
Sidney R. Yates1998U.S.Congress (D,IL).Yates, Champion of libraries and arts.[31]
Henriette Avram1997Developed the MARC format (Machine Readable Cataloging), Associate Librarian for Collections Services, Library of Congress.[32]
Oprah Winfrey1997 Oprah's Book Club
Eileen D. Cooke1996Director, ALA Washington Office, 1972–1993.[33]
Mark Hatfield1996U.S. Senator (R,OR)
Nancy Kassebaum1996 U.S. Senator (R,KS)
1996U.S. Senator (D, IL), Champion of public's access to government information.[34]
Pat Williams1996U.S.Congressman (D-MT),
No Award1995
Jimmy Carter1994U.S. President 1977–1981, spoke at White House Conference on Libraries and Information Services.[35]
Virginia Mathews1994Director, National Library Week, developer of Sesame Street, co-founded American Indian Library Association,organized 1979 and 1991 White House Conferences on Library and Information Services[36]
Robert G. Vosper1993Director, libraries at the University of California, Los Angeles, President, American Library Association, President, Association of College and Research Libraries.
Joseph Becker1992Library networking pioneer. Award of Merit - Association for Information Science and Technology.[37]
Miriam L. Hornback 1991Secretariat to the American Library Association Council and executive board for 47 years. Attended 80 ALA Conferences.[38] [39]
Robert W. Frase1991Executive Director of American National Standards Institute Z39;[40] Library Funding and Public Support.[41]
Barbara Bush1990First Lady of the United States, Barbara Bush Foundation for Family Literacy
No Award1989
Ralph E. Ellsworth1988Director of libraries and professor of bibliography at the University of Colorado, author- Academic Library Buildings : A Guide to Architectural Issues and Solutions[42] [43]
Spencer Shaw1988Professor, Information School of the University of Washington, (1970–1986), president, Association for Library Service to Children.[44] [45]
Eric Moon1987 Editor-in-Chief, Library Journal, President, American Library Association.[46]
Major Owens1987U.S. Congressman (D, NY), librarian - Brooklyn Public Library.[47] [48]
Frederick Gale Ruffner Jr.1987Founder, Gale Research, Decorated World War II veteran.[49]
No Award1986
Virginia G. Young1985Library Trustee, author- The Library Trustee.[50] [51]
Lester Asheim1984Director, International Relations and Director. Office for Library Education, American Library Association. Professor, University of Chicago Graduate Library School and UNC School of Information and Library Science, Beta Phi Mu Award.[52]
William D. Ford1984U.S. Congressman (D, MI)
Johnny Carson1983Tonight Show, books and authors.[53]
Jack Dalton1983 Dean, Columbia University School of Library Services, Director Office of International Relations, American Library Association.[54] [55]
Clara Stanton Jones1983Director Detroit Public Library, President, American Library Association.[56]
Claiborne Pell1983U.S. Senator (D, RI)
George Aiken1982U.S. Senator (R, VT)
Carl A. Elliott1982U.S. Congressman (D, AL)
Virginia Haviland1982Founder, Center for Children's Literature, Library of Congress, chair, Newbery-Caldecott Award Committee, author.[57]
Frederick G. Kilgour1982President of OCLC;Legion of Merit for intelligence work during World War II, “History of Library Computerization.”,[58] Award of Merit - Association for Information Science and Technology.
John Brademas1981 U.S. Congressman (D, IN)
1981U.S. Senator (R, NY)
Lawrence Clark Powell1981University Librarian, UCLA Library, President Bibliographical Society of America, author, professor in Residence University of Arizona.[59]
Bessie Boehm Moore1980Served on Arkansas Library Commission for 38 years, member National Commission on Libraries and Information Science,
Lowell A. Martin1979Educator, author,[60] consultant.[61] [62]
Frances Neel Cheney1978Reference expert reviewed over 6,000 books for Wilson Library Bulletin, author- Fundamental Reference Sources.[63] [64]
Fred C. Cole1978President, Council on Library Resources, President, Washington and Lee University, Special Commendation of Surgeon General, U.S. Navy.[65] [66]
William S. Dix1978Librarian, Princeton University, President, American Library Association, primary author of The Freedom to Read statement.[67]
No Award1977
1976University Librarian, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, President, American Library Association, President, Illinois Library Association, author.[68]
Mary V. Gaver1976President, American Library Association, President American Association of School Librarians, Beta Phi Mu Award.
Virginia Lacy Jones1976Dean, Atlanta University School of Library Sciences,[69] President, Association for Library and Information Science Education, Beta Phi Mu Award.
Edmon Low1976Head librarian, Oklahoma State University 1940–1967 named in his honor: Edmon Low Library, President, Association of College and Research Libraries.
Herman Liebaers1976Director general of the central Belgian Royal Library[70]
Allie Beth Martin1976President, American Library Association, Director, Tulsa City-County Library, Oklahoma; author- A Strategy for Public Library Change[71]
Daniel Melcher1976President, R.R. Bowker Company; chairman Gale Research Company, and trustee, Montclair Public Library.[72]
Mary U. Rothrock1976Supervisor, Tennessee Valley Authority libraries, President, Tennessee Library Association and Southeastern Library Association, President, American Library Association.[73]
Jesse H. Shera1976President, Association for Library and Information Science Education, library historian,[74] Beta Phi Mu Award, Award of Merit - Association for Information Science and Technology.[75]
Alex P. Allain1975Intellectual Freedom advocate, Founder Freedom to Read Foundation, chair Louisiana Library Association Intellectual Freedom Committee, liaison officer in the French Navy during World War II[76]
Augusta Baker1975Coordinator of Children's Services at New York Public Library, storyteller, known for contributions to children's literature, especially regarding the portrayal of Black Americans. Storyteller-in-Residence University of South Carolina.[77]
William O. Douglas1975 U.S. Supreme Court Justice
1975U.S. Congressman (D, KY)
No Award1974
Germaine Krettek1973Director. American Library Association, Washington Office 1957–1972, secured funding for rural library service authorized under the Library Services Act.[78]
David Horace Clift1972Executive Director, American Library Association, President, Connecticut Library Association, U.S. Army, Office of Strategic Services during World War II.[79]
Luther H. Evans1972Librarian of Congress and Director-General of UNESCO.
Charlemae Rollins1972Head librarian, children's department, Chicago Public Library, President, Association for Library Service to Children, winner of Coretta Scott King Award in 1971 for Black Troubadour: Langston Hughes
Frank Francis1971British Museum Director.[80]
Ralph R. Shaw1971Director, U.S. National Agricultural Library, Dean, Rutgers University Department of Library and Information Science, Founder, Scarecrow Press[81]
Elizabeth Homer Morton1970Founding director of the Canadian Library Association. Order of Canada, 1968.[82]
No Awards1968–1969
Verner Warren Clapp1967Library of Congress- many positions including Acting Librarian of Congress,[83] author,[84] founder of the United Nations Library,[85] President of the Council on Library Resources.
John E. Fogarty1966U.S. Congressman (D,RI).[86]
No Award1965
Joseph Lewis Wheeler1964Director, Enoch Pratt Free Library, author[87] Library War Service during World War I.
Edwin C. Austin1963Chicago Attorney, American Library Association Trustee
Keyes DeWitt Metcalf1963Director, Harvard Library,[88] President, American Library Association, author.[89]
John Miller Chancellor1962Committee on Library Extension, Adult Education Specialist, author- The Library in the TVA Adult Education Program;[90] Helping Adults to Learn.[91]
No Awards1957–1961
Lister Hill1956U.S. Senate (D, AL)
No Award1955
Charles Harvey Brown1954Director, Iowa State University Library, U.S. Navy, World War I, founder Association of College and Research Libraries[92] president, American Library Association.
Linda A. Eastman1954Head Librarian, Cleveland Public Library, president of the American Library Association.
Carleton B. Joeckel1954Director, Berkeley Public Library, Captain in World War I-Silver Star, President, California Library Association and Michigan Library Association, Professor, University of Chicago Graduate Library School, author.[93] [94] [95] [96]
Carl Hastings Milam1954Executive Director, American Library Association, Library War Service in World War I, Director, United Nations Library.[97]
No Award1953
Harry Miller Lydenberg1952Director, New York Public Library, President, American Library Association, author.[98] [99]
William Warner Bishop1951President, American Library Association, President, International Federation of Library Associations, advisor to the Vatican Library.[100]
Helen E. Haines1951Author of Living with Books,[101] editor,[102] lecturer.[103]
Robert MacDonald Lester1951Carnegie Foundation administrator.[104] [105]
Louis Round Wilson1951Dean, University of Chicago Graduate Library School-golden age of library education-.[106] The Louis Round Wilson Library at the University of North Carolina named for him. President, American Library Association
No Award1950
David H. Stevens1949Professor, University of Chicago,[107] Director, Humanities Division of the Rockefeller Foundation, Advisor to Chicago Mayor's Commission
No Awards 1946–1948
Frederic G. Melcher1945"The greatest all-round bookman in the English-speaking world,"[108] President, R.R. Bowker, Originator Newbery Medal and Caldecott Medal for children's literature.[109] [110]
Halsey William Wilson1945Publisher, founder of the H. W. Wilson Company, creator of the Readers' Guide, the Cumulative Book Index, and the Book Review Digest.
No Awards1943–1944
Theodore S. Chapman1942American Library Association Attorney
Frederick Paul Keppel1942President, Carnegie Corporation[111]
No Award1941
Frank Pierce Hill1940Director, Newark Public Library, Chief Librarian Brooklyn Public Library, President, American Library Association.
1940Librarian of Congress, Librarian, Boston Public Library, President, American Library Association.[112]
John H. Finley1939Professor of Polities at Princeton University, and Commissioner of Education of the State of New York
Ross A. Collins1938U.S. Congressman (D, MO).
No Awards1934–1937
Richard Rogers Bowker1933Editor, Publishers Weekly and Harper's Magazine, and founder, R. R. Bowker Company.[113]
William L. Clements1933"One of the great Americana collectors of his or any other generation.",[114] est. Bay City Public Library,[115] Benefactor to William L. Clements Library, University of Michigan.[116]
Wilberforce Eames1933"Dean of American bibliographers,"Chief of the American History Division at the New York Public Library.
Charles Evans1933Founder of the American Library Association, Bibliographer-American Bibliography,[117] [118] [119] Director Indianapolis Public Library
Daniel Berkeley Updike1933Printer who was "one of the finest representatives of the Arts and Crafts movement in American book arts,"[120] historian of typography, founder Merrymount Press, author of Printing Types: Their History, Forms and Use.[121]
No Awards1931–1932
Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge1930Benefactor, worked with Library of Congress to construct Coolidge Auditorium.[122]
Herbert Clark Hoover1929U.S. President, 1929–1933.
No Award1928
Charles Alexander Nelson1927Bibliographer, cataloger of the Astor Library[123] [124]
No Awards1920–1926
Frank A. Vanderlip1919Library War Council Chairman, Founder, Federal Reserve System, Founder, first Montessori school in the United States,[125]
No Awards1900–1918
Andrew Carnegie1899Industrialist and philanthropist. Funded 1,681 public library buildings in 1,412 U.S. communities between 1889 and 1923.[126]
Bishop John H. Vincent1898Founder, Chautauqua Institution
No Awards1896–1897
Willard Fiske, Daniel Coit Gilman, Edwin H. Grant, S. Hastings Grant, Reuben Aldridge Guild, Edward Everett Hale, Ezekiel A. Harris, Charles W. Jencks, and Anson Judd Upson.1895At the 1895 conference "all survivors of the Librarians Convention of 1853" were elected to honorary membership.[127]
No Award1894
1893U.S. Commissioner of Education.[128]
No Awards1880–1892
Frederick O. Prince1879Mayor of Boston, Trustee and President, Boston Public Library advocated and oversaw construction of the library's McKim Building in Copley Square.
Charles William Eliot1879President, Harvard University[129]
References

Notes and References

  1. https://www.ala.org/awardsgrants/honorary-membership Honorary Membership.
  2. https://www.ala.org/awardsgrants/honorary-membership Honorary Membership.
  3. Wiegand, Wayne A. (1986). The Politics of an Emerging Profession : The American Library Association 1876–1917. New York: Greenwood Press.
  4. https://www.ala.org/news/press-releases/2012/04/us-senator-jack-reed-receives-honorary-membership-american-library U.S. Senator Jack Reed receives honorary membership to the American Library Association
  5. https://www.ala.org/advocacy/spectrum/beginningsreflection Reflections on Spectrum's Beginnings
  6. https://www.patmora.com/whats-dia Children’s Day, Book Day
  7. https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/pat-mora Pat Mora.
  8. Wilkin, Binnie Tate (2006). "Effie Lee Morris: Retired Children's Services Coordinator, San Francisco Public Library". African American Librarians in the Far West: Pioneers and Trailblazers. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press.
  9. https://www.ala.org/news/news/pressreleases2007/march2007/hm07 ALA names four honorary members
  10. https://www.ala.org/news/news/pressreleases2007/march2007/hm07 ALA names four honorary members
  11. https://www.ala.org/news/news/pressreleases2007/march2007/hm07 ALA names four honorary members
  12. Sullivan, Peggy. 2009. “A Tribute to Al Trezza.” American Libraries 40 (3): 36–37.
  13. [Robert D. Stueart elected to ALA honorary membership]
  14. Beaudin, J. (1998). Interview. In McCook, K. . (1998). Women of color in librarianship: An oral history. Chicago, IL: American Library Association.
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