Ruth Freitag Explained

Ruth Steinmuller Freitag (8 June 1924  - 3 October 2020) was an American reference librarian at the Library of Congress with an expertise in astronomy. Freitag was known for compiling extensive bibliographies.

Biography

Born in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, Freitag studied history at Pennsylvania State University, graduating with a liberal arts degree in 1944. She served with the Women's Army Corps in China from 1945. After three years she was accepted to the United States Foreign Service, working as a communication specialist at the US embassies in the UK and Hong Kong. She earned a master's degree in library science at the University of Southern California in 1959 and that year took a post at the Library of Congress.[1] [2] In the 1960s Freitag was instrumental in developing the MARC (machine-readable cataloging) standards, which helped standardize digital records shared between libraries.[1]

During her time at the Library of Congress, Freitag was a reference librarian specializing in the compilation of bibliographic guides, particularly on topics related to astronomy. One of her noted achievement's was compiling, illustrating and annotating an extensive bibliography on Halley's comet, which was published by the Library of Congress in 1984. Her patrons included Isaac Asimov and Carl Sagan. She retired from the library in 2006 and died on 3 October 2020 at a nursing home in Falls Church, Virginia.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Jennifer Harbster (12 March 2014). Celebrating Librarian Extraordinaire Ruth S. Freitag. Library of Congress.
  2. Katherine Seelye (22 May 2021). Ruth Freitag, Librarian to the Stars, Dies at 96. The New York Times.