Utah Library Association Explained

Utah Library Association
Nickname:ULA
Logo Alt:a sepia colored serifed U with a book open underneath it
Parent Organization:American Library Association

The Utah Library Association (ULA) is a professional organization for Utah's librarians and library workers. It was founded on June 8, 1912, in Salt Lake City & County Building in Salt Lake City, Utah.[1] [2] The initial founders were Esther Nelson, librarian of the University of Utah; Joanna Sprague and Julie Lynch of the Salt Lake City Public Library; and Howard Driggs, library secretary of the State Board of Public Instruction.[3] Ephraim G. Gowans, Department Chair for Anatomy and Pathology in the University of Utah Medical School, was ULA's first elected president.[4] ULA was initially part of the Utah Education Association and split from them in 1915.

At ULA's first conference in 1913 there were 46 members, by 2012 there were approximately 1,000 on the ULA membership list.[4] For the first 13 years, annual ULA conferences were held in Salt Lake City, in conjunction with the LDS fall conference.[4] ULA has been a charter member of the American Library Association since 1913 and was a founding member of the Mountain Plains Library Association.[4]

ULA advocated for the establishment of the Utah State Library in the 1950s; the library was established with state support, the last state library agency created in the United States up until then.[4]

ULA published Utah Libraries (formerly the ULA Newsletter, est. 1938) from 1957 through 1990.

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Random References . 27 January 2020 . The Ogden Standard . June 4, 1912.
  2. Web site: History – ULA . ULA . 1912-06-08 . 2020-01-27.
  3. Web site: Archives West: Utah Library Association records, 1912-2012 . Archives West . 1999-02-22 . 2020-01-27.
  4. Book: Mogren . Paul . Lamb . Connie . Willey . Kayla . Utah Library Association 1912-2012 Essays in Honor of Its Centennial . 2013 . Utah Library Association . 6–12.