Haines, Helen (1872–1961)

views updated

Haines, Helen (1872–1961)

American librarian. Born Helen Elizabeth Haines, Feb 9, 1872, in New York, NY; died Aug 26, 1961, in Altadena, California; dau. of Benjamin Reeves Haines and Mary (Hodges) Haines.

Joined publisher Richard R. Bowker as assistant (1892), becoming managing editor of Library Journal (1896); worked with American Library Association (ALA), becoming recorder (1896) and 2nd vice president (1906); resigned from Journal and ALA because of ill-health (1908) and moved to California; wrote book reviews for Pasadena News, then Pasadena Star-News (1910–50); taught training class at Los Angeles Public Library (beginning 1914); joined faculty of School of Library Science at University of Southern California (USC); wrote Living With Books: The Art of Book Selection (1935) and What's in a Novel? (1942); taught at USC and summer classes at Columbia University (1937–50); helped found Intellectual Freedom Committee of California Library Association (1940) and served as its chair for 10 years. Received ALA's Lippincott Award (1951).

About this article

Haines, Helen (1872–1961)

Updated About encyclopedia.com content Print Article