Hello,
I found this article from Atlas Obscura
http://www.atlasobscura.com/ and
wanted to share it with you.
Happy
Reading!
Page
The Women Who Rode Miles on Horseback to Deliver Library Books
Librarians are amazing.
They were known as
the “book women.” They would saddle up, usually at dawn, to pick their way
along snowy hillsides and through muddy creeks with a simple goal: to deliver
reading material to Kentucky’s isolated mountain communities.
The Pack Horse Library
initiative was part of President Franklin Roosevelt’s Works Progress
Administration (WPA), created to help lift America out of the Great Depression,
during which, by 1933, unemployment had risen to 40 percent in Appalachia. Roving
horseback libraries weren’t entirely new to Kentucky, but this initiative
was an opportunity to boost both employment and literacy at the same time.
The WPA paid the salaries of
the book carriers—almost all the employees were women, making the initiative unusual
among WPA programs—but very little else. Counties had to have their own base
libraries from which the mounted librarians would travel. Local schools helped
cover those costs, and the reading materials—books, magazines, and newspapers—were
all donated. In December 1940, a notice in the Mountain Eagle newspaper noted that the
Letcher County library “needs donations of books and magazines regardless of
how old or worn they may be.”
Old magazines and newspapers
were cut and pasted into scrapbooks with particular themes—recipes, for
example, or crafts. One such scrapbook, which still
is held today at the FDR Presidential Library & Museum in Hyde Park,
New York, contains recipes pasted into a notebook with the following
introduction: “Cook books are popular. Anything to do with canning or
preserving is welcomed.” Books were repaired in the libraries and, as historian
Donald C. Boyd notes,
old Christmas cards were circulated to use as bookmarks and prevent damage from
dog-eared pages.
The book women rode 100 to
120 miles a week, on their own horses or mules, along designated routes,
regardless of the weather. If the destination was too remote even for horses,
they dismounted and went on foot. In most cases, they were recruited locally—according
to Boyd, “a familiar face to otherwise distrustful mountain folk.”
By the end of 1938, there
were 274
librarians riding out across 29 counties. In total, the program employed
nearly 1,000 riding librarians. Funding ended in 1943, the same year the WPA
was dissolved as unemployment plummeted during wartime. It wasn’t until the
following decade that mobile book services in the area resumed, in the form of
the bookmobile, which had been steadily increasing
in popularity across the country.
In addition to
providing reading materials, the book women served as touchstones for these
communities. They tried to fill book requests, sometimes stopped to read to
those who couldn’t, and helped nurture local pride. As one recipient said,
“Them books you brought us has saved our lives.” In the same year as the call
for books, the Mountain Eagle exalted the Letcher
County library: “The library belong to our community and to our county, and is
here to serve us … It is our duty to visit the library and to help in every way
that we can, that we may keep it as an active factor in our community.”
No comments:
Post a Comment