07 December 2024

Letter to the Future City Librarian

«One very hot Saturday afternoon in April 1940, sitting alone in her office, Althea Warren* typed a letter addressed to "The City Librarian of Los Angeles on December 7, 1972" that she wanted opened by the future city librarian on what would be the hundredth anniversary of the library. She thought it would be interesting to leave a message, like a time capsule, for her sucessor. "You may be amused to know my troubles an hopes in your office thirty-two years ago," she began. "Thirty-two-year-old troubles are almost sure to be amusing." Warren mentioned that if by chance she were still alive when the letter was opened, she would be eighty-five years old, which at that time must have seemed nearly immortal. She wrote about how difficult it had been for her to inherit the library from the venerable Everett Perry, and how she felt like a "soft and shaking poplar tree" compared to Perry's "hard, primeval oak." She wrote about the contrast between the 1920s, when the library budget was lavish, and the cold shock of the stock market crash, when she was forced to cut salaries of library workers three times and could barely afford to order new books. The letter is by turns jolly and aching, full of the sober realization that because of her constrained budget, she was doomed to disappoint both her staff and the public. The public got less from the library that they wanted, and her staff was more aggrieved that she wished. She rued that she spent so much of her time on small matters—deciding whether to buy a new thermostat for the furnace in the San Pedro branch, finding money in the budget to buy paper towels for the washrooms—when what she hopes was to create a utopia of libraries across the city, staffed by librarians who were satisfied and proud.
  The letter was also optimistic. It was clear that Warren believed the library would endure. She signed off, "My heart is with your work and you!" The letter sat in the office of the city librarian until its designated date, when it was opened and read by Wyman Jones.»

Susan Orlean, The Library Book


*City librarian of the Los Angeles (California) Public Library from 1933 to 1947

3 comments:

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