Entity | American Library Association
The American Library Association (ALA) is a nonprofit organization based in the United States that promotes libraries and library education internationally. It is the oldest and largest library association in the world, with 49,727 members as of 2021. During the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia in 1876, 103 librarians, 90 men and 13 women, responded to a call for a "Convention of Librarians" to be held October 4–6 at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. At the end of the meeting, according to Ed Holley in his essay "ALA at 100", "the register was passed around for all to sign who wished to become charter members," making October 6, 1876, the date of the ALA’s founding. Among the 103 librarians in attendance were Justin Winsor (Boston Public, Harvard), William Frederick Poole (Chicago Public, Newberry), Charles Ammi Cutter (Boston Athenaeum), Melvil Dewey, and Richard Rogers Bowker. Attendees came from as far west as Chicago and from England. The ALA was chartered in 1879 in Massachusetts. Its head office is now in Chicago.
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Inception: 1876
Alternate Names: American Library Association, American Library Association. Headquarters Library, American Library Association Library, ALA
Occupation(s): Artists
Field(s) of Work: library and information science, librarian
Associated Place(s): Chicago, United States of America, United States, Singapore
Social Networks and Archival Context (SNAC) Record
Wikidata Record
Library of Congress Name Authority File (LCNAF)
WorldCat Identities Record (archived version)
Wikidata Record
Library of Congress Name Authority File (LCNAF)
WorldCat Identities Record (archived version)
Appears in:
National Association of Educational Broadcasters (NAEB) 26
Gateway to ideas 26
- Africa: Past, present and future
- American genius for self-examination
- Are the arts becoming incomprehensible
- Books into mass media
- Books that formed my opinions
- Can attitudes be legislated?
- Changing attitudes toward women
- Each to the other
- Education and social change
- Freud and twentieth century literature
- Is science sterilizing humanistic thought?
- Labor, leisure and automation
- Let's redefine tolerance
- Present-day immigration waves
- Protestant ethic today
- Shifting role of the university
- Should we educate for excellence?
- Spiritual poverty
- The U.S. and Western alliance
- The U.S. and the Far East
- The changing role of magazines
- The job of the presidency
- Wanted: Redefinition of classics
- What makes a good biography
- Who sets standards and values?
- Will man be modified?