Anne Carroll Moore | |
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Born | July 12, 1871 Limerick, Maine, United States |
Died | January 20, 1961 (aged 89) New York City, New York, United States |
Nationality | American |
Other names | ACM, Annie Carroll Moore |
Occupation | Children's Librarian |
Known for | Pioneer in the speciality of Children's Librarianship |
Anne Carroll Moore (July 12, 1871 - January 20, 1961) was an American educator and advocate for children's libraries. She was named Annie after an aunt, and officially changed her name to Anne in her fifties, to avoid confustion with Annie E. Moore, another woman who was also publishing material about juvenile libraries at that time.[1]
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Moore was born in Limerick, Maine, the youngest of ten children and the only surviving daughter[2] of Luther Sanborn and Sarah Barker Moore.[3] She described her childhood as a happy one and wrote about growing up in My Roads to Childhood.[3] Moore began her formal education at the Limerick Academy in Maine. She then attended a two-year college, The Bradford Academy in Massachusetts.[3] She was very close to her father[4] and hoped to follow in his footsteps as a musician,[5] despite the biases of her era.[6]
When the death of both her parents[7] and a sister-in-law[8] made her plans to become a lawyer unattainable, she spent several years helping her now widowed brother Harry raise his two children.[3] Her brother suggested that she consider the emerging profession of librarian, so Moore applied to the State Library School in Albany, N.Y., but lacked the program’s educational requirements. Undaunted, she then applied to the Pratt Institute Library in Brooklyn where she was accepted into the one-year program (1895).[3]
In 1896 Moore graduated from Pratt, and accepted an offer to organize a children’s room at that same institute, partly due to a paper which Lutie Stearns had presented at the 1894 meeting of the American Library Association (ALA), “Report on the Reading of the Young”.[9] Up to this point children had usually been considered a nuisance in library settings, and often were excluded from libraries until they were at least 14 years of age.[9] As part of her research into the proposed children’s room, Moore visited kindergartens (also a new concept at the time), toured various ethnic neighborhoods in the area, and even questioned children whom she encountered on the street.[9] Moore then set out to create a welcoming space for children with child-sized furniture, open stacks, cozy reading nooks, story times, puppet shows, summer programming, quality juvenile literature and perhaps most importantly librarians committed to working with children.[10] When Moore opened the children’s room it drew a line of children circling the block awaiting entry.[10]
Moore remained at the Pratt library for ten years. In 1906 she moved to the New York Public Library, having accepted the position of Superintendent of the Department of Work with Children, which Director Dr. John Shaw Billings had offered to her. This rather unwieldy title placed her in charge of children’s programming at all NYPL branches as well as overseeing the Central Children’s Room, which opened in 1911.[9]
Moore also developed a training program for children’s services staff: the “Qualification Test for the Children’s Librarian Grade”.[11] This six-month program included practical training, readings and discussion.[11] She organized hundreds of story times, compiled a list of 2500 Standard Titles in Children’s Literature, and she lobbied for and received permission to loan books to children. The children were required to sign a ledger promising to treat books respectfully, and to return them; "When I write my name in this book I promise to take good care of the books I use in the Library and at home, and to obey the rules of the Library."[9] She also initiated a policy of inclusion, celebrating the ethnic diversity of her patrons through story times, poetry readings and books that celebrated the various backgrounds of recent immigrants to the city.[9]
Moore developed a set of standards that she called “The Four Respects”:
In 1918 Moore delivered a series of lectures to a group of New York publishers and booksellers, promoting the need for quality writing for children. It was the norm of the day that children’s books were primarily vehicles for morality lessons, and Moore felt they should be more than this; she stressed the importance of providing access to well written books for the young.[13]
In 1921 Moore gave a series of lectures and toured the libraries of England and France for the ALA. During this tour she met Walter de la Mare, L. Leslie Brooke, and Beatrix Potter. She is credited with introducing all three to the American public.[13] She also wrote children’s books, the most famous entitled Nicholas, a Manhattan Christmas Story in which the main character was based on a puppet she used in her story times. She wrote of her own childhood in My Roads to Childhood.[14]
During this period Moore began to regularly review children’s books, writing for The Bookman for six years.[13] Moore eventually went on to become a highly influential children’s book reviewer.[9] From 1924 to 1930 she was the children’s book reviewer for the New York Herald Tribune.[9] In 1927 her column The Children’s Bookshop became a regular twice monthly feature. By 1936 her reviews were also appearing in The Horn Book Magazine. With a few notable exceptions (e.g. E.B. White’s Stuart Little[15] and Charlotte’s Web),[9] her stamp of approval or disapproval was often widely accepted as final judgment on a book.[9] Her own confidence in her ability as book reviewer is evident in the stamp she kept in her desk; Not Recommended for Purchase by Expert. By all accounts she wasn’t afraid to use it.[9]
Moore retired in 1941 at age 70. She remained active, writing and teaching for most of her remaining years. She died on 20 January 1961.[12]
Moore credited two women as her most influential mentors, Mary Wright Plummer and Caroline Hewins.[3] Throughout her career Moore surrounded herself with talented librarians, storytellers and writers. She mentored in turn many significant authors of children’s literature, including Margaret McElderry (book editor and publisher), Eleanor Estes (winner; 1952 Newbery Medal), Claire Huchet Bishop (author: The Five Chinese Brothers), Marcia Brown (who illustrated three Caldecott Medal winners) and Ruth Hill Viguiers (editor of The Horn Book). Several librarians published books that developed from their story times at the New York Public Library Children’s Room during Moore’s tenure, including Mary Gould Davis, Anna Cogswell Tyler and Pura Belpre.[12]
Along with Franklin K. Mathieus , Chief Librarian for the Boy Scouts of America and Frederic Melcher, Editor of Publishers Weekly, Moore founded Children’s Book Week in 1918.[13]
In 1932 Moore received from the Pratt Institute a special award, the Diploma of Honour.[3] In 1940 she was twice awarded the Doctor of Letters from the University of Maine.[17] In 1955 she received an Honorary Doctorate from the Pratt Institute.[3] In 1960, the year before her death, she was awarded the Catholic Library Association’s Regina Medal “for her pioneer work in children’s library services”.[18]
According to the American Libraries article, “100 of the most important leaders we had in the 20th century”, Anne Carroll Moore is one of the most influential figures in 20th century librarianship in the United States.[19] She was dubbed the “Grande Dame of Children’s Services”;[12] a pioneer in the newly emerging specialty of children’s literature, librarianship and publishing.[18]