Jump to content

Special Libraries Association

Revision as of 09:11, 15 September 2023 by Amandashelton (talk | contribs) (Added SJSU papers location info)

ORGANIZATION:

Special Libraries Association

ACTIVE DATES:

1909 - present

ADDRESS:

1120 Route 73, Suite 200

Mount Laurel, NJ 08054 USA

(703) 647-4900

E-MAIL:

leadership@sla.org

PERSONS INVOLVED:

Burton W. Adkinson; Verner W. Clapp; Herman Henkle; Cloyd Dake Gull; Eugene B. Jackson; Donald W. King; Jack Cassius Morris; Winifred Sewell; Jesse H. Shera; Charles H. Stevens; Mortimer Taube; Herbert White

MAJOR PROJECTS:

OTHER INFORMATION:

"Special Libraries Association (SLA) was formally organized, complete with its Constitution, on July 2, 1909. John Cotton Dana was the first president of SLA. The first conference of the new association was held in New York City on November 5, 1909, with approximately 40 members participating."

"In 1910, the Serial Publications program was established to provide a vehicle to communicate Association news, professional opportunities, and information affecting the profession, and to serve as a forum for the exchange of research and information impacting the profession. Its journal, Special Libraries, began as an eight-page pamphlet in January 1910, with Anna B. Sears acting as editor. The April 1910 issue of Special Libraries contained the first directory of special libraries, devoted to 23 subject fields. Badly needed book lists and bibliographies were featured from the beginning. In 1916, editor Dr. John A. Lapp effectively defined 'the basic purpose of the special library, namely to put knowledge to work.' This gave the Association its motto-Putting Knowledge to Work.

The Serial Publications program has considerably expanded since its 1910 inception. Special Libraries was published monthly from 1910 to 1980, when it became the Association's quarterly scholarly journal. Publication of the SpeciaList monthly newsletter, detailing Association and member news, also began in 1980."

"The groundwork for SLA's present structure of Divisions representing different subject fields or special types of organizations was laid at the Association's first New York meeting. At that time, committees were set up to consider the problems of agricultural libraries, commercial associations, insurance libraries, legislative and municipal reference libraries, membership libraries, public utility libraries, and sociological and technical libraries. These original committees were gradually formalized first into Groups and later into Divisions. The Divisions are important and unique because they demonstrate the integration of the library function into a subject field, into the operation of an organization, or in a new technology."1

SOURCE:

1. Special Libraries Association. (1997, July 5). Historical highlights. https://web.archive.org/web/19970705032413/http://www.sla.org/association/historical-highlights.html


PAPERS AT:
LOCATION

American Library Association Archives

University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign

PAPERS DATES:

1937-2013

SIZE:

18.3 cubic feet

INCLUDES:

Business & Finance Division Subject Files, 1949-2013; Business & Finance Division Publications, 1937, 1948-2012; Science-Technology Division Administrative Subject File, 1952, 1963-2008; Science-Technology Division Publications, 1947-2007; Science & Technology Division Subject File

SOURCE:

https://archon.library.illinois.edu/ala/?p=creators/creator&id=3993

PAPERS AT:
LOCATION

San Jose State University (online)

PAPERS DATES:

1910-2020

SIZE:

INCLUDES:

Special Libraries journal issues 1910-1996; Information Outlook magazine issues 1997-2020

SOURCE:

Special Libraries: https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_sl/

Information Outlook: https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_io/