Director of the Center for the Book at the Library of Congress, 1977-2016.
Historian of the Library of Congress (2016-2021)
John Y. Cole (born July 30, 1940) is an American librarian, historian, and author. He was the founding director of the Center for the Book at the Library of Congress and in 2016 became the first official historian of the Library of Congress.
From 1946 to 1966, Cole was chief of the library branch of the U.S. Army Intelligence School, stocking the library's collection on foreign intelligence from books in the Library of Congress surplus books program.[5]
Cole was hired at the Library of Congress in 1966 as an administrative assistant.[6] He also worked in the Library's Congressional Research Service and in the Reference Department as a collection development librarian.[6] He researched and wrote articles on the history of the library, focusing his Ph. D. dissertation on Ainsworth Rand Spofford, the nineteenth century Librarian of Congress who expanded the library from a small reference collection to a national institution.[5]
Cole's knowledge about the history of the organization led to his role on a yearlong planning task force initiated by Librarian of Congress, Daniel Boorstin.[7][5] Boorstin recommended Cole to lead the new Center for the Book, created in 1977 to use the resources of the Library of Congress to promote literacy and reading.[5]
Cole served as the executive director for the Center of the Book from 1977 to 2016.[5][6] He worked with Laura Bush and James H. Billington to launch the National Book Festival in 2001.[8] He opened the Young Readers Center to encourage reading by young people, and created the Library of Congress Literacy Awards, providing recognition and financial prizes for organizations that promote increased literacy.[5] The role that John Cole played in promoting the study of the history of the book is documented in the essay, “The Center for the Book and the History of the Book.” [9]
In 2016, Cole was named the first Historian of the Library of Congress.[10] The position is dedicated to research and documentation of the history of the Library of Congress.[10]
Cole has received many awards, notably the first "Champion for Literacy" award, presented by the Barbara Bush Foundation for Family Literacy in 2016,[11] and the 2000 Joseph W. Lippincott Award, presented by the American Library Association for distinguished service to librarianship.[12] The Lippincott Award statement praised Cole for having "exposed the American people to the power of the written word through dozens of national reading and library promotion projects including the landmark Read More About It series on CBS Television."[12]
Libraries and Scholarly Communication in the United States: The Historical Dimension, ed. Phyllis Dain and John Y. Cole (New York:Greenwood Press, 1990).
Cole, John Young; Congress, Library of (1995). On these walls : inscriptions and quotations in the buildings of the Library of Congress. The Library. ISBN978-0844408453. OCLC31295109.
Cole, John Young; Cole, John Y.; Reed, Henry Hope; Small, Herbert (1997). The Library of Congress : the art and architecture of the Thomas Jefferson Building. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN978-0393045635. OCLC37694014.
Cole, John Young; Aikin, Jane (2004). Encyclopedia of the Library of Congress : for Congress, the nation & the world. Library of Congress. ISBN978-0890599716. OCLC57558633.
Cole, John Y. (2017). America's greatest library : an illustrated history of the Library of Congress. ISBN9781911282136. OCLC974677704.
^ abcMaack, Mary Niles (2010). "Introduction: John Y. Cole: Librarian, Bookman, and Scholar". Libraries & the Cultural Record. 45 (1). University of Texas Press: 1–4. doi:10.1353/lac.0.0119. JSTOR20720635. S2CID161747506.
^Cole, John Y. "New Center for the Book at LC," AB Bookman's Weekly 61, March 13, 1978, 1763-64.
^"National Book Festival". Library of Congress Information Bulletin (July/August 2001). Library of Congress. Retrieved 2017-07-20.
^Shevlin, Eleanor F, and Eric N Lindquist. “The Center for the Book and the History of the Book.” Information & Culture 45, no. 1 (2010): 56–69