Peggy Sullivan (August 12, 1929 – April 13, 2020)[1] was an American librarian and educator. She was elected president of the American Library Association and was a scholar of the history of librarianship.
Biography
Throughout her career, Sullivan served as:
Dean, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, Dominican University (formerly Rosary College), River Forest, Illinois (1995–1997)
From 1952 to 1977, Sullivan held positions of increasing responsibility in public and school libraries. She directed the national Knapp School Libraries Project for the American Association of School Librarians (1963–1968) which had received $1,130,000 to raise the standards of school libraries.[2]
Highlights of Sullivan's career include President of ALA's Children's Services Division (now the Association for Library Service to Children – ALSC) (1976–1977), Chair Centennial Celebration of the American Library Association (1976), assistant commissioner for extension services at the Chicago Public Library (1977–1981), ALA president (1980–1981), ALA executive director (1992–1994), Dean of the LIS Program at Rosary College (now Dominican University), Dean of the College of Professional Studies at Northern Illinois University, and numerous university teaching positions. Sullivan served as director of the Knapp School Libraries Project (1963–1968). This project had great national impact on convincing the public of the need for high quality school library media programs.[3]
In 2004, Sullivan established the Sullivan Award for Public Library Administrators. This award is presented annually to an individual who has shown exceptional understanding and support of public library service to children while having general management/supervisory/administrative responsibility that has included public library service to children in its scope. She also presented the Sullivan Award to a faculty member in the NIU College of Health and Human Sciences (formerly the College of Professional Studies, where she was dean) for achievement in research. It is presented every fall on the NIU campus.
Public Libraries: Smart Practices in Personnel, with William H. Ptacek (Libraries Unlimited, 1978) ISBN0872872785
Opportunities in Library and Information Science (Vocational Guidance Manuals, 1977) ISBN089022224X (Sullivan had varying responsibilities for later editions of this title with various publishers)
Problems in School Media Management (Bowker, 1972) ISBN0835204278
UNESCO Consultant on School Libraries, Australia, 1970
President, American Library Association, 1980–1981. Theme: "Libraries and the Pursuit of Happiness."[4]
Numerous committee appointments and elective offices in the American Library Association, 1959 and continuing, including the presidency of the Children's Services Division, 1976–1977, and membership on the ALA Council
Vice President and Program Chair, Caxton Club of Chicago, 2001–2002
Treasurer, Chicago Literary Club, 2006–2007
Consulting assignments and the presentation of speeches, workshops, storytelling programs, as well as participation in ALA accreditation of library education programs have taken Peggy Sullivan to every one of the fifty US states and every continent except Antarctica (which she visited on her own).
Committee appointments in the Illinois Library Association, the Catholic Library Association, the Association of college and Research Libraries, the Library Administration Division of the American Library Association, and the American Association of School Librarians
Donor, the Sullivan Award for Public Library Administrators, American Library Association, 2004 and continuing annually
Awards and recognition
In 2008, Sullivan was awarded American Library Association Honorary Membership.[5][6] She was nominated in recognition of over 50 years of dedicated librarianship during which she wrote the definitive scholarly history of the tenure of Carl Milam (ALA secretary 1920–1946) and the growth of the American Library Association to an international organization."[5]
^Knapp School Library Project. Peggy Sullivan (ed.), Realization: The Final Report of the Knapp School Libraries Project, (Chicago, 1968), Record Series 20/4/14, American Library Association Archives at the University of Illinois./