Stanley Pargellis
Stanley McCrory Pargellis (June 25, 1898 – January 6, 1968) was an American historian and librarian. His work as a historian focused mainly on the military history of the American colonial era. From 1942 to 1962, he was director of the Newberry Library in Chicago. BiographyPargellis was born in Toledo, Ohio, in 1898.[1] He studied at the University of Nevada (B.A. 1918), at Harvard Law School, and as a Rhodes Scholar at Exeter College of the University of Oxford (B.A. 1922; M.A. 1929).[2] He began his career as a lecturer in history and English at the California Institute of Technology from 1923 to 1925. From 1926 to 1942, he taught at Yale University, where he received a Ph.D. in 1929 with a thesis on Lord Loudoun. As a historian, he published mainly on the military history of the American colonial era. In 1936, he published a critical edition of military-historical documents from the archives of the Duke of Cumberland at Windsor Castle. In 1942, Pargellis became Director of the Newberry Library in Chicago, one of the world's largest independent research libraries. He pursued a selective policy in the acquisition of new books, but contributed greatly to opening up and expanding the archival holdings. Pargellis "made the collection stronger by a quarter-million volumes and instituted a program of fellowships, publications, exhibitions, and public lectures—anything to make better known the treasures of the Newberry."[3] He was especially credited with acquiring archival documents from American economic and corporate history, for example by securing the entire business archive of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad. Pargellis also emphasized the importance of archiving American corporate history in two lectures to the Newcomen Society, "The Judgment of History on American Business" (1943) and "The Corporation and the Historian" (1944). While he was director, an in-house library periodical, the Newberry Library Bulletin, was launched in 1944. He retired from the Newberry in 1962. He gave the A.S.W. Rosenbach Lectures in Bibliography in 1962. Pargellis was interested in literary studies, supporting the journal Poetry with donations from the library during a period of financial difficulty in the 1940s. Pargellis was one of the founders of the Hounds of the Baskerville (sic), a Sherlock Holmes society in Chicago affiliated with The Baker Street Irregulars, and gave the group its name.[4] Pargellis was married to Elizabeth Allen, with whom he had three children. After the death of his first wife, he married Mabel Spence Erler, who had worked at the library for 38 years and was head of the Technical Services Department. She traveled to Europe to buy books and other research materials for the library and corresponded regularly with many of the distinguished book dealers of the continent, England and the United States.[5] She died in 1988.[6] He died of cancer in Chicago in 1968. Selected worksMonographs
Selected essays and lectures
Works edited
Secondary literature
References
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