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'''Robert Bingham Downs''' was a prolific [[United States|American]] author and librarian. Downs was an advocate for [[intellectual freedom]] as well.<ref name="Davis">Donald G. Davis, D. G. D. J. (2003). Dictionary of American Library Biography: Second Supplement, Libraries Unlimited.</ref> Downs spent the majority of his career working against, and voicing opposition to, literary censorship. Downs authored many books and publications regarding the topics of [[censorship]], and on the topics of responsible and efficient leadership in the library context. <ref name="Davis"/>
'''Robert Bingham Downs''' was a prolific [[United States|American]] author and librarian. Downs was an advocate for [[intellectual freedom]] as well.<ref name="Davis">Donald G. Davis, D. G. D. J. (2003). Dictionary of American Library Biography: Second Supplement, Libraries Unlimited.</ref> Downs spent the majority of his career working against, and voicing opposition to, literary censorship. Downs authored many books and publications regarding the topics of [[censorship]], and on the topics of responsible and efficient leadership in the library context. <ref name="Davis"/>


===Life ===

Downs (a [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democrat]]) was born May 25, 1903 (a [[Gemini]]) in the southern small town of [[Lenoir, North Carolina]] ([[United States]])<ref name="gale">Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2008. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Gale, 2008. http://galenet.galegroup.com.proxy.lib.wayne.edu/servlet/BioRC.</ref>. Downs was the seventh child (of eight) of Mr. John McLeod (an [[educator]] and local part-time [[politico]]) and Clarissa Catherine (Hartley) Downs, who suffered from periodic ambulatory incapacity.<ref name="Davis"/>,<ref name="gale"/> Downs married fellow classmate Elizabeth Crooks in 1929. Elizabeth and Robert had two daughters Clara (Mrs. William Keller) and Roberta (Mrs. Terence Andre). In 1982, Elizabeth Downs died.<ref name="gale"/> Subsequently, Robert Downs was remarried to Jane Wilson in 1983. Downs has three grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.<ref name="gale"/> Robert B. Downs died at the age of 87 of [[pneumonia]] in 1991 at this home in the city of [[Urbana, Illinois]]. <ref name="Times">Unknown (1991). Robert B. Downs, 87, Librarian and Author. New York Times.</ref>

===Educational background ===

Downs attended the one-room schoolhouse called Shady Grove until his high school years when his family relocated to [[Asheville, North Carolina]].<ref name="Davis"/>, <ref name="gale"/> After the completion of his high school curricula, Downs went on to study at the [[University of North Carolina]] (A.B. 1926), the School of Library Science at [[Columbia University]] (B.S. 1927, M.S. 1929). During his Masters coursework, Downs was employed at the [[New York Library]] and as a librarian for two years (1929 to 1931) at [[Colby College]] in Maine.<ref name="gale"/> Downs earned a Doctor of Letters from Colby College (1944) and from [[University of Illinois]] (1973). In addition, Downs earned a L.L.D. from North Carolina University in 1949, and L.H.D.’s from [[Ohio State University]] (1963) and [[Southern Illinois University]] (1970).<ref name="gale"/>

===Employment===
The author of this entry wishes to make it explicitly known to the reader that the following "Employment" section uses data procured from the source: Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2008. The author of this entry has merely provided reformatting of this data. Exhaustive citation information can be located in the "References" section of this entry.

*1922-1926: Assistant Librarian, University of North Carolina
*1927-1929: Librarian, Colby College *1929-1931: Assistant Librarian, New York Public Library
*1931-1932: Assistant Librarian, University of North Carolina
*1932-1934: Librarian and Associate Professor of Library Science, University of North Carolina
*1934-1938: Librarian and Professor, University of North Carolina
*1938-1943: Director of Library and Library Sch. – Director of Libraries, [[New York University]]
*1943-1958: Professor of Library Science, University of Illinois
*1958-1971: Dean Library Administration, University of Illinois
*1971: Dean Emeritus, University of Illinois
*1973: Visiting Professor at [[University of Toronto]]
*1975: University of North Carolina
*In addition, Downs served as an adviser to many overseas libraries.<ref name="gale"/>

===Professional/academic memberships ===
The author of this entry wishes to make it explicitly known to the reader that the following "Professional/academic" section uses data procured from the source: Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2008. The author of this entry has merely provided reformatting of this data. Exhaustive citation information can be located in the "References" section of this entry.

*1951-1952: Vice President, [[American Library Association]]
*1952-1953: President, American Library Association
*1955-1956: President, [[Illinois Library Association]]

In addition, Downs was a member of:

*[[Southeastern Library Association]]
*[[American Association of University Professors]]
*[[Authors League America]]
*[[Society of Midland Authors]]
*[[Committee on Books Abroad]]
*[[United States Information Agency]]
*[[Phi Beta Kappa]]
*[[Beta Phi Mu]]
*[[Phi Kappa Phi]]

===Endeavors ===

While Downs looked to heroes [[Abraham Lincoln]] and [[Thomas Jefferson]] for guidance when challenges were encumbered, it was the influences of this his distant cousin, Mr. Louis Round Wilson, that formed Downs’ librarian leadership foundation. <ref name="Davis"/> During his tenure as President of the American Library Association, Downs became a strong force against what he viewed as suppressive forces of literature.<ref name="Davis"/> Downs produced many publications during his life and is best known for his book titled ''Books That Changed the World''. This publication enjoyed a great deal of success and was subsequently translated into many languages.<ref name="Davis"/>, <ref name="gale"/>, <ref name="Times"/> Downs was also known for his inexhaustible accession talents and developed a proclivity for rare books regarding the topic of [[American Folklore]]. Aided by Mr. Gordon N. Ray, Downs deft talents would eventually facilitate realization of the private papers of noted authors [[H.G. Wells]] and [[Carl Sandburg]].<ref name="Davis"/>

===Works ===
The author of this entry wishes to make it explicitly known to the reader that the following "Works" section is a direct reflection of data from the source: Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2008. Exhaustive citation information can be located in the "References" section of this entry. In addition, let it be known that the formatting of the following data was facilitated by another contributor of the Wikipedia community.

*(With Louis R. Wilson) Report of a Survey of the Libraries of Cornell University, Cornell University Press, 1948.

*Books That Changed the World, New American Library, 1956, 2nd edition, American Library Association, 1978.

*(With others) Family Saga and Other Phases of American Folklore, University of Illinois Press, 1958.

*Molders of the Modern Mind: III Books That Shaped Western Civilization, Barnes & Noble, 1961.

*Strengthening and Improving Library Resources for Southern Higher Education, Southern Regional Education Board, 1962.

*The Kabul University Library, University of Wyoming Education Program, 1963.

*(Editor) The Bear Went over the Mountain, Macmillan, 1964.

*Famous Books, Ancient and Medieval, Barnes & Noble, 1964.

*Resources of North Carolina Libraries, Governor's Commission on Library Resources, 1965.

*How to Do Library Research, University of Illinois Press, 1966, 2nd edition, 1975.

*Resources of Missouri Libraries, Missouri State Library, 1966.

*(With Frances B. Jenkins) Bibliography: Current State and Future Trends, University of Illinois Press, 1967.

*Resources of Canadian Academic and Research Libraries, Association of Universities of Canada, 1967.

*University Library Statistics, Association of Research Libraries, 1968.

*Books That Changed America, Macmillan, 1970.

*Famous American Books, McGraw, 1971.

*Books and History, University of Illinois Library School, 1974.

*Horace Mann, Twayne, 1974.

*Heinrich Pestalozzi, Twayne, 1975.

*Famous Books, Littlefield, 1975.

*Books That Changed the South, University of North Carolina Press, 1977.

*Henry Barnard, Twayne, 1977.

*Friedrich Froebel, Twayne, 1978.

*Australian and New Zealand Library Resources, Mansell, 1979.

*British and Irish Resources, Mansell, 1981.

*Landmarks in Science, Libraries Unlimited, 1982.

*(With others) Memorable Americans, Libraries Unlimited, 1983.

*Perspectives on the Past, an Autobiography, Scarecrow, 1984.

*(With John T. Flanagan and Harold W. Scott) More Memorable Americans, Libraries Unlimited, 1985.

*Books in My Life, Library of Congress (Washington, DC), 1985.

*(Compiler) Images of America: Travelers from Abroad in the New World, University of Illinois Press, 1987.

*Scientific Enigmas, Libraries Unlimited, 1987.

*A Dictionary of Eminent Librarians, High Plains Publishing (Worland, WY), 1990.

*(With Jane B. Downs) Journalists of the United States: Biographical Sketches of Print and Broadcast News Shapers from the Late seventeenth Century to the Present, McFarland (Jefferson, NC), 1991.


===References===
===References===

Revision as of 20:20, 15 May 2009

Robert Bingham Downs was a prolific American author and librarian. Downs was an advocate for intellectual freedom as well.[1] Downs spent the majority of his career working against, and voicing opposition to, literary censorship. Downs authored many books and publications regarding the topics of censorship, and on the topics of responsible and efficient leadership in the library context. [1]


References

  1. ^ a b Donald G. Davis, D. G. D. J. (2003). Dictionary of American Library Biography: Second Supplement, Libraries Unlimited.