After his training in library cataloguing, Freidus worked as a cataloguer at the General Theological Seminary.[1] On February 23, 1897, he took a job at the New York Public Library.[1] The scholar of Judaism Richard James Horatio Gottheil estimated that the public library then had about 300 books related to Jewish studies, but the month after Freidus joined the library's staff, a collector named A. M. Banks sold a collection of more than 2,000 books to the library.[1] Because of this sudden influx of material, a Jewish literature department was created (the Department of Hebraica and Judaica[2]) at the library, and in November 1897, Freidus was appointed as its head.[1]
Less than a decade later, in 1906, Cyrus Adler and Peter Wiernik estimated that the Jewish literature department at the New York Public Library had grown to contain 15,000 works, which Freidus had divided into 500 categories.[2] He developed an original system for cataloguing these works, which has been called the Abraham Freidus Classification Scheme.[3][4] Adler and Wiernik wrote that Freidus's system of organizing these materials "may be considered the first elaborate scheme of classifying Jewish literature for library purposes".[2]
In addition to his work as a cataloguer, Freidus also wrote original encyclopedic works. These include exhaustive lists of periodicals and reference texts on various topics in Jewish studies, which he published in outlets like the Jewish Year Book and the bulletin of the American Jewish Historical Society.[1] Joshua Bloch, Freidus's successor as head of the Jewish literature department at the New York Public Library, estimated that Freidus published 28 bibliographic works.[5] The originality of Freidus's scheme, and his reputation for being able to rapidly supply references on Jewish literature, made him a prominent figure in the community of Jewish writers in New York City at the beginning of the 20th century.[6]
Freidus died on October 2, 1923, in New York City.[1]
In 1929, the Alexander Kohut Memorial Foundation published a book on Jewish bibliography that was dedicated to the memory of Freidus,[7] and discussed his life and work.[5]
Freidus's classification scheme remains, alongside alternatives like that of Gershom Scholem, one of the standard options for cataloguing large collections of Jewish written works.[8]