Frances Burns Linn

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BornSeptember 17, 1873
Ohio, US
DiedMay 4, 1962(1962-05-04) (aged 88)
Occupationlibrarian
HonoursCalifornia Library Hall of Fame (2018)
Frances Burns Linn
A newspaper photograph of a white woman in an oval frame. She is wearing a high lace collar, with her dark hair dressed in an bouffant updo.
Frances Burns Linn, from a 1911 newspaper.
BornSeptember 17, 1873
Ohio, US
DiedMay 4, 1962(1962-05-04) (aged 88)
Occupationlibrarian
HonoursCalifornia Library Hall of Fame (2018)

Frances Burns Linn (September 17, 1873 – May 4, 1962) was an American librarian, the head librarian of the Santa Barbara Library from 1906 to 1943. She was inducted into the California Library Hall of Fame in 2018.

Frances Burns was born in Ohio, the daughter of Helen Scott Burns and George W. Burns. Her father was a Methodist minister in Zanesville, Ohio.[1] She attended the New York State Library School, and worked as a librarian in Norwalk, Ohio in 1902.[2] She was a young widow when she moved to California in 1906.[3]

Career

Linn became head librarian of the Santa Barbara Public Library in 1906, during a state-wide expansion of free library services in California.[4] In 1914, she toured eastern and midwestern cities to study public library facilities,[5] and used a Carnegie Foundation grant to fund the city's new public library building,[6] which opened in 1917.[7][8] The King of Belgium visited the library in 1921.[9] The Santa Barbara Library building was badly damaged in an earthquake in 1925, but reopened in 1926, and added the Faulkner Gallery in 1930.[10][11]

Linn held various leadership positions with the California Library Association during her career, from district officer to president (in 1928).[12][13] As county librarian, she was involved in the establishment of 59 public libraries in Santa Barbara County.[14]

Linn explained her motivations and goals for librarianship when she said, "The library can be the means of building up the neighborhood life and community spirit. It can be the common interest in the small towns where differences of creed and politics and social position separate the people, dissipating the forces for good."[15][3]

Personal life and legacy

References

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