Nicolás Barrios-Lynch
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nicolás Barrios-Lynch[1] (1910–1986) was an Argentine educator and pioneer of the rural libraries movement across South America. After his teaching career, he became a dedicated promoter of public and rural libraries, and the inclusion of foreign books and texts of Argentine original peoples literature in public education, spreading commercial education for entrepreneurship of educational tourism, became Director of Rural Education programs at the Ministry of Public Transportation, and at Argentina's Ministry of Education contributing in philanthropic initiatives for the sustainability of the National Library of Teachers located at the Sarmiento Palace.
He was born in Chilecito, La Rioja, the first son of Argentine arts student Romualda Barrios and Chilean artist Enrique Lynch del Solar. Upon his birth his father moved to France, eventually his mother re- marriage to Dr. Alfredo Palacios who would become his father figure. From his paternal family, he maintained relation with his distant cousins of his own age, his youngest cousin renowned writer Adolfo Bioy Casares and his older cousin naturist Enrique Lynch Arribálzaga, both members of the Lynch Clan in Argentina.