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The
librarian with the staring problem:
Ella
G. Parmele, 1899
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Ella Goodwin Parmele
became the librarian at Oshkosh Normal in 1899. A professional, trained
by the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, the Oswego, New York native is thought
to be the school's fourth librarian.
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By the time Ella G. started in Oshkosh, the library had grown into a well
developed program. The facility had extended from one to three rooms located
in the Normal School's third floor. In addition to the reference collection
and main reading room, the library, at the time, included a textbook lending
collection and a special reading room of periodicals separately paid for
faculty and students. Throughout the building there were also separate
reading rooms for the departments of history, literature and science.
In addition to these collections, the library also oversaw a collection
of 1,800 government publications, donated by Senator Philetus Sawyer and
other officials. These were housed in a fourth floor room and were used
widely for debates and reference. And
over all of this, it is reported, Ella Parmele ran a tight ship. Accounts
of Ella's deportment vary slightly in the brief bios of staff printed
in the Quiver:
…from her lookout
in the center of the reading room, [she] watches with eager eye lest some
indolent student idly fritter away his time in idle gossip. (1904)
…Puzzle: Is
it the nature of the school or an economy of time that forbids her gracious
replies? (1908)
The students might
have been more understanding of her austere manner. With a monthly salary
of $70, Ella G. had a lot to be crabby about.
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