Cleveland Public Library. Literature Department
Name Entries
corporateBody
Cleveland Public Library. Literature Department
Name Components
Name :
Cleveland Public Library. Literature Department
Genders
Exist Dates
Biographical History
The Cleveland Public Library Literature Department contains materials related to classic and contemporary fiction, poetry, drama, cinema, radio, television, theater, literary criticism and biography, writing and journalism, printing and publishing, library and information science, humor, and public speaking. Currently, the Literature Department holds over 500,000 volumes and has a collecting emphasis on materials pertaining to American and English literature and local theater and authors.
Before 1913, two departments, Circulating and Reference, existed in the Cleveland Public Library (CPL). When the library moved to the Kinney and Levan Building in 1913, subject departments, including a Literature Department, replaced this structure. With the opening of the current library location at 325 Superior Avenue in 1925, the Literature Department was located on the first floor. The Louis Stokes Wing was completed in 1997, and the Literature Department temporarily relocated to the seventh floor of the Louis Stokes Wing while remodeling of the Main Library Building occurred. With the completion of the remodeling in 1999, the Literature Department moved to the second floor of the Main Library Building where it currently resides.
The first Head of the Literature Department, Nellie M. Luehrs, served until 1942. Marie C. Corrigan, who began working for CPL in 1923, replaced Luehrs and acted as Head of the Literature Department until 1968. Following Corrigan, Jay W. Beswick, whose career with CPL began in 1938, served as Head of the Literature Department until 1978. Lucille Troph, who worked for CPL beginning in 1941, acted as Head of the Literature Department briefly from 1978 to 1982. After Troph retired, Evelyn Ward, whose career with CPL began in 1959, served as Head of the Literature Department from 1983 until 2006. From 2006 to 2011, Ron Antonucci was Head of the Literature Department. At present, Amy Dawson serves as the Manager of the Literature Department and the Ohio Center for the Book.
The Literature Department's strengths are in American and English literature and in theater and film. Throughout the 1940s and 1950s, the library collected theater-and film-related materials in both the Literature and Fine Arts Departments, but some staff desired to combine materials in the two departments into a dedicated theater collection. This goal was achieved in 1961 when the Literature Department established the William F. McDermott Memorial Theatre Collection after the widow of William McDermott, drama critic at the Plain Dealer, donated his materials to CPL. The Literature Department also added theater-related items from the Fine Arts Department to its collection. Other notable collections found in the Literature Department include the Leo Weidenthal Collection of Theatrical Memorabilia, which contains numerous programs, photographs, books, and other resources (acquired in 1968); the Wertheimer Collection of Theater Programs, which was donated in 1971; the W. Ward Marsh Cinema Archives, which consists of photographs, stills, and movie reviews belonging to the late Plain Dealer movie critic; and the John L. Price, Jr. Musicarnival Archive, which includes materials related to Musicarnival, Inc., the Cleveland-based tent theater company.
Sources:
"Cleveland Public Library." The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History. Last modified September 23, 2004. http://ech.case.edu/cgi/article.pl?id=CPL.
Cleveland Public Library Archives.
eng
Latn
External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/304717235
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no2013072671
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/no2013072671
Other Entity IDs (Same As)
Sources
Loading ...
Resource Relations
Loading ...
Internal CPF Relations
Loading ...
Languages Used
Subjects
Theater
English language
Harvard University
Nationalities
Activities
Occupations
Legal Statuses
Places
Charleston (W. Va.)
AssociatedPlace
Buffalo (N.Y.)
AssociatedPlace
Poughkeepsie (N.Y.)
AssociatedPlace
Carnegie Hall (New York, N.Y.)
AssociatedPlace
Munich (Germany)
AssociatedPlace
Cleveland (Ohio)
AssociatedPlace
Boston (Mass.)
AssociatedPlace
Symphony Hall (Boston, Mass.)
AssociatedPlace
Cleveland (Ohio)
AssociatedPlace
Princeton (N.J.)
AssociatedPlace
Cleveland (Ohio)
AssociatedPlace
Cleveland (Ohio)-History.
AssociatedPlace
New York (N.Y.)
AssociatedPlace
Cambridge (Mass.)
AssociatedPlace
Boston (Mass.)
AssociatedPlace
Salzburg (Austria)
AssociatedPlace
Severance Hall (Cleveland, Ohio)
AssociatedPlace
New York (N.Y.)
AssociatedPlace
Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>