The modern history of the Texas State Library begins with the creation of the Texas Library and Historical Commission in 1909 (House Bill 142, 31st Texas Legislature, Regular Session). The Commission was charged with the control and administration of the State Library whose functions would include historical work, legislative reference, and encouragement of library development in Texas. E. W. Winkler was appointed State Librarian at the Commission's first meeting, March 29, 1909.
Gradually, all the Commission's mandates have been addressed. Historical work began with Cadwell Walton Raines in 1891, who as State Librarian began to rebuild the State Library's holdings, destroyed by the Capitol fire in 1881. Legislative reference formally got under way in 1910 with the appointment of a Legislative Reference Librarian. In 1916, the Library offered twelve different traveling libraries to communities in Texas to concretely demonstrate the value of libraries. In 1917, an effective county library law was passed; and, in 1920, the first county library was established. In 1927, the position of Library Organizer was created. Books for the blind were available through the Library in 1919.
An estimate of the Library's holdings in 1931 specified 88,800 bound volumes, 85,000 pamphlets, and 85,000 manuscripts. The Depression was a time of salary reductions, little book buying, and curtailed extension activity.
Following World War II, the State Library entered a period of expansion to meet the increasing demands placed on it by the public and by state government. The Library responded with greatly increased budget requests for new programs to meet these needs.
In 1956, the Archives Division was forced by the crowded conditions in the Capitol Complex to move to a quonset hut at Camp Hubbard. The Library and its friends had long been seeking a separate and appropriate building for the Archives and Library, and the move to the quonset hut was a rallying point. Funds were appropriated in 1957 and the Library moved to the newly constructed Lorenzo de Zavala State Archives and Library Building in 1961.
When created in 1909 (House Bill 142, 31st Texas Legislature, Regular Session), the Texas Library and Historical Commission was composed of five members: the Superintendant of Public Instruction, the chairman of the University of Texas History Department, plus three public members appointed by the governor, with concurrence of the Senate, for two-year terms. In 1919 (Senate Bill 88, 36th Texas Legislature, 2nd Called Session), the composition of the Commission was changed to five public members appointed by the governor for 6-year terms. In 1953 (House Bill 762, 53rd Texas Legislature, Regular Session), an extra member was added, bringing the number up to six. In 1979 (House Bill 1429, 66th Texas Legislature, Regular Session), the name of the commission was changed to the Texas State Library and Archives Commission, still composed of six members. In a statewide move to prevent tied votes in boards containing even numbers of members, an additional public member was added in 2003 (Senate Bill 287, 78th Texas Legislature, Regular Session), raising the number to seven.
The Commission appoints the State Librarian and Director who serves as the executive officer of the Texas State Library and Archives Commission as well as the executive and administrative officer of the agency. Duties of the State Librarian and Director are to record the proceedings of the Commission and keep account of its financial transactions; approve expenditures made in connection with the State Library; have charge of the State Library and materials contained therein; demand and collect records of state agencies and officials not connected to their current duties; endeavor to collect manuscript records in the hands of private individuals; procure archives of the state which have been removed, including those found in Mexico and other states; preserve historical relics and memorabilia which come into possession of the State Library; give proper attention to the care and availability of the archives in custody of the State Library; make a biennial report to the Governor; and ascertain the condition of all public libraries in the state and report the results to the Commission. Additionally, the State Librarian and Director is authorized by law to transfer, dispose, or otherwise destroy records in his custody which have no permanent value.
The State Librarian and Director oversees the operations of the divisions in the State Library through which his duties and responsibilities are carried out. Divisions as of 1984 were Administration (includes offices of the State Librarian, Assistant State Librarian, and publications), Administrative Services (includes personnel, accounting, building services, purchasing, and a print shop), Archives (administers the permanently valuable official records of the state and related historical materials), Data Processing (provides computer operations and assistance to the divisions), Blind and Physically Handicapped (provides materials for blind and disabled patrons), Information Services (includes genealogy, reference, U.S. and Texas documents programs, and technical services), Library Development (works with public libraries to secure funding, etc.), Local Records (operates a depository program for county records), and Records Management (provides records management assistance to state agencies and ensures records are sent to the Archives for permanent storage or are disposed of due to a non-permanent value).
By 1995, the divisions had been condensed into Administrative Services, Automated Information Systems, the Talking Book Program (providing services to all disabled Texans), Archives and Information Services (combining the majority of the old programs of the Archives and the Information Services and managing Regional Historical Resource Depositories), Technical Services (responsible for acquisitions, cataloging, processing and binding of library materials), Statewide Library Development (to promote and improve Texas libraries), and State and Local Records Management. Since 1995, the Executive Office has been the unit incorporating the Public Information Office and the offices of the Assistant Librarian and the Director and Librarian.
(Sources include previous finding aids, Texas Government Code, Chapter 441, and the enabling legislation.)
From the guide to the State Library and Archives Commission meeting files, 1909-2005, (Texas State Archives)
The first White House Conference on Library and Information Services was held in 1979. In 1988 President George Bush called for a second White House Conference, and Congress authorized it by enacting Public Law (P.L.) 100-382. The second White House Conference on Libraries and Information Services (WHCLIS II) was held July 9-13, 1991. January 4-5, 1991, the Texas State Library (TSL) sponsored the Texas Conference on Libraries and Information Services (TCLIS) in Austin as a state precursor to the national assembly. The state conference was coordinated by the Texas Library Association (TLA) under contract with the Texas State Library and Archives Commission. TLA, in turn, contracted the professional services of the Perkins Group as conference coordinator. Funding was provided by P.L. 100-382 and by P.L. 98-480, the Library and Construction Act. Funding was also provided in part by the Texas Committee for the Humanities, the state program of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
The primary purpose of these Conferences was to identify unmet library service needs, examine library and information service issues, and develop recommendations for future library and information services with the primary focus of the WHCLIS II being the impact of libraries on productivity, democracy, and literacy. Delegates to TCLIS and WHCLIS II included elected and appointed government officials, librarians, library users, trustees, friends groups, civic leaders, lawmakers, information providers, and interested citizens.
From the guide to the Texas Conference on Libraries and Information Services (TCLIS) and White House Conference on Libraries and Informaion Services (WHCLIS II) Records, 1979-1991, (bulk 1989-1991), (Repository Unknown)
The Texas State Library began as the National Library of Texas. In 1839, under President Mirabeau B. Lamar, the Third Congress appropriated $10,000 for books to be housed in the office of the Secretary of State. The first purchase of this appropriation was $300 paid to Ashbel Smith for his Edinburgh Encyclopedia .
During the remainder of the Republic period and until after the Civil War, an occasional appropriation was made for book purchases and document exchanges. Then, in 1866, the office of State Librarian was created at $1,000 a year. Robert Josselyn was appointed Librarian and catalogued the 5,427 books in the Library before being removed from office, along with the rest of the state government's officers, as an impediment to Reconstruction. The Library remained under the Secretary of State until 1876 when it was transferred to the new Department of Insurance, Statistics, and History. One of the duties of the State Library in its new setting was to serve as a depository for historical materials.
In 1881, the Capitol burned and the Library's 8,000 volumes were lost. Since most of the state's records were still in the custody of the creating agencies or stored in vaults, the loss of archival material was not great.
The Library began to move forward again in 1891 when the 22nd Legislature appropriated $1,500 for a Historical Clerk and $360 for a Librarian and Office Assistant. Governor James Hogg appointed Cadwell W. Raines as Historical Clerk. He began his duties May 5, 1891 and actively collected historical materials throughout the state. Although appropriations were reduced each biennium, the State Library had 25,000 volumes in 1901.
The modern history of the Texas State Library begins with the creation of the Texas Library and Historical Commission in 1909 by the 31st Legislature. The Commission was charged with the control and administration of the State Library whose functions would include historical work, legislative reference, and encouragement of library development in Texas. E. W. Winkler was appointed State Librarian at the Commission's first meeting, March 29, 1909.
Gradually, all the Commission's mandates have been addressed. Historical work began with Raines in 1891. Legislative reference formally got under way in 1910 with the appointment of a Legislative Reference Librarian. In 1916, the Library offered twelve different traveling libraries to communities in Texas to concretely demonstrate the value of libraries. In 1917, an effective county library law was passed; and, in 1920, the first county library was established. In 1927, the position of Library Organizer was created by the Legislature. Books for the blind were available through the Library in 1919.
An estimate of the Library's holdings in 1931 specifies 88,800 bound volumes, 85,000 pamphlets, and 85,000 manuscripts. The Depression was a time of salary reductions, little book buying, and curtailed extension activity.
Following World War II, the State Library entered a period of expansion to meet the increasing demands placed on it by the public and by state government. The Library responded with greatly increased budget requests for new programs to meet these needs.
In 1956, the Archives Division was forced by the crowded conditions in the Capitol Complex to move to a quonset hut at Camp Hubbard. The Library and its friends had long been seeking a separate and appropriate building for the Archives and Library, and the move to the quonset hut was a rallying point. Funds were appropriated in 1957 and the Library moved to the Lorenzo de Zavala State Archives and Library Building in 1961.
The Texas State Library and Archives Commission is governed by the Library and Archives Commission (Vernon's Ann. Civ. St., Article 5434 (1925, originally created in 1909 as the Texas State Library and Historical Commission)). Commission members are appointed by the Governor, with concurrence of the Senate, to six-year overlapping terms. The Commission appoints the State Librarian and Director who serves as the executive officer of the Texas State Library and Archives Commission as well as the executive and administrative officer of the agency. Duties of the State Librarian and Director are to record the proceedings of the Commission and keep account of its financial transactions; approve expenditures made in connection with the State Library; have charge of the State Library and materials contained therein; demand and collect records of state agencies and officials not connected to their current duties; endeavor to collect manuscript records in the hands of private individuals; procure archives of the state which have been removed, including those found in Mexico and other states; preserve historical relics and memorabilia which come into possession of the State Library; give proper attention to the care and availability of the archives in custody of the State Library; make a biennial report to the Governor; and ascertain the condition of all public libraries in the state and report the results to the Commission. Additionally, he is authorized by law to transfer, dispose, or otherwise destroy records in his custody which have no permanent value.
The State Librarian and Director oversees the operations of the divisions in the State Library through which his duties and responsibilities are carried out. Divisions as of 1984 were Administration (includes offices of the State Librarian, Assistant State Librarian, and publications), Administrative Services (includes personnel, accounting, building services, purchasing, and a print shop), Archives (administers the permanently valuable official records of the state and related historical materials), Data Processing (provides computer operations and assistance to the divisions), Blind and Physically Handicapped (provides materials for blind and disabled patrons), Information Services (includes genealogy, reference, U.S. and Texas documents programs, and technical services), Library Development (works with public libraries to secure funding, etc.), Local Records (operates a depository program for county records), and Records Management (provides records management assistance to state agencies and ensures records are sent to the Archives for permanent storage or are disposed of due to a non-permanent value).
By 1995, the divisions had been condensed into Administrative Services, Automated Information Systems, the Talking Book Program (providing services to all disabled Texans), Archives and Information Services (combining the majority of the old programs of the Archives and the Information Services and managing Regional Historical Resource Depositories), Technical Services (responsible for acquisitions, cataloging, processing and binding of library materials), Statewide Library Development (to promote and improve Texas libraries), and State and Local Records Management. Since 1995, the Executive Office has been the unit incorporating the Public Information Office and the offices of the Assistant Librarian and the Director and Librarian.
The State Librarian through the years has served on various state boards and committees, sometimes appointed, sometimes as an ex-officio member, such as the Board of Library Examiners and the Sesquicentennial Commission; and s/he has been involved with legislation affecting public libraries in Texas, including the Library Systems Act and the Library Services and Construction Act. S/He has also worked to secure grant funding from several sources for public libraries and various programs within the State Library, such as the Blind and Physically Handicapped program. S/He has also served in varying capacities (committees, boards, etc.) with a number of library/historical groups, including the Texas Library Association, the Texas State Historical Association, the Society of American Archivists, and others. The Librarian also makes presentations to groups such as these, to smaller organizations (such as county-wide groups), and to public libraries.
From the guide to the Records, 1857-1979, undated, (Repository Unknown)
Founded by the Texas Legislature in 1909, the Texas State Library and Historical Commission became the Texas State Library and Archives Commission (TSLAC) in 1979. As a supervisory body over the Texas State Library, the commission collects items pertaining to Texas history and advocates their collections through published material and promoting Texas history. In addition to managing the records of several state departments, TSLAC also facilitates the development of library associations, while denoting and preserving historical sites throughout Texas. Originally comprised of five officers appointed by the governor, a sixth member was added in 1953.
Source:
Smith, Dick. Texas State Library and Archives Commission. Handbook of Texas Online . Accessed March 7, 2011. http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/mdt28 .
From the guide to the Texas State Library and Archives Papers, 1926, 1930, 1957-1959, (Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, The University of Texas at Austin)
Founded by the Texas Legislature in 1909, the Texas State Library and Historical Commission became the Texas State Library and Archives Commission (TSLAC) in 1979.
As a supervisory body over the Texas State Library, the commission collects items pertaining to Texas history and advocates their collections through published material and promoting Texas history. In addition to managing the records of several state departments, TSLAC also facilitates the development of library associations, while denoting and preserving historical sites throughout Texas. Originally comprised of five officers appointed by the governor, a sixth member was added in 1953.
From the description of Texas State Library and Archives Papers, 1926, 1930, 1957-1959 (University of Texas Libraries). WorldCat record id: 773756635