Dixson, Zella Allen, 1858-1924
Variant namesLibrarian.
From the description of Papers, 1876-1910. (University of Chicago Library). WorldCat record id: 52248137
Zella Allen Dixson (1858-1924) was born in Zanesville, Ohio, and received an A.B. from Mount Holyoke College in 1880. Her second degree, an A.M. from Shepardson College, was received in 1892. After a brief marriage to Joseph E. Dixson ended with her husband's death in 1885, Mrs. Dixson entered Columbia College in New York as a student of library methodology under Melvil Dewey. At the end of her first year at Columbia, and with Dewey's reluctant approval, she left to organize a series of community and college libraries in Ohio, Wisconsin, and Minnesota, a period of independent professional work which culminated in her appointment as librarian at Denison University in 1888. Two years later, she accepted the position of librarian at the Baptist Union Theological Seminary in Morgan Park, Illinois, where she quickly attracted the notice of trustee Thomas W. Goodspeed. In July, 1891, at Goodspeed's urging, President William Rainey Harper named Mrs. Dixson to supervise the operation of the University of Chicago Library. She assumed the position of Assistant Librarian in the fall of 1892, was promoted to Associate Librarian in 1895, and, in the absence of an official University Librarian, remained the de facto head of the Library until her resignation in 1910.
While Mrs. Dixson's duties were largely administrative, she also developed a series of courses in library science for the University Extension. First offered in 1897, these courses had increased to four by 1900: Historical and Literary Outlines of Library Economy; Technical Methods; Bibliography and Reference Work; and Principles of Library Administration. Other professional interests were reflected in two books written by Mrs. Dixson. The first, The Comprehensive Subject Index to Universal Prose Fiction (1897), was a distillation of her experience as a cataloguer and organizer of libraries. The second, Concerning Book-Plates: A Handbook for Collectors (1903), revealed her attraction to an esoteric field and had the added distinction of being published by the Wisteria Cottage Press, a private press operated by Mrs. Dixson from a small building behind her Hyde Park home.
From the guide to the Dixson, Zella Allen. Papers, 1876-1910, (Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library 1100 East 57th Street Chicago, Illinois 60637 U.S.A.)
Role | Title | Holding Repository | |
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creatorOf | Dixson, Zella Allen, 1858-1924. Papers, 1876-1910. | University of Chicago Library | |
referencedIn | University of Chicago. Library. Records, 1890-1928 (inclusive). | University of Chicago Library | |
creatorOf | Dixson, Zella Allen. Papers, 1876-1910 | Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library, | |
referencedIn | University of Chicago. Library. Office of the Director. Ernest Dewitt Burton and J. C. M. Hanson. Records, 1910-1928 | Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library, | |
referencedIn | University of Chicago. Library. Office of the Director. Zella Allen Dixson. Records, 1892-1910 | Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library, |
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associatedWith | Burton, Ernest De Witt, 1856-1925 | person |
associatedWith | University of Chicago. Library. | corporateBody |
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Librarians |
Library education |
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Person
Birth 1858
Death 1924