Russian Culture: Facts, Food, Values, Beliefs, Communication, Education, History (1998)
James Hadley Billington (born June 1, 1929) is an
American academic and author who taught history at
Harvard and
Princeton before serving for 42 years as
CEO of four federal cultural institutions. He served as the
13th Librarian of Congress after being nominated as 13th by
President Ronald Reagan in
1987, and his appointment was approved unanimously by the
U.S. Senate. He retired as Librarian on
September 30,
2015.
From
1973 to 1987, Billington was director of the
Woodrow Wilson International Center for
Scholars, the nation’s official memorial in
Washington, D.C. to
America’s 28th president. As director, he founded the
Kennan Institute for Advanced
Russian Studies at the
Center and seven other new programs as well as the
Wilson Quarterly.[2]
Billington was sworn in as the Librarian of Congress on
September 14, 1987. He is the 13th person to hold the position since the
Library of Congress was established in 1800. He was nominated by President Ronald Reagan and his appointment was unanimously confirmed by the
Senate.[3]
During his tenure at the Library of Congress, Billington doubled the size of the
Library's traditional analog collections, from 85.5 million items in 1987 to more than 160 million items in 2014.[4] He led the acquisition of
Lafayette's previously inaccessible papers in
1996 from a castle at
La Grange,
France. Billington has since been the only non-Frenchman on the
Board of the foundation governing the castle.[5] He also acquired the only copy of the 1507
Waldseemüller world map ("American's birth certificate") in
2003 for permanent display in the Library's
Thomas Jefferson Building.
Billington pioneered the reconstruction, using privately raised funds, of
Thomas Jefferson's original library, which was placed on permanent display in the
Jefferson building in 2008.[6] He enlarged and technologically enhanced public spaces of the
Jefferson Building into a national exhibition venue, and hosted over
100 exhibitions, most featuring materials not previously displayed publicly in the
United States.[7] These included exhibits on the
Vatican Library[8] and the
Bibliothèque Nationale de France,[9] several on the
Civil War and
Lincoln, on African-American clulture, on
Religion and the founding of the American
Republic, the
Early Americas (the
Kislak Collection is now on permanent display), and the global celebration commemorating the 800th anniversary of the
Magna Carta, and on early American printing featuring the Rubenstein
Bay Psalm Book. Billington also advocated successfully for and underground connection between the
U.S. Capitol Visitors Center and the Library in 2008 to increase congressional usage and public tours of the Library's Thomas Jefferson Building.[4]
Billington launched a mass deacidification program in
2001, which has extended the lifespan of almost 4 million volumes and 12 million manuscript sheets; and a new collection storage modules at
Fort Meade, the first opening in
2002, to preserve and make accessible more than 4 million items from the Library's analog collections. Billington established the Library
Collections Security Oversight Committee in
1992 to improve protection of collections, and also the Library of Congress
Congressional Caucus in 2008 to draw attention to the Library's curators and collections. He created the Library's first
Young Readers Center in the Jefferson Building in 2009, and the first large-scale summer intern (
Junior Fellows) program for university students in
1991.[10] Under Billington, the Library also sponsored the
Gateway to
Knowledge in 2010-2011, a mobile exhibition to 90 sites covering all states east of the
Mississippi in a specially designed
18-wheel truck, increasing public access to library collections off-site, particularly for rural populations.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_H._Billington