Eileen Colwell

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Eileen Hilda Colwell (16 June 1904 – 17 September 2002) was a pioneer children’s librarian, "the doyenne of in Great Britain".[1]

Life[]

Born at The Manse, Robin Hood’s Bay, Fylingdales, near Whitby in North Yorkshire, Colwell was the third daughter of Methodist minister Richard Harold Colwell and his wife Gertrude (née Mason).[2] She obtained a scholarship and studied librarianship at University College London. She had become interested in the idea of a children’s library at an early age but found that the plan of study (then the only one of its kind in the country) did not cover the subject.[3]

After leaving college she worked at Bolton Library in Manchester before obtaining the new post of Children's Librarian for the Hendon Urban District in North London in October 1926. Mostly providing schools with "book cupboards" she built the children's collection (2,000 volumes) from scratch. In 1929 Colwell was made permanent children's librarian with the opening of Hendon Library where she remained for forty years. She pioneered the use of story telling hours (sometimes with a puppet called Jacko), and let the children help with the running of the library.[4]

In 1937 Colwell helped found the Association of Children's Librarians, later integrated as the Youth Library Section of the Library Association.[1][5] In 1965 she was made an MBE. In 1967 she left Hendon, and for a while lectured at Loughborough University.[4] She made several radio programs with the BBC, and between 1966 and 1967 she appeared as a storyteller on the BBC children's programme Jackanory narrating in ten episodes.

Works[]

  • Princess Splendour And Other Stories (1969)
  • The Magic Umbrella And Other Stories Of Telling (1977)
  • Autobiography, Once Upon A Time (2000)

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b Mary Ellen Quinn (2014). Historical Dictionary of Librarianship. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-8108-7545-6.
  2. ^ Tucker, Nicholas (January 2011). "Colwell, Eileen Hilda (1904–2002)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. Retrieved 6 July 2021. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. ^ Eileen Colwell, The Telegraph, 18 September 2002
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Stephenson, Chris (25 September 2002). "Eileen Colwell Gifted storyteller and creative pioneer of children's libraries". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  5. ^ "A Brief History of Youth Libraries Group and CILIP's Carnegie and Kate Greenaway Awards" (PDF). CILIP Youth Libraries Group. 2006. Retrieved 3 January 2016.
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