Herbert Goldhor
Herbert Goldhor was Director and Professor at the
School of Information Sciences (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign).
Education and career
Herbert Goldhor was born in Newark, New Jersey in 1917. He received his B.A. from Rutgers University and a B.S. in Library Science from Columbia University in 1938. His first professional position was assistant to the librarian at Iowa State College.He earned the PhD from the University of Chicago Graduate Library School in 1943. His dissertation was on "The Selection of Employees in Large Civil Service and Non-Civil Service Public Libraries."
He served in the U.S. Army in World War II, primarily in the European Theater from 1944 to 1946, where he rose to the rank of Second Lieutenant. His military role involved library-related activities, including the training of soldier-librarians to support educational and recreational services for troops following the D-Day invasion in June 1944. In a 1947 article Goldhor detailed this experience describing how he helped establish and lead training programs for enlisted personnel to manage army libraries in liberated areas like Paris by late August 1944.
After military service, Goldhor joined the Library School faculty of the University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign from 1946 to 1951. While at
Illinois he was the editor of the Occasional Papers series and published the first of many trend-line indexes. The "Occasional Papers" series is a venue for disseminating in-depth scholarly works on librarianship, too lengthy, detailed, or specialized for standard periodical publication.
In 1952, Goldhor moved to Indiana to become the chief librarian of the Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library.
He returned to the University of Illinois to direct the Graduate School of Library Science from 1962 to 1978. He coordinated and edited the 1963 Clinic on Library Applications of Data Processing.
In 1975 Goldhor was appointed director of the school's Library Research Center. He published the "University of Illinois Annual Survey" annually in American Libraries, the magazine of the American Library Association. The survey tracked national trends in public library circulation and expenditures with data indexed to a 1980 base of 100. The series was published from 1974 to 1988.
Goldhor was director of the Library Research Center until his retirement in 1987. A festschrift published in his honor emphasized his contributions to public library
service and administration, data collection, and scientific research in librarianship.
Herbert Goldhor died March 29, 2011.
Awards and honors
- 1988 Melvil Dewey Medal - American Library Association for "his contribution to library education, his gathering and analysis of statistics, and his leadership in library administration and professional associations"
- 1987 Librarian of the Year- Illinois Library Association