Archives West Finding Aid
Table of Contents
WPA Montana Library Project scrapbooks, 1933-1943
Overview of the Collection
- Collector
- United States. Works Progress Administration
- Title
- WPA Montana Library Project scrapbooks
- Dates
- 1933-1943 (inclusive)19331943
- Quantity
- 1.3 linear feet of shelf space
- Collection Number
- MC 416
- Summary
- This collection consists of twenty-four scrapbooks from the WPA Library Service (1933-1943). The scrapbooks were produced as part of the WPA Library Project District 6, Montana. They are comprised of clippings from published sources on a variety of topics.
- Repository
-
Montana Historical Society, Library & Archives
Montana Historical Society Research Center Archives
225 North Roberts
PO Box 201201
Helena MT
59620-1201
Telephone: 4064442681
Fax: 4064445297
mhslibrary@mt.gov - Access Restrictions
-
Collection open for research.
- Languages
- English
Historical NoteReturn to Top
With the election of Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1932, his promised New Deal resulted in the creation of a number of federally sponsored programs to help provide relief to the American people suffering the economic and psychological effects of the Great Depression. The largest and most successful of these programs was the Works Progress Administration (1935). The WPA provided assistance to workers of all walks of life. The Library Services Division got its start under the Federal Emergency Relief Act (FERA 1933) and later made the transition to the WPA as the Library Services Section and in 1936 came under the direction of the Division of Women’s and Professional Projects. The goal of the Library Services Section was to provide employment for professional librarians, primarily women, as a way of exchanging work for relief.
Like most New Deal programs the Library Service had a practical as well as altruistic application. The practical application of the program provided the opportunity of employment for professional and semi-professional librarians as well as expanding the services of local library in the areas of adult education and rural extension. The hope, in the spirit of New Deal ideology, was to also provide the opportunity to improve literacy while addressing the inherent right of all Americans to cultural enrichment. The library project achieved its greatest successes with permanent gains in the extension of library services to those people and places that had either lost their library, had limited library access, or never had a library. Residents in rural areas began to see the delivery of books in a variety of modes including backpack, saddlebags, and bookmobiles. Criticism of the program mainly rested on ‘make work’ activities that did not do anything positive other than pay wages. However, in those areas where people had at least semi-regular access to books and magazines for the first time these WPA libraries became “’the bread line of the spirit.’”
According to WPA Montana (PAM 3499), the library service not only brought books to rural Montana it also helped strengthen Democracy by providing more reading material on national and international affairs. By the early 1940s, the bookmobile already served four Montana counties around Great Falls with the hope of expanding that rural service in other sections of the state. Along with the extension of rural services, the Library Project provided labor assistance to libraries across the state that needed more help. The WPA library project included training opportunities for professional and non-professional library work. In conjunction with the assistance to libraries, it operated two book binding units in Great Falls and Butte. These two units made sure book repairs were cost efficient for WPA libraries. WPA libraries and bookbinding units in Montana and across the nation participated in collecting books for the Victory Book Campaign for members of the military at the start of World War II. The Library Service officially closed the week of March 15, 1943. At its peak the library service employed 38,324; 25,628 in library services and 12,696 working on book repair.
Content DescriptionReturn to Top
This collection consists of twenty-four scrapbooks (1933-1943) created for WPA Library Project District 6 Montana as part of the larger WPA Library Services Section of the Division of Women’s and Professional Projects. The Library Service employed workers who created scrapbooks to increase and add content to rural library collections. The content of the scrapbooks is not Montana specific and cover a variety of topics: short-stories, puzzles, poems, sports, self-help, society, and culture.
Use of the CollectionReturn to Top
Restrictions on Use
Researchers must use collection in accordance with the policies of the Montana Historical Society. The Society does not necessarily hold copyright to all materials in the collection. In some cases permission for use may require additional authorization from the copyright owners. For more information contact an archivist.
Preferred Citation
Item description and date. Collection Title. Collection Number. Box and Folder numbers. Montana Historical Society Research Center, Archives, Helena, Montana.
Administrative InformationReturn to Top
Arrangement
Files are arranged by series. Some material housed in oversize box. See Location os Collection under Administrative Information as well as the inventory below for more information.
Detailed Description of the CollectionReturn to Top
The following section contains a detailed listing of the materials in the collection
ScrapbooksReturn to Top
Container(s) | Description | Dates |
---|---|---|
Box/Folder | ||
1/1 | Sports |
1933-1943 |
1/2 | Poems |
1933-1943 |
1/3 | Post Scripts |
1933-1943 |
1/4 | Short Stories |
1933-1943 |
1/5 | Stories |
1933-1943 |
1/6 | Stories |
1933-1943 |
1/7 | Good Stories |
1933-1943 |
1/8 | Amusing Clippings for
Children |
1933-1943 |
1/9 | Keep Up with the World |
1933-1943 |
1/10 | Keep Up with the World |
1933-1943 |
2/1 | Floral Culture |
1933-1943 |
2/2 | Short Stories |
1933-1943 |
2/3 | Short Stories |
1933-1943 |
2/4 | Did You Ever Wonder |
1933-1943 |
2/5 | Health and Diet
Advice |
1933-1943 |
2/6 | In Lighter Vein |
1933-1943 |
2/7 | Puzzle Corner |
1933-1943 |
3/1 | Tubby and Buddy |
1933-1943 |
3/2 | Short Stories |
1933-1943 |
3/3 | England |
1933-1943 |
3/4 | Color Pictures |
1933-1943 |
3/5 | Childhood and Teen-Age
Problems |
1933-1943 |
Scrapbooks: OversizeReturn to Top
Container(s) | Description | Dates |
---|---|---|
oversizebox-folder | ||
4/1 | The Beauty Clinic |
1933-1943 |
4/2 | Interiors |
1933-1943 |