| The Women's Library
Association, "dedicated to the premise that a great university must
have as its heart a great library," was established in 1956 as the
Women's Committee of the University of Denver. At the request of
Chancellor Chester Alter, Marion Gottesfeld (Hurwitz) and Peg Bradford,
both University trustees, formed a committee to raise funds for
the University's libraries and to acquire book donations and manuscript
collections to support University research and teaching. This committee,
composed of seven other members, including Mrs. Harry Bellamy, Mrs.
Horace Bennett, Mrs. David Chalmers, Mrs. Dayton Denious, Mrs. William
Iliff, Mrs. Sam Levy, and Mrs. Harold Webster (Frances), organized
an initial fundraising campaign that resulted in significant contributions
to the Mary Reed Library.
In 1958, the Women's Committee of the University
of Denver became the Women's Committee for the Library, also known
as the Women's Library Committee. Under the leadership of Marion
Gottesfeld (Hurwitz) the activities of the group were expanded,
and the organization set out to build the library's collections
through the solicitation of donations from organized women's groups
and individuals, and the creation of a memorial book program. The
new committee's enthusiasm and commitment was summed up in a 1959
Denver Post article, in which Marion Gottesfeld, referring to the
Mary Reed Library, stated that, "a woman built this library so it's
up to the women of the community to keep it up."
By 1965 the Women's Library Committee had grown
to over 130 members and their impact was strongly felt, as they
were responsible for acquiring seventy percent of the gifts made
to the University of Denver libraries from 1964-1965. To reward
this dedicated work a new organization was formed in December 1965
by proclamation of University Chancellor Dr. Chester M. Alter. The
Women's Library Committee was renamed the Women's Library Association,
which shortly became an independent organization with its own bylaws
and Executive Board. Marion Gottesfeld (Hurwitz) was named the first
Executive Chair, with Janet Pirkey appointed as the general chair
of the Annual Support program. The new organization was designed
to involve a greater number of women from the Denver community.
They hoped to reach this goal with the Annual Support program, which
recruited women to become Sustaining, Associate, and Contributing
members of the WLA. Members were eligible to attend a series of
educational lectures, which became the WLA Lecture Series, presented
by University faculty and community leaders.
In the 1970s and 1980s the organization developed
several creative fundraising events. Some of the most notable include
the annual Art and Antique auction, the Bargain Bazaar garage sale,
the WLA cookbook A Stirring Experience, Mansions in Miniature (a
miniature collectible show and sale), the Craftskeller gift shop
(a store for students in the student union), and the annual spring
book sale. Along with providing funding for books and manuscript
collections, the work of the Women's Library Association also reached
more widely into campus affairs. They had a representative on the
committee to select the architect for Penrose Library, which opened
in 1972. In addition, they sponsored many special events on campus,
including a reception in 1964 for U Thant, Secretary General of
the United Nations, and an exhibit in Penrose library of the University's
collection of prints by photographer Edward S. Curtis in 1975.
Today, the Women's Library Association remains
an important source of support for the University of Denver Libraries.
Their used bookstore, The Book Stack, comprises the majority of
their fundraising efforts for the libraries, along with the WLA
Lecture Series, the Living Library Fund, and the contributions of
annual members.
|