America’s Immigration Quandary

Babe Ruth’s draft card. Al Capone’s guilty verdict. Edgar Allen Poe’s 1842 bankruptcy petition. A 1909 letter from “Buffalo Bill” Cody to James Garfield, Secretary of the Interior (and future US president). Minutes from the November 12, 1718, trial of the pirate Stede Bonnet.

Don’t Dread Tax Season: Your Library Can Help!

Some people say their least favorite time of the year is the winter; others say it’s back-to-school season. But for most Americans, tax season takes the cake when it comes to being their least favorite part of the yearly calendar.

William Wood: The Johnny Appleseed of Libraries

Book ban proponents today seem to have a vision of an imaginary library full of Greek classics for adults and The Bobbsey Twins for children. While early libraries varied, they were far from uniformly dull. When people think about historic American libraries, they probably think of Andrew Carnegie, benefactor of library buildings (not books) at the turn of the twentieth century. Or they think of Benjamin Franklin, founder of one of the earliest-known subscription libraries in 1731. But nestled between them is a man you’ve probably never heard of, whose legacy was to seed book collections all over the US: William Wood.

The Inspiring Women Who Made Library History

Although most librarians today are women, libraries were originally staffed mostly by men. Even as more women entered the profession during the 1800s, men still held most managerial positions. However, female librarians kept pushing against the glass ceiling, breaking down the barriers holding them back.

JSTOR’s Prison Initiative Reaches More Than 1 Million Incarcerated Learners

Education is a valuable tool for everyone, and having access to resources such as libraries and online databases is vital for researching and learning. People who are incarcerated have long dealt with obstacles to accessing the resources they need to pursue their education and research goals.

Libraries Taught Kristen Arnett to Ask Questions

When Kristen Arnett was growing up, she was always begging to go to the library.

IdeaSpace, a Makerspace Unlike Any Other

EveryLibrary would like to thank the Central Rappahannock Regional Library System’s (CRRL) Chuck Gray, IdeaSpace manager, and Simon Watts, MakerLab specialist, for participating in an email-based interview in February 2025.

Data Librarians are Securing Government Data!

A small team of data librarians has been actively searching for data assumed at risk and sending the datasets and documentation to ICPSR's DataLumos, a crowd-sourced repository for government data. In the past week, they have sent data from IMLS, the Department of Education, FEMA, HUD, SAMSHA, and more. In addition, they have been nominating sites for the End of Term Crawl. They aim to ensure that the data captured has the appropriate documentation and metadata to enable long-term discoverability and preservation.

A Brief History of Legal Publishing

We saw it many times across sixteen years: Jack McCoy, maverick prosecutor from TV’s Law & Order, talking shop with his fellow attorneys or going toe-to-toe with defense counsel behind closed doors.

Students of Military Parents Deserve the Freedom to Read

President Donald Trump has issued executive orders aimed at eliminating what he termed "radical indoctrination" in K-12 education.