William Wood: The Johnny Appleseed of Libraries
March 17, 2025
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.