Friday, August 9, 2024

The Outdoor Reading Rooms of Los Angeles Public Library

A postcard selling the lush surroundings of Pershing Square 
captures the Los Angeles Public Library outdoor library (circa early 1940s)

Outdoor reading rooms were very popular in Los Angeles during the late 1930s-early 1940s. Before the advent of Little Free Libraries, the Los Angeles Public Library had carts of books and magazines in downtown parks for people to borrow from and enjoy the sunshine while catching up on their reading. The October 1938 issue of The American City magazine listed reasons why folks might be more inclined to visit the book cart instead of going into the library to borrow materials. There was the perception amongst the patrons that there were "difficulties to be met in the library routine" including the indoor atmosphere and/or an embarrassment of their own unconventional garb (e.g. they were unable to afford "proper attire").
The park area behind the Central Library in August 1936 (view is from the Engstrom Hotel Apartments)
Photographer: G. Haven Bishop, Southern California Edison Photographs and negatives, Huntington Library

A man borrows a book from the Los Angeles Public Library outdoor library in Pershing Square [n.d]
California Historical Society/University of Southern California Digital Library

An outdoor library (initially a table with books and magazines) was tried (in 1936?) outside the Central Library where folks gathered in the park-like surroundings of the library to chat with others and people-watch but never actually came inside the library. A cart in Pershing Square was the second outdoor library. At the time Pershing Square was planted with semi-tropical trees and attracted not only wild birds but up to 100,000 people a day -- far more than the 2,500 seats available in the park. Due to the success of the outdoor libraries at the Central Library park and Pershing Square, a third outdoor library was started in Lafayette Park near the Felipe de Neve Branch.
Men heed the sign which says, "Los Angeles Public Library Borrow A Book To Read In The Park" in Pershing Square (circa 1937). Photographer: Herman J. Schultheis/Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection

Each of these outdoor libraries were open from approximately 9am to 4pm year-round and cared for by WPA workers. There were both books and magazines available to check out on the honor system, no need to produce a library card or sign your name. Magazines were far more popular with the outdoor readers. The books were often library discards, duplicates, or books that had been repaired. Due to the success of the outdoor libraries, especially the Pershing Square location, there was talk of adding outdoor libraries at other branch libraries that were near parks but I've yet to find evidence that this occurred.
A man peruses Los Angeles Public Library's outdoor library in Pershing Square (circa 1937)
Los Angeles Daily News Negatives/UCLA Library Digital Collections

Thursday, May 9, 2024

Pomona's Influential Librarian and Preservationist: Sarah M. Jacobus

Sarah M. Jacobus, Pomona (CA) librarian (1906-1946), circa 1905
Pomona Public Library Special Collections

Sarah Jacobus was thirty-six years old when she took over as librarian of the Pomona Public Library in 1906 and built a powerhouse institution that she led for more than 40 years. Although best known as the Pomona librarian, she was earlier an Assistant at the Los Angeles Public Library and the librarian at the Kamehameha School for Boys in Honolulu. Along the way, she mentored library workers, advocated for collaboration in librarianship, and championed local history, which led to the founding of the Historical Society of Pomona Valley.

Sarah Miranda Jacobus (Mira to friends and family) was the second of eight children born to Isaac Jacobus and his wife Sarah Eliza Jacobus (nee Gambee) on July 20, 1869. She was born in Junction City, Kansas, where her father was minister at the new Congregational church. Newspaper accounts called Isaac an energetic pastor, a “man of learning and ability.” The small church was described as beautiful, with varnished pine pews and black walnut rails. Isaac was also involved in local government and served for many years as Superintendent of Public Education. 

Map of the City of Los Angeles in 1884 by H.J. Stevenson
Highlight and detail of this cadastral map shows the land owned by Sarah's father, Isaac Jacobus, in East Los Angeles. 
Borders of the Jacobus Tract were Sichel Street on the east, Griffin Avenue on the west between 
(just north of) Avenue 28 on the north and Altura on the south.
Los Angeles Public Library Map Collection

The Jacobus family moved to Los Angeles in 1881 and settled in East Los Angeles. Mr. Jacobus purchased 14.45 acres at the northwest corner of Griffin Avenue and Patrick Street directly from John S. Griffin, the founder of East Los Angeles. The family home, at what would today be 2675 N. Griffin Avenue was across the street from the Salvation Army ‘True Love Home.’ Sadly, Isaac Jacobus died of typhoid pneumonia on February 17, 1883, at the age of 48. The property was transferred to his widow, Sarah Eliza Jacobus, who sold parcels of land in the Jacobus tract in East Los Angeles (now known as Lincoln Heights) and was able to provide for the family. 


(Background photo) Los Angeles High School circa 1883, C.C. Pierce/Security National Bank Collection/Los Angeles Public Library; (clockwise, l-r) Valedictorian Mira Jacobus in the Los Angeles Times, June 30, 1888; Lavinia, Lyman, and Sarah M. lived with their mother on Griffin Avenue, from the 1897 city directory, Los Angeles Public Library Collection; 
Sarah Miranda Jacobus listed in the 1889 Wellesley College Legenda, Wellesley College Archives


In 1888, Mira Jacobus was valedictorian of her graduating class at Los Angeles High School, which then sat atop Poundcake Hill, which was approximately the southeast corner of Broadway & Temple. [In a bit of foreshadowing of Mira’s future, Mary Foy (City Librarian 1880-1884) was a very active participant in the Los Angeles High School Alumni group in 1888 and served on their Executive Committee.] Following graduation, Mira attended Wellesley College from 1888 until 1891. She was enrolled in the Classical course (which included the prerequisite to be able to translate both Homeric and Attic Greek by sight), but for some reason did not graduate. In November 1891, she returned to the family home on Griffin Avenue in East Los Angeles. She lived there for many years with her widowed mother, her sisters Agnes and Lavinia, and her brother Lyman. (Her other siblings- Levi, Leighton, Charles, and Annie, all died in childhood.) 


(Background) General Library room in the Los Angeles Public Library, from the 1897-98 Los Angeles Public Library Annual Report; (clockwise l-r) Mira Jacobus listed as a General Attendant in the Los Angeles Public Library Annual Report 1898-99; Mira Jacobus graduated in the Ninth Training Class of the Los Angeles Public Library, from the 1897-98 Los Angeles Public Library Annual Report; Los Angeles City Hall circa 1889. The library was on the third floor of this city hall building from 1889 until 1906. Security National Bank Collection/Los Angeles Public Library

Mira Jacobus sought a career in librarianship after a brief foray into teaching. She completed the coursework for the Los Angeles Public Library Training Class in December 1897 and was hired as an Attendant at the Los Angeles Public Library in April of the following year (Harriet Child Wadleigh was City Librarian at the time). In the LAPL annual report for 1900 she is listed more formally as Sarah M. Jacobus, an Attendant under the leadership of City Librarian Mary L. Jones.


(Background) Bishop Hall on the campus of the Kamehameha School for Boys from the Honolulu Advertiser, January 1, 1901; (clockwise l-r) Los Angeles City Librarian Mary L. Jones mentioned Sarah Jacobus' resignation in the 1900-01 Los Angeles Public Library Annual Report; Miss Jacobus' new position in Honolulu mentioned in the Los Angeles Times, September 1, 1901; Graduating class of students from the Kamehameha School for Boys in 1900 (the year prior to Jacobus' arrival), Kamehameha School Archives

It was Mary L. Jones who recommended Sarah Jacobus for her next adventure. In September 1901, Jacobus traveled to Honolulu, Hawaii, where she became the librarian (1901–1905) at the Kamehameha School for Boys. Newspaper reports during Miss Jacobus’ years working in Hawaii indicate that she worked also with the Honolulu Library (then known as the Honolulu Library and Reading Room) in some capacity, likely as a volunteer. In 1904, she traveled around the Hawaiian islands with the Honolulu librarian, Helen L. Hillebrand, including trips to Haleakala, Hilo, and Makawao. [Miss Jacobus must have been well-liked; she was offered the librarian job at the Honolulu Library in March 1907 but turned it down.]


(Background) Pomona Public Library circa 1903, California Historical Society/University of Southern California Libraries; (l-r) Postcard view of the Pomona Public Library showing the statue of the goddess Pomona (circa 1908), Author's collection; Postcard view showing the exterior of the Pomona Public Library (circa 1910), Author's collection 

Sarah Jacobus moved back to Los Angeles and, in October 1905, returned to work as an Attendant at the Los Angeles Public Library when Charles Lummis was City Librarian. A month later, she traveled to Pomona (approximately 30 miles east of Los Angeles, halfway between Los Angeles and San Bernardino. The population of Pomona was 5,526 in 1900, versus Los Angeles’ population of 102,499), where she temporarily took over the library while Pomona librarian Mabel E. Prentiss was on a leave of absence and working in Monterey. (Jacobus and Prentiss briefly worked together at the Los Angeles Public Library.) The lovely Pomona Carnegie Library, opened in 1903 on the corner of Main Street and Center Street, was a point of pride for the community and often the subject of area postcards. The library was considered an architectural beauty. Ultimately, Ms. Prentiss resigned as Pomona librarian in January 1906 and began work as a Library Organizer with the California State Library. Due to Prentiss’ excellent work for four years in Pomona, she was given the position to establish libraries in new districts or support libraries that were struggling.


(Background) Sarah M. Jacobus stands on the lawn of the Pomona Public Library (circa 1905), Pomona Public Library Special Collections; (clockwise l-r) The Pomona Daily Review newspaper reported on Miss Jacobus' request for local history materials, January 19, 1906; Twins Julia (l.) and Emily (r.) Heath with Stephen Fages in front of the library (note the Biblioteca Publica sign in the window) on June 15, 1921. Pomona Public Library Special Collections. Emily Heath worked as an Assistant and Stephen Fages was a Page at the library.; The Pomona Progress newspaper reported on Miss Jacobus' request for local history materials, January 18, 1906.

Sarah Jacobus was officially installed as the Pomona librarian following Ms. Prentiss’ January 1906 resignation and immediately set to work boosting her new community. In her first weeks on the job, Ms. Jacobus spoke at a meeting of the Pomona Ebell Club’s Landmark section about the need to establish a “historical bureau” at the library that would give future generations an idea of Pomona’s everyday life in the early twentieth century. She sent letters to Pomona’s churches, clubs, schools, and organizations asking for their programs, leaflets, membership lists, memorial sermons, rules and constitutions of local organizations, publications of state, county, and town governments, books and pamphlets about Southern California (especially Pomona), as well as photos of local people, buildings, and streets. According to the Pomona Progress newspaper, she said, “The common places of our generation are the treasure relics of the next. We are trying to lay up for ourselves some of these treasures and ask for the cooperation of Pomona people. The town is justly proud of its library. This is the way to enrich it vastly and are [of] no cost to the giver.” She added a collection of braille books (loaned by the California State Library), instructed students on how to use the library, interfiled fiction and non-fiction in the card catalog, and mentored young librarians. Signs posted on the building were in English and Spanish to welcome the growing Hispanic population, and Spanish books were added to the collection. In 1918, Miss Jacobus hired a gentleman (Antonio Chavez) to oversee a small book collection at the newly opened Spanish Social Center in a building on Gordon and Third. 


(Background) Letter from Miss Jacobus (signed Mira Jacobus) to Mr. (Arthur M.) Dole, who was on the library's Board of Trustees, asking if he would take a look at a book on architecture that she saw in a Los Angeles bookshop. Arthur M. Dole Papers, Claremont Colleges Library Special Collections. (Clockwise from bottom left) Miss Jacobus described the library as a lodestone that drew people to Pomona in the 1910 Pomona Public Library Annual Report; examples of the types of telephone service available at the library are advertised in the September 1907 Monthly Bulletin of the Pomona Public Library; the 1910 Pomona Public Library Annual Report posited that 68% of Pomona residents had a library card; the Library Board of Trustees praised the work of Sarah M. Jacobus in the 1910 Pomona Public Library Annual Report.

Miss Jacobus had an excellent relationship with the Library Board of Trustees and both touted the fact that the library drew people to Pomona. In 1907, board president Arthur M. Dole noted that the Pomona Public Library, deemed a progressive small library, “maintains the well-earned reputation of being accredited [among “those in the know” as] one of the best and most useful small libraries in the west.” The small library was, in many ways, similar to those of large metropolitan libraries. The library drew patrons from all over Southern California and built unique collections including sheet music, stereopticon slides, Californiana, art and travel pictures, clipping files, a pamphlet collection, and phonographs. Miss Jacobus also took a page from Hartford (CT) librarian Caroline M. Hewins and started a collection featuring dolls from around the world. The dolls became the basis of a multicultural program that Miss Jacobus presented locally and traveled around the southland, including to Santa Ana, Ojai, and Brawley. There were also doll parties at the branch that featured stories, music, and refreshments including sticks of candy and large cookies that the children at the library loved. (The doll collection has grown over the years with additions from subsequent librarians, and it's still in the possession of the library today.) 


Pomona experienced steady population growth during the early twentieth century, thanks in part to a boom in the citrus industry, and the library benefited considerably. Under Miss Jacobus’ tenure, library card registrations and circulation numbers rose year after year. In 1908, it was noted that fifty-five percent of the residents of Pomona had a library card, and by 1911, according to Public Libraries magazine, the number of library cardholders in the city was up to sixty-eight percent of the population. The Pomona Public Library was praised for its reference services and its collections were larger than those of the libraries in nearby communities. Helping patrons with their informational needs was a popular service and the library was an early adopter of telephone reference, first noting it in 1908. Branches were also created in area schools to facilitate service to school children.


The Pomona Public Library advertised Children's Book Week 
in the Bulletin newspaper, November 11, 1923

The Pomona Public Library was an early adopter of children’s library service in Southern California and launched its first story hour in March 1907. Miss Jacobus cited the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh’s Greek myths children’s story hours as an inspiration. Sarah’s sister, Agnes Jacobus, led the popular Classic Myths storytime meant for those twelve and under. Sarah Jacobus was also an early proponent of summer reading programs. In the early twentieth century, librarians nationwide worked to find a solution for the decline in summertime circulation numbers. The Davenport (Iowa) Public Library’s summertime reading contests for children were successful and Miss Jacobus likely learned of them through her participation in ALA or from reading professional literature. (One hour each week was set aside for employees to read professional literature such as Public Libraries, Bookman, and Publishers Weekly; the objective was to make them more efficient.) By the early 1920s, the summertime Vacation Reading Club was in full swing at the Pomona Public Library and proved to be a popular program. During one year’s summer reading program, children were given badges when they enrolled. This provided free publicity for the library and enticed other children to sign up and get a badge of their own. Upon successful completion, the young readers were presented with a “diploma” signed by Miss Jacobus, along with the Superintendent of Schools, and the principal of whichever school the child attended. Another year the summer reading program was called the “Stay-at-Home Travel Club,” and the card catalog was described as the library’s compass. Each child had to prove they could use the “compass” to find what they were looking for before they could receive their diploma for summer reading. Summer reading themes for other years included the Treasure Chest Club, the Magic Highway Club, Enchanted Isle, and the Blue Diamond Vacation Reading Club. 


(Background) View from the Delivery Hall of the Pomona Public Library circa 1906 (service desk on the right, note fresh flowers from the library's garden in vases) towards the Reference Room, California History Room Photo Collection, California State Library. (Clockwise from bottom left) Pomona Public Library advertisement in the classified section of the Pomona Progress newspaper on September 26, 1923; in the early years, the Pomona Public Library issued a Monthly Bulletin which gave borrower information, circulation statistics, lists of new books and donated items. 
Children's Book Week advertisement, Bulletin, November 11, 1923.

Sarah M. Jacobus kept her community informed about the library and its offerings. She used the newspapers to share the library's statistics as well as events such as an amnesty program that allowed for long overdue books (which she called “dusty travelers”) to be returned—no questions asked!—without a fine during “Back Home Week.” Paid advertisements were tried in the 1920s but some, such as ads in the classified section of the Pomona Progress newspaper, might seem more costly than they were worth. On the contrary, Miss Jacobus spoke of a gentleman’s agreement between the library and the newspaper. If the library paid for advertisements, they often received more newspaper space than usual devoted to the library (e.g., a single display ad yielded approximately 50 inches of story space, according to a paper Sarah Jacobus gave at the 1924 CLA annual conference on the experiences of the Pomona Public Library). She also used newspapers to be transparent about the struggles that the library faced against termites, which were eating both the books and the building. Through the florid language that described the “onslaught” of  “vandals of ancient times,” Miss Jacobus let the public know that termite-related repairs would be necessary and costly.


Several Mutual Building & Loan Association of Pomona advertisements that praised Sarah Jacobus and the library appeared in the Pomona Progress newspaper in 1929 and 1930. The Mutual Director of the company, J.F. Lobingier, was on the Library Board of Trustees for many years.

In addition to library annual report summaries and notices of special library events that were printed by the local press, the Pomona Public Library sent out a large volume of mail. These included invitations to visit the library sent to new parents, overdue notices that were sent when a book was 10 days late, and reminders of library card expirations. Interestingly, Assistant Elizabeth Harris was in charge of a list that tracked patron’s favorite topics and postcards would be sent to them when a new book came in that might be of interest. In 1919 alone, the library sent out 700 such postcards. She and the Pomona Public Library staff members and Board of Trustees hosted the Pomona City Council, Mayor, and representatives from the local press for yearly visits to the library. The visitors were shown around each department in the library while staff explained the work that was done thanks to the previous year’s library appropriation. According to news articles and write-ups in professional literature these yearly visits were met with generous feelings towards the library by the visitors. Pomona businessmen were also encouraged to use the library. In the 1920s, a series of ads from Pomona’s Mutual Building and Loan Association specifically touted Miss Jacobus as a person who could help you grow your profits via the information she and the library could provide. 


(l-r) Sarah M. Jacobus was one of two women on a list of Pomona boosters in the Bulletin newspaper, January 1, 1927; Miss Jacobus was listed in Women of the West (1928); A Pomona Public Library envelope dated July 10, 1928; Miss Jacobus sold a subscription to Elizabeth (Bessie) Sheppard for the USO War Fund Campaign. Miss Sheppard was head of the Reference Department at the Pomona Public Library. Both items from the Bessie Sheppard Collection, 1874-1975. Robert E. Ellingwood Model Colony History Room, Ontario City Library


Miss Jacobus’ outreach and community activism created goodwill that inspired local organizations to help the library. She spoke on a variety of topics to a number of organizations all over the southland. For example, she spoke about the use of secondary sources by children at a National Educational Association (NEA) convention in Alhambra, discussed current events at the Pomona Ebell Club, spoke to PTA parents about how the library could benefit their high school-aged children, led a book club and spoke on social problems at Pomona’s beautiful Pilgrim Congregational Church (where she was an active member), taught a twelve-lesson reading course about the best books and periodicals for women which was held at the YMCA Auxiliary, discussed modern poetry with the Pasadena Study Club, and celebrated a book-day luncheon at the famed Friday Morning Club in Los Angeles. As a result, donations poured in from library patrons, other libraries, and local organizations. She led the Women’s Auxiliary of the Pomona Chamber of Commerce, was on the executive board of the Pomona Red Cross, and was celebrated by the Pomona Woman’s Club. She also sat on committees to clean up Pomona, ridding alleys of trash and weeds. In 1927, Miss Jacobus was one of two women whom Pomona’s newspaper, The Bulletin, named as someone who made the city a better place to live, and it was deemed that “Pomona has no institution more worthy of praise than the public library.”  Subsequently Miss Jacobus was included in the 1928 book Women of the West, which highlighted her interest in “civic betterment.”



The Pomona Historical Society is a Sarah Jacobus’ civic project that still continues today. During her earliest days as Pomona’s librarian she asked Pomonans to donate photos of Pomona, contribute the history of their organizations, and share their family stories with the library.  Over the years, Miss Jacobus continued to present the library as a repository for local history and it was these materials that formed the basis of the historical society. The history of the organization can be found in their publication Pomona Valley Historian (April 1966, Vol. II-Number 2). Miss Jacobus sought out historians J.M. Guinn (co–founder of the Historical Society of Southern California) and Herbert E. Bolton (Chair of the History Dept at UC Berkeley), both of the California Historical Survey Commission, for information on starting a historical society. She was introduced to Margaret V. Allen of the San Diego Pioneer and Historical Society who gave her tips on building a successful organization. She also traveled to Redlands for several days to learn how their historical society (founded in 1900) organized their materials. With words of encouragement from the library’s Board of Trustees, Guinn, and Allen, Miss Jacobus held a meeting at the library in March 1916 that led to the creation of the Historical Society of Pomona Valley. Miss Jacobus was made curator of the historical society and the library was made the depository of local historical material. Lavina B. Kirkman, the library’s reference librarian, was put in charge of organizing the items and the library’s 1916 annual report gave a brief description of the cataloging methods used (e.g. the use of Subheads under Cities) and preservation efforts (e.g. making copies of frequently used materials to save originals from wear and tear). 


(Background) Headquarters of the Historical Society of Pomona Valley in the former Pomona Ebell Club building at 585 E. Holt. Miss Jacobus gave many talks at the Ebell Club during her years as Pomona librarian. Today her photo hangs in the historical society's office (left). Both photos from the Author's collection. (Right) Souvenir from the May 31, 1938 fundraiser for the preservation of the Palomares Adobe which is now operated by the Historical Society of Pomona Valley. Arthur M. Dole Papers, Claremont Colleges Library Special Collections


The library’s Reference Department used the historical materials it gathered to create a document on the history of Pomona, widely used by the general public and students. In 1925, the historical society invited former Pomona residents to “Old Home Day” at the Los Angeles County Fair. Miss Jacobus, dressed in her mother’s 1880s wedding dress, represented the library and the historical society as one of the hostesses at the fair’s event. She was also part of a Pomona Chamber of Commerce committee dedicated to recognizing historic trails, buildings, roads, and sites. Members of the historical society often visited other nearby historical sites, such as Casa de Adobe near the Southwest Museum and the Pony Express Museum in San Marino, and enjoyed picnic lunches along the way. The lessons learned no doubt helped them with projects like restoration of the Palomares Adobe, just one of several historic buildings in charge of the Historical Society of Pomona Valley today. The society is headquartered in the former Ebell building where Sarah Jacobus once gave lectures. 


Portrait of Sarah M. Jacobus (1926)
Pomona Public Library Special Collections

Sarah M. Jacobus was very active in organizations of library professionals, especially those in California. She was an early California Library Association member, with a chronological member number of 260. (For comparison, Charles Lummis was #272.) Shortly after her installation in Pomona, she became secretary of the California Library Association’s Fourth District, which was composed of all counties south of Tehachapi (CLA’s redistricting later created the Sixth District, comprising the counties of: Imperial, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Ventura). Jacobus was secretary of the Sixth District in 1912 and President in 1913. She attended the state conferences and joined several CLA committees over the years, including Public Libraries; Book Selection; Salaries; Resolutions; Auditing; Membership; CLA Publications; and Seaman’s Library. Talks given by Jacobus at the CLA meetings include topics such as Guides to Book Selection (1907 in Redlands), the use of postcards to alert patrons of overdue materials (1908 in Santa Monica), and “Small Problems of Library Economics”(1910 in Long Beach).


Pomona Public Library staff, Summer 1920: (top row, l-r) Lavina B.K. Penley, Josephine Sowers, Harriet Windrem, Ruth Bishop (front row, l-r) Betty Niswander, Sarah M. Jacobus, Elizabeth H. Harris
Pomona Public Library Special Collections

In addition to being a committed member of the California Library Association, Miss Jacobus was dedicated to the principles of librarianship and mentoring future librarians. She started a training course at the Pomona Public Library beginning in 1908, which usually had two students at a time and the graduates were added to the library’s substitute list. The training course later morphed into an apprenticeship. In fact, the Pomona Public Library functioned as a training ground for other librarians who went on to lead libraries all over California including Kings County, Solano County, San Luis Obispo County, San Mateo County, Madera County, Tulare County, Glenn County, Richmond, and Hemet. She also loaned her assistants to other libraries for special projects. The beloved California State Librarian, James Gillis, was a Sarah Jacobus fan, writing the Pomona library board in 1913 to praise the librarian and the staff who had passed through the library in their careers.

Pomona Public Library staff, April 1922 (l-r) May L. Bouton, Lavina B.K. Penley, Ermine Groves, Ruth Bishop, Elizabeth H. Harris, Rachel F. Saxon, Sarah M. Jacobus, Fern Hartman Lyman, Annice Healton, and Grace McIlvried.
Pomona Public Library Special Collections 

She often gave lectures on a variety of topics at the Los Angeles and Riverside library schools, and the library schools brought students to the Pomona Library to observe the methods of the staff. We get a glimpse of Miss Jacobus’ ideas for improving library skills from a talk she gave at both the Riverside and Los Angeles Library Schools titled, “How to Give Yourself a Graduate Course.” She advised students to read all the professional literature that they could and visit as many libraries as possible. They should be in a receptive mood during these library visits and be willing to observe how the library works without offering advice on how they felt it should be done. Students were encouraged to learn their personal weak points and strive to correct them. Don’t talk excessively and “work faithfully every hour of your working day.” Miss Jacobus used professional literature such as Public Libraries and Library Journal to share progress (e.g. salary increases for the staff) and struggles (e.g. issues with linoleum flooring in the basement) to hopefully benefit other libraries and librarians. When the Alumni Association of the Library School of the Los Angeles Public Library was formed, Miss Jacobus was named their first president. She also chaired a committee on recruiting for librarianship for the association.

Sarah M. Jacobus was a charter member of the San Antonio Library Club, one of the oldest library clubs in California. Upland librarian Adda Manker founded the club in late 1918. It was composed of librarians who work within sight of Mount San Antonio (aka Mount Baldy), and included workers from public and academic libraries in Pomona, Claremont, Ontario, Chino, and Upland. The club chose a new president each year and their meetings were hosted by different libraries each time. Members and speakers spoke on a variety of topics, such as collaboration between public libraries and schools or the need to be useful to their community. The meetings also offered an opportunity for librarians to share duplicate materials, talk about upcoming projects, or solicit advice on best practices. Sarah Jacobus acknowledged that the club filled a real need and found the meetings stimulating. Miss Jacobus was also a charter member of the Public Library Executives Association of Los Angeles County, which was founded on her motion at a meeting of librarians in December 1933. She occasionally spoke at meetings of the Orange County Library Club, which was founded in 1921.

View from the Delivery Hall of the Pomona Public Library circa 1906. 
The service desk is on the left with a view towards the General Reading Room 
(note statue of the goddess Pomona through the middle arch)
California History Room Photo Collection, California State Library

Libraries, both locally and around the country, contacted the Pomona Public Library to observe their methods. The high level of customer service at the Pomona Public Library was noted again and again by the local press, as was the librarian’s “efficient management.” Ira Orendoff, the Whittier librarian, spent two months at the Pomona Library observing their work with children. Alma Danford, the Glendale Public Library’s first librarian, visited Pomona to learn “new ways from Miss Jacobus.” Gratia Countryman, a Minneapolis librarian, also visited Miss Jacobus at the library. Pomona's Carnegie public library building had fans as well. It was written up in Public Libraries magazine, and representatives from several cities wrote and asked for the blueprints. Others visited the space because it was pleasingly decorated with flowers grown in the library’s own garden. In 1926, the Pomona Public Library was acknowledged as a top library in terms of per capita circulation, per capita expenditures, and the highest percentage of the population registered as borrowers, according to A Library Survey of the United States. As a matter of fact, Pomona and Pasadena were both in the top ten nationally for libraries with between 50,000 and 100,000 volumes. It was also noted that it was one of only eight smaller libraries listed nationwide that offered an “information desk” (often times for readers advisory) in addition to a reference and circulation desk.

In early September 1946, seventy-seven-year-old Sarah Jacobus presented her resignation to the Pomona Public Library Board of Trustees during their monthly meeting. According to the Pomona Progress Bulletin, her retirement plan was to move in with her sisters, Agnes and Lavinia, at the Jacobus family home in Lincoln Heights. Before her return to Los Angeles, Miss Jacobus was feted by both the Pomona Business and Professional Women’s Club and the Pomona Lions Club; the Pomona City Council presented a letter of commendation; and the historical society she founded celebrated Jacobus Night, where Miss Jacobus held court, sharing the history of the Pomona Public Library from its origins in 1887. Even after her move to Los Angeles she was celebrated in the library she devoted forty years to. For example, author Scott O’Dell, in a book talk for Hill of the Hawk, remembered doing most of the research at the Pomona Public Library. He paid tribute to Miss Jacobus “who built this library into the most complete, for its size, that I know of.” Sarah Jacobus passed away on May 10, 1962 at the age of 92. She was predeceased by her parents and siblings, and at the time she was living in Whittier near two nieces. She and her immediate family members are buried at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery.

Sarah M. Jacobus strove to be of the most service as possible for her communities. She led the Pomona Public Library through two world wars, the Great Depression, and the Spanish flu epidemic.* Along the way, she instigated a historical society, championed librarianship, built a strong relationship with local schools, battled termites, and made the library an important fixture in Southern California.

Sarah M. Jacobus
July 20, 1869 - May 10, 1962


*The Pomona Public Library’s response to each of these topics would be of great interest to future researchers. For example, the Pomona Public Library’s response to the 1918 Spanish flu epidemic was very interesting. The library stayed open while schools and other public institutions closed for a time. Circulation numbers went through the roof as people checked out books to keep them occupied during the closures of their places of employment. The 1919 annual report notes that no one on the staff got sick despite the lack of special precautions or fumigation. While the library did have a fumigation vault (as other libraries of the time did), it did not use it during the Spanish flu epidemic. However, they did acknowledge in 1926 that, while not anxious about disinfecting the books, they sometimes left the books out in the sun for a week “to satisfy the unconvinced.” [A Survey of Libraries of the United States by the American Library Association]. The response of the library to the Great Depression, World War I, and World War II can be found in their annual reports and the news articles of the time.

Thank you to the many people who helped with the research for this post including Allan Lagumbay of the Pomona Public Library; Deborah Clifford of the Historical Society of Pomona Valley; Lisa Crane and Sean Stanley of the Claremont Colleges Library Special Collections & Archives; Patty Edwards of the Model Colony History Room, Ontario City Library; Glen Creason (retired) map librarian at the Los Angeles Public Library, and especially Chris Hiatt of the Meadowlark Park Library.