1939
May 3
President Franklin D. Roosevelt sends a letter to Felix Frankfurter, newly appointed associate justice of the Supreme Court, asking Frankfurter if he believes that Archibald MacLeish would be a suitable successor to Herbert Putnam as Librarian of Congress (1899-39). Despite the efforts of the American library community to influence his choice, Roosevelt is determined to choose his own candidate.
May 11
Justice Frankfurter writes President Franklin D. Roosevelt recommending Archibald MacLeish as a potential Librarian of Congress. He says that MacLeish "would bring to the Librarianship intellectual distinction, cultural recognition the world over, a persuasive personality and a delicacy of touch in dealing with others, and creative energy in making the Library of Congress the great center of the cultural resources of the Nation in the technological setting of our time."
June 1
Archibald MacLeish is reluctant to take on the weighty duties of a government official, wishing to continue his writing career. Nevertheless, he accepts Franklin D. Roosevelt’s offer to nominate him as the Librarian of Congress.
June 7
President Franklin D. Roosevelt nominates Archibald MacLeish, poet and author, as Librarian of Congress.
July 1
The Library of Congress opens the Hispanic Foundation, a center for the pursuit of studies in Spanish, Portuguese, and Latin American culture.
September 1
Germany invades Poland signaling the beginning of World War II.
September 7
Recognizing early on the need to acquire "all sorts of publications (other than books) bearing on the war," Martin Arnold Roberts, Chief Assistant Librarian, instructs José Meyer, the Library’s representative in France, to obtain regulations, propaganda leaflets, war camp publications, special editions of newspapers, posters, unusual photographs, maps, and broadsides. Roberts is convinced that, as a ‘Library of research,’ the Library of Congress needs to have all of these materials.
October 2
Archibald MacLeish begins his stewardship of the Library of Congress. He inherits a collection of roughly six million books and pamphlets as well as countless manuscripts, maps, prints, and pieces of music. There are approximately eleven hundred persons on the staff; the Library’s budget is slightly more than three million dollars. MacLeish vigorously tackles his new duties, setting in motion a reorganization of the Library.
October 12
The Hispanic Society Reading Room of the Hispanic Foundation is formally opened.
October 19
In “Libraries in the Contemporary Crisis,” an address given at the Carnegie Institute of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the Librarian declares that libraries “are the only institutions in American life capable of opening to the citizens of the Republic a knowledge of the wealth and richness of the culture which a century and a half of democratic life has produced.”
November 28
The Librarian, in a welcoming ceremony, hails the deposit of the Lincoln Cathedral copy of the Magna Carta at the Library of Congress for safekeeping and exhibition purposes.
December 19
Final report of the Committee on the Acquisition Policy of the Library of Congress is presented. The committee reports that "the existing system with respect to recommendations for purchase was inadequate and too decentralized" and that "certain collections had been neglected."