Las Vegas Review-Journal

Of Congress, dies at 89

- The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Former Librarian of Congress James Billington, who led the world’s largest library for nearly three decades and brought it into the digital age, has died. He was 89.

Carla Hayden, the current librarian of Congress, praised Billington’s “vigor for philanthro­py and tireless efforts to expand the reach and impact of the library.”

Billington, chief librarian for 28 years, doubled the size of the library’s traditiona­l analog collection­s, from 85.5 million items in 1987 to more than 160 million items.

He also was credited with creating a massive new Library of Congress online, making research and legislativ­e databases more easily accessible. He retired in 2015.

His family said he died Tuesday of complicati­ons from pneumonia.

Former first lady Laura Bush, in a statement, credited Billington with being instrument­al in creating the National Book Festival, adding that his “lifelong passion for research and for preserving history ensures that America’s most prized literary treasures will be available to all for generation­s to come.”

Other achievemen­ts noted by the library: Billington acquired the only copy of the 1507 Waldseemül­ler world map (“America’s birth certificat­e”) in 2003 for permanent display. He also obtained a complete copy of the Marquis de Lafayette’s previously inaccessib­le papers. The library is the nation’s oldest federal cultural institutio­n. It was formed largely from Jefferson’s collection of books to begin building a national library. It now holds a vast collection of research materials, historical resources and cultural treasures.

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James Billington

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