So my dad listens to NPR like a fiend (its on from 6am until 6pm…maybe even later). And he LOVES Garrison Keillor (because really who doesn’t). So my dad sent me this snippet from the Writer’s Almanac:

It’s the birthday of Melvil Dewey, born in Adams Center, New York (1851). He went to Amherst, and to support himself there he worked in the college library, and he decided that it needed to be reorganized. At the time, there was no consistent method that libraries used to organize books. Some numbered shelves, some arranged books by size just to look nice, and some libraries tried to alphabetize the whole library, which meant that every time they got a new book they had to redo the entire system. Dewey saw a better way to do this, but for awhile, he couldn’t decide whether to be a missionary or to put his time into reorganizing the library system. But he chose the latter, and he started to figure out a system of categories and subcategories, based on older ideas. As he researched, he wrote in his diary, “My heart is open to anything that’s either decimal or about libraries.”

And he came up with the Dewey Decimal System, which is still used today in many libraries, a series of classifications divided and subdivided into subjects and assigned a decimal number to each book.

So I wrote back to my dad:

They forgot to say that he created the first library school at Columbia, but forgot to ask the institution if that was alright.  He also had a desire to change the way the world spelled, so he consistently dropped unneeded letters from words (he was originally named Melville).  He also created the American Library Association and was subsequently kicked out for sexual harassment.  Finally he moved to upstate New York and created a colony.  He refused to allow in persons of color and jews.  One can assume from this that he was a bigot.

Basically Dewey was crazy, and would hate most of the librarians that are in the profession today.  So I suspect that’s why the occasion went largely unnoticed.