<div dir="ltr"><div class="gmail_quote"><br><br><div dir="ltr"><div><a href="http://womenoflibraryhistory.tumblr.com/post/112696434599/linda-McPherson" target="_blank">http://womenoflibraryhistory.tumblr.com/post/112696434599/linda-McPherson</a></div><div><br></div><div><h2><a href="http://womenoflibraryhistory.tumblr.com/post/112696434599/linda-mcpherson" target="_blank"><font color="#222222">Linda McPherson</font></a></h2><p><i>Today’s post comes from Asheley Bryson, who works at the Darrington branch of the Sno-Isle library system. She writes, ” I plan on staying at this lovely little library until I retire, just as Linda did.”</i></p><p>Linda McPherson became the community librarian in the small town of Darrington in 1987. She was instrumental in creating the new location in 1990, and was putting the finishing touches on the building in 2008 with the addition of a beautiful meeting room when she hired me. I was the last person that Linda hired, as she retired in January of 2011 after managing the Darrington Library for almost 30 years. Unbeknownst to me at the time, she had opened the door to a close-knit community and welcomed an outsider in. </p><p>Although most of the stories you may have read about Linda over the last year have been about how she died, I wish to say a little about how she lived. Linda loved People, and not just the magazine that she would read every day on her lunch break while sipping her Diet Coke. She loved all the generations, from the ones that raised her to the peers she grew up with to the children she helped guide from early literacy all the way through graduate school. She never lost touch with her community. She sat alongside our patrons on sunny Saturday afternoons, creating beautiful watercolor paintings in a library program that she had arranged. She helped teenagers apply for college loans and coached our unemployed patrons through the frustrations of job hunting online. Shortly before retiring, you could find her rocking out to Guitar Hero alongside teenage boys in out meeting room, often scoring higher than they would. She served 17 years on the Darrington School Board, including as president. She hugged me when I told her that I was expecting a child, exclaiming “A library baby!” and I cried when she retired, knowing things would never be the same at our tiny, mountain town branch. <br><br></p><p>She believed in work-life balance, and fostered passions of her own outside of her dutiful work for the library and the community. She was a talented carpenter, a wonderful artist, and had many plans for adventures abroad. She raised two kind and successful children, and she set an example for countless others, myself included. She showed me what it looked like to embody the mission of our organization: to be a community doorway to reading, resources, and lifelong learning, and a center for people, ideas, and culture. I will always be grateful to her for opening the door and welcoming me into the world of libraries and the people who staff them. My tenure at the library has been the most rewarding, most enjoyable position that I have held. I plan to keep that door open for generations to come.</p><p><br></p><p>Information about submissions: <a href="http://womenoflibraryhistory.tumblr.com/submit2015" target="_blank">http://womenoflibraryhistory.tumblr.com/submit2015</a></p><span class="HOEnZb"><font color="#888888"><p><br clear="all"><br></p></font><p><br></p></span><p><br></p><p><br></p></div><span class="HOEnZb"><font color="#888888"><div><div><h6><br></h6><span style="font-family:"Comic Sans MS";font-size:10pt"></span></div></div>
</font></span></div>
</div><br><br clear="all"><br>-- <br><div class="gmail_signature"><div><em><span style="font-family:"Comic Sans MS";font-size:10pt">Diedre Conkling</span></em><i><span style="font-family:"Comic Sans MS";font-size:10pt"><br><em><span style="font-family:"Comic Sans MS"">Lincoln County Library District</span></em><br><em><span style="font-family:"Comic Sans MS"">P.O. Box 2027</span></em><br><em><span style="font-family:"Comic Sans MS"">Newport, OR 97365</span></em><br><em><span style="font-family:"Comic Sans MS"">Phone & Fax: 541-265-3066</span></em><br><em><span style="font-family:"Comic Sans MS"">Work email</span></em></span></i><em><span style="font-family:"Comic Sans MS";font-size:10pt;font-style:normal">: </span></em><a href="mailto:diedre@lincolncolibrarydist.org" target="_blank"><i><span style="font-family:"Comic Sans MS";font-size:10pt"><font color="#0000ff">diedre@lincolncolibrarydist.org</font></span></i></a><i><span style="font-family:"Comic Sans MS";font-size:10pt"><br><em><span style="font-family:"Comic Sans MS"">Home email: </span></em></span></i><a href="mailto:diedre08@gmail.com" target="_blank"><em><span style="color:blue;font-family:"Comic Sans MS";font-size:10pt">diedre08@gmail.com</span></em></a></div>
<div> </div>
<div>
<h6>
<span>“If you don't like something, change it. If you can't change it, change your attitude.”―Maya Angelou</span><span></span></h6><span style="font-family:"Comic Sans MS";font-size:10pt"></span></div></div>
</div>