ANGELINE
Her connection with
She began her tenure as
librarian with only
one assistant. At the end of her career,
she had four assistants and many student assistants to manage over
40,000
volumes and as many periodicals and pamphlets.
She had cataloged and written call numbers on each and every
volume.
Miss Milner was a founding
member of the
Illinois Library Association and served as its President.
Having developed a knowledge of library
science through experience and self-study, she wrote numerous
professional
articles and gave many presentations.
Because all faculty members required their students to use the
library,
she developed lessons so that students could become familiar with the
library
and put it to better use.
During World War I, Ange
began compiling a
complete roster of men and women who were at ISNU and who had served in
the
war. This list eventually included 821
names. This list was declared as one of
the most complete war rosters and files in the state of
Ange insisted on quiet in
her
library. She was shrewd and
quick-witted, and always knew what a student wanted.
She was familiarly called “Aunt Ange” by many
of the students on campus.
Ange was well-known to
faculty and
students and went out of her way to be of service to them.
For example, she would scan periodicals as
they came in and alert any faculty member or student to articles that
might be
of interest to them. She was always
helpful to students and would spend hours hunting down a reference
needed for a
thesis. But alternatively, she had no
patience with those who waited until the last minute to seek out her
help, and
would lecture them on getting an early start on their research.
Others have extolled her
many virtues, but
these did not necessarily include tactfulness.
She herself recognized this and worked to improve it. Some called her outspoken.
She was not sympathetic to Women’s Sufferage,
but considered it her “religious duty” to vote when the privilege came
into
being.
She worked for 38 years at
the library
until ill health forced her retirement on October 15, 1927. When Miss Milner finished her career, the
library was in North Hall. In 1940, what
is now known as Williams Hall was completed and dedicated as Milner
Library in
her honor. The library moved to its
present location in 1976. Many of the
older books remained in Williams Hall on the third floor.
The last few months of her
life, Ange had
been confined to her bed following a lengthy illness. She died at her
home on
Much has been written about
Ange’s life
and career, and the definitive biography would appear to be a thesis
written in
her lifetime by Charles William Perry.
It was printed in the Alumni Quarterly in 1924 and much that was
written
in articles thereafter seems to be taken from this thesis.
In 2006, on the occasion of her 150th
birthday, her grave in