by Mike Rhode
I don't know if anyone actually ever called her "America's comic book librarian," but someone should have.
On October 31, 2023, Georgia Higley retired from the Library of Congress (LOC) where she had worked for 33 years upon joining the staff as a library intern in 1990. Georgia had been in charge of the Newspapers and Current Periodicals division and had overseen the rebuilding, strengthening, and spotlighting of one of the largest comic book collections in the world and possibly the largest in America. The website for the collection calls it, "The largest publicly available comic book collection in the world is comprised of over 165,000 original
print issues and 12,000 different titles that span 1934-present."
The following bullet points about her career were initially pulled from the LOC's internal newsletter The Gazette (January 30, 2004) and updated by one of her colleagues:
- Began her career at the Library of Congress on September 4, 1990.
- Served
in varying capacities: intern, reference librarian, automated reference
service specialist, acting head of Reference Section, co-founder of the
LOC Reference Forum, trustee
for the LOC Professional Association Continuing Education Fund, section
head of Newspaper and finally newly reorganized Physical Collections
Services Section
- Headed the Newspaper Section from 2004 to 2020.
- In
2020 appointed head of the Physical Collections Services Section – a
combined section of newspapers, government documents and current
periodicals, responsible for acquiring, preserving
and serving physical collections of the division.
- Significant force behind the expansion and preservation of the comic book collection in the early 2000s through today.
While Georgia was running the section that collected comics, in 2011 the Library and the Small Press Expo (SPX) began to work together to ensure the preservation of America's alternative and mini comics through a cooperative program that saw LOC librarians fanning out throughout the SPX exhibit floor and asking cartoonists to donate copies of their works. Those works were then added to a Small Press Expo collection (actually two - one of comic books, and one of original art, prints, and ephemera) at the Library. As of this writing 3,345 comics have been cataloged. The project is the work of scores of people, but Georgia has been one of the mainstays of it.
When asked about her plans at her recent retirement party, Georgia said that she might volunteer for SPX in the future, but in the meantime she would be working on cleaning out an old shed falling apart in her backyard. We wish her well in both of those endeavors.
The comic book collection remains open for research and the division is
currently being overseen by longtime comic book reference librarian
Megan Halsband.
This article has been posted simultaneously to the ComicsDC and International Journal of Comic Art blogs.