University Librarians
David Barry SCOTT
Mollie THOMSON
Eoin WILKINSON
Barry MITCHESON
Neil McLEAN
Penny CARNABY
Maxine BRODIE
David Barry Scott, OBE
Macquarie University Foundation Librarian1965-1970
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Barry Scott was Macquarie University's first University Librarian and came to Macquarie from his alma mater, the University of Queensland, where he was Deputy University Librarian from 1960 and Acting University Librarian from 1963. Barry's tenure as University Librarian was cut short by his death from cancer on 9 January 1970. His achievements however were considerable and his legacy memorable. He became closely involved in the design and layout of the first library building in 1964 and heavily influenced the design of the first stage of the current building a couple of years later. Utterly convinced of the central role of a library in the teaching program of a significant university, he fought for the establishment of a full library service to be in place by the time the University began accepting students. He made the fortuitous choice, unusual for the time, of the Library of Congress Classification System for the library's resources. Significantly, Barry fostered the integration of classes in information retrieval in student programs, a goal that the library pursues to this day. Barry participated in the life of the University at many levels. He was a member of the Academic Senate of the University, President of the Staff Association and served on the board of the union. Outside the University he worked for the betterment of libraries and librarians with the Library Association of Australia, Library Promotion Councils and in schools with an interest in the development of their libraries. Harrison Bryant, University Librarian at Sydney University, in his funeral address for Barry Scott declared that as librarian and a person he had left the world a better place than he had found it. One example of this is the year of service he committed to UNESCO in Ankara where Barry worked to extend and improve the under-developed library services of Turkey. Barry Scott's legacy is, as Mansfield and Hutchinson (1) have recorded, imperishable by any accounting. Looking back, perhaps his stellar achievement was the embedding of the position of the library in the teaching programs of the University. (1) Mansfield, B. and Hutchinson, M. Liberality of Opportunity. Sydney, Hale & Iremonger, 1992, p. 84. |
Mollie Thomson
Acting University Librarian (1970)Deputy Librarian (1971-1980)
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Mollie Thomson graduated from the University of Sydney with a Bachelor of Arts and Diploma of Education. She worked firstly as a high school teacher, then as a teacher librarian, before becoming a librarian at the State Library of New South Wales in 1951. She trained primarily as a under the mentorship of Jean Arnot, before becoming a cataloguer and reference librarian at Vancouver Public Library in 1954-58. She also worked as an indexer with the Canadian Library Association in Ottawa before returning to Australia in 1958 to join the staff of the National Library of Australia. Mollie returned to North America in 1960 as New York Liaison Officer of the National Library of Australia (1960-63) and while in New York she gained the degree of Master of Science in Librarianship at Columbia University (in 1963). Mollie Thomson became Head Cataloguer at the National Library of Australia in 1964. After a brief period of service at Monash University, she was appointed to the newly established Macquarie University where she was successively Head Cataloguer (1966), Technical Services Librarian (1967), and following the sudden death of the University Librarian, Mr. Barry Scott, in January, 1970, was Acting Librarian. Following the appointment of Eoin Wilkinson as University Librarian she served as Deputy Librarian from 1971 until her death in 1980. Mollie Thomson is remembered with affection and admiration by all who knew her as a consummate cataloguer and as the epitome of the complete librarian. Throughout her career she was able to inspire library staff and administrators alike to believe that institutional, professional and national goals were achievable. Mollie played a vital role in the design of the Library building, and in bringing works of art into Macquarie University Library on a scale not previously seen in any Australian academic library. Mollie Thomson died from cancer on 21 October 1980 after a long illness. Shortly after her death she was posthumously awarded the distinction of Fellowship of the Library Association of Australia in recognition of her outstanding contributions to librarianship. [On the southern side of the Library building, near the Library entrance there is a stained glass window commissioned by the Library from funds donated in memory of Mollie Thomson. Designed by South Australian artist, Cedar Prest, it was unveiled on 22 July 1984. The design elements reflect Mollie's love of Australian wildflowers.] |
Eoin Wilkinson
Macquarie University Librarian1971-1987
Barrie Mitcheson
Macquarie University Librarian1988-1996
Neil McLean
Macquarie University Librarian1996 - 2001
Penny Carnaby
Macquarie University LibrarianJanuary 2002 - January 2003
Maxine Brodie
Macquarie University Librarian2003 - present

![[Mollie Thomson]](images/mollie-tn.jpg)
![[Eoin Wilkinson]](images/wilkinson-tn.jpg)
![[Barrie Mitcheson]](images/barrie-tn.jpg)
![[Neil McLean]](images/neil-tn.jpg)
![[Penny Carnaby]](images/penny-tn.jpg)
![[Maxine Brodie]](images/maxine-tn.jpg)