Newberry Library
The Newberry Library is an independent research library in Chicago, Illinois, specializing in the humanities and dedicated to fostering scholarly inquiry through its extensive non-circulating collections.[1] Founded in 1887 via a bequest from Chicago businessman Walter Loomis Newberry (1804–1868), who allocated $2.2 million to establish a free public library, the institution has developed into a premier resource for researchers worldwide, emphasizing genealogy, Midwest history, and cultural studies.[2][3] The library's holdings encompass rare books, manuscripts, maps, and archival materials focused on topics such as American Indian history, European exploration, the performing arts, and Chicago's cultural development, with over 500 collections documenting local business, publishing, and social activism.[4][5] Self-governing and publicly accessible without charge, the Newberry supports advanced research through fellowships, exhibitions, and digital resources, maintaining its role as a vital hub for independent scholarship unbound by university affiliations.[6][7] While the library has avoided major public controversies, its curatorial decisions, such as acquisitions during mid-20th-century European book market disruptions, underscore pragmatic strategies in building collections amid geopolitical shifts, reflecting a commitment to empirical preservation over ideological curation.[8] The Newberry's enduring achievements lie in its transformation of a private endowment into a publicly oriented institution that prioritizes primary source access, enabling causal analysis of historical events through unaltered artifacts rather than mediated narratives.[2]Overview and Mission
Founding and Purpose
The Newberry Library was established in 1887 pursuant to the will of Chicago businessman and civic leader Walter L. Newberry (1804–1868), who directed that half his estate fund a free public library if his daughters predeceased him without direct heirs—a condition met after their deaths in 1871 and 1885.[1][3] Newberry's fortune, derived from real estate, shipping, and early banking in the growing city, yielded approximately $2.2 million for the institution, with trustees tasked to acquire materials and erect a facility despite the loss of his personal collection in the 1871 Great Chicago Fire.[1][3] Unlike the circulating Chicago Public Library founded in 1872, the Newberry was designed from the outset as a non-circulating reference library open to the public, prioritizing advanced research over popular lending.[1] Its core purpose centered on humanities scholarship, emphasizing rare books, manuscripts, maps, and primary sources to support in-depth study in areas such as history, literature, genealogy, and local Midwest heritage.[2] This foundational intent aimed to position Chicago as a hub for elite intellectual pursuits, with early trustees—led by figures like Eliphalet W. Blatchford—focusing acquisitions on materials that would attract scholars and enhance the city's prestige, even amid limited local demand for such specialized resources in the late 19th century.[9][10] The library opened in a purpose-built Romanesque structure on Washington Square, immediately fulfilling Newberry's vision of public access to enduring knowledge without operational specifics dictated in his will.[2]Location, Facilities, and Funding Model
The Newberry Library is situated at 60 West Walton Street, Chicago, Illinois 60610, in the Near North Side neighborhood adjacent to Washington Square Park.[11] This location places it in a historic district conducive to scholarly pursuits, with convenient access via public transportation and proximity to other cultural institutions.[12] The library's facilities center on a Spanish-Romanesque Revival building designed by architect Henry Ives Cobb and completed in 1893, covering an area of approximately 300 by 60 feet.[10] Key amenities include specialized reading rooms open Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., exhibition galleries accessible Tuesday through Thursday until 7 p.m. and Friday through Saturday until 5 p.m., a bookshop, seminar rooms, program spaces, and lounges for researchers and visitors.[11] The structure houses a 10-story bookstack with 27.5 miles of shelving designed for preservation, featuring climate control and double-shell construction to protect collections from environmental damage.[1] Recent renovations, including those by Annum Architects, have restored historic finishes on the first floor while adding modern visitor orientation areas and expanded public programming spaces.[13] As an independent nonprofit research library, the Newberry operates primarily on endowment income, private philanthropy, and targeted grants rather than ongoing government appropriations.[6] Established through the 1868 bequest of Walter L. Newberry, its funding model emphasizes self-sufficiency, supplemented by contributions from foundations such as the Lilly Endowment ($2.2 million grant in 2024 for religion and culture initiatives), the Grainger Foundation ($1 million in 2023 for digital access), and the Mellon Foundation (for conservation endowments).[14] [15] [16] Fundraising campaigns, like the 2018 First and Foremost initiative aiming to raise $30 million, further bolster operations and specific programs.[17] This structure allows governance by a board of trustees focused on long-term institutional sustainability and humanities research.[1]Historical Development
Establishment and Early Years (1887–1910)
The Newberry Library was founded in 1887 through a bequest in the will of Walter Loomis Newberry (1804–1868), a Chicago merchant and real estate investor who amassed wealth in transportation and land holdings. Newberry's 1868 will directed that, upon the deaths of his widow Julia and youngest daughter Mary without surviving children, half his estate—valued at approximately $2.1 million—be allocated to establish a "free public library" supported by its income, with any remainder invested in Chicago real estate. These conditions were met after Julia's death in 1885 and Mary's in 1886 without heirs, prompting incorporation on July 1, 1887, and public opening on September 6, 1887, initially in rented space on LaSalle Street.[1][18] Trustees Eliphalet W. Blatchford, a prominent Chicago industrialist, and William H. Bradley, a lawyer and estate executor, led the establishment, selecting books and hiring staff to build a reference-oriented institution distinct from circulating libraries. They appointed William Frederick Poole, a noted bibliographer and former librarian of the Chicago Public Library, as the first librarian in 1887; Poole shaped its focus on humanities research, acquiring rare books, manuscripts, and periodicals on European and American history despite starting with no foundational collection, as Newberry's personal books had perished in the 1871 Great Chicago Fire. Under Poole's direction until his death in 1894, the library prioritized scholarly access over popular lending, amassing initial holdings through purchases like incunabula and early Americana, while offering free admission to readers.[19][20] The library's permanent home, a Romanesque Revival structure designed by Poole with architect Henry Ives Cobb, opened in November 1893 at 60 West Walton Street on Washington Square (now Washington Square Park), featuring reading rooms, stacks, and space for 200,000 volumes amid the World's Columbian Exposition's influence on Chicago's cultural infrastructure. Early operations included cataloging drives and public lectures, with Poole's indexing expertise aiding collection organization; by 1900, successors continued acquisitions, reaching tens of thousands of items by 1910, establishing the Newberry as a non-circulating research hub amid growing endowments from real estate rents.[19][18]Growth and Institutional Milestones (1910–2000)
Under the librarianship of W. N. C. Carlton (1909–1920), the Newberry Library continued its emphasis on acquiring rare books and manuscripts, building on earlier foundations to strengthen its humanities collections amid Chicago's post-fire reconstruction era.[19] This period saw steady institutional maturation, with the library maintaining public access while prioritizing scholarly resources over general lending, a policy shift formalized in 1897 that persisted through economic fluctuations.[18] George B. Utley served as librarian from 1920 to 1942, guiding the institution through the Great Depression and World War II by conserving resources and selectively expanding holdings in incunabula, early printed books, and Midwestern history materials.[19] Despite fiscal constraints, the library avoided major staff reductions and sustained reader services, reflecting prudent endowment management from its founding bequest. Stanley Pargellis succeeded Utley in 1942 and led until 1962, introducing postdoctoral fellowships in the 1940s to attract humanities scholars and fostering conferences that elevated the Newberry's reputation as a research hub.[19] The most transformative phase occurred under Lawrence W. Towner (1962–1986), who oversaw physical expansions, including new facilities for storage and programming, and aggressively broadened fundraising by enlarging the board of trustees from 13 to 25 members.[21] Towner established four specialized research centers in the 1970s: the Hermon Dunlap Smith Center for the History of the History of Cartography, the D'Arcy McNickle Center for American Indian History, the Center for Renaissance Studies, and the Newberry Library Center for Family and Community History, each leveraging core collections to support interdisciplinary scholarship.[19] Undergraduate seminar programs, initiated in 1965 with Midwestern colleges, expanded under his tenure to include Chicago-area universities, integrating the library into regional academic ecosystems. In 1982, a bookstack tower addition provided climate-controlled storage, accommodating growing manuscript and map holdings.[18] Towner's retirement in 1986 marked the end of this expansionist era, followed by the library's centennial in 1987, which highlighted its evolution into a premier independent research institution with over 1 million volumes by mid-century, sustained by endowment income and private donations rather than public funding.[19] These milestones solidified the Newberry's focus on preservation and access, prioritizing long-term curatorial rigor over short-term popularity.[1]Modern Era and Recent Initiatives (2000–Present)
David Spadafora served as President and Librarian from 2005 to 2019, during which the library expanded its digital access initiatives and underwent a significant first-floor renovation completed in 2018. This renovation restored the 1893 mosaic-tiled floor, introduced improved lighting and acoustics, and added a welcome center, bookstore, and enhanced program spaces to increase public engagement while preserving the building's historic character.[22][13] The project aimed to make the landmark more accessible and inviting, aligning with efforts to showcase collections amid growing visitor numbers. Daniel Greene succeeded Spadafora in 2019, leading until spring 2023, followed by interim leadership under Gail Kern Paster from April 2023. Astrida Orle Tantillo assumed the role of President and Librarian thereafter. Under this leadership, the library adopted a 2022 strategic plan emphasizing four pillars: advancing knowledge through digital humanities and collaborations; building diverse learning communities with a focus on Chicago and the Midwest; growing and preserving collections via digitization and inclusive cataloging; and strengthening institutional sustainability through fundraising and cultural shifts.[23][24][25][26] The plan discontinued the annual book fair in 2023 to redirect resources toward core collection access and research support.[27] Recent initiatives include robust digitization efforts by a dedicated team of nine staff, producing interactive resources like Newberry Transcribe for crowdsourced manuscript transcription and high-resolution digital collections encompassing maps, rare books, and Midwest history materials. Projects such as Indigenous Chicago, developed with tribal nations and community members, integrate exhibitions, digital mapping, oral histories, and K-12 curricula to highlight Native American experiences in the region. Ongoing exhibitions, like "Mapping Outside the Lines" in 2025, and expanded fellowships underscore the library's commitment to scholarly dissemination amid financial stewardship challenges.[28][29][30][7]Collections and Holdings
Core Strengths in Rare Books and Manuscripts
The Newberry Library's rare books collection emphasizes the history of printing and the book arts, encompassing significant holdings in incunabula and early European imprints. With more than 200 incunabula, the library maintains strengths in pre-1501 printed works, including editions from major European presses, alongside sixteenth- through eighteenth-century Spanish and Italian plays and Italian literature.[31] These materials support research into the material culture of early printing, with acquisitions such as the 1889 purchase of Henry Probasco's 2,500-volume library, which included rare books, manuscripts, and incunabula focused on early science and mysticism.[32] Notable individual items include a Shakespeare First Folio and multiple medieval books of hours, such as those from Salisbury and Rouen use, which rank among the library's most frequently requested rare volumes.[33] In American rare books, strengths center on regional history, including Midwest imprints and materials related to westward expansion, as exemplified by the Everett D. Graff Collection of approximately 10,000 volumes and manuscripts documenting nineteenth-century trans-Mississippi exploration and settlement, including rare accounts like the Lewis and Clark expedition narratives.[34] The 1964 acquisition of L.H. Silver's collection for $2.75 million further bolstered holdings in European Renaissance literature and early English books, comprising thousands of rare editions that enhanced the library's depth in pre-1800 European history.[35] Manuscript holdings total approximately five million pages across 1,300 distinct archival collections, with core strengths in areas aligned to the library's printed collections, such as American Indian and Indigenous studies via the Edward E. Ayer Collection.[36] Donated in 1911 with over 17,000 items and expanded through endowment to exceed 130,000 volumes and one million manuscript pages, the Ayer materials include 400 Spanish-American colonial manuscripts, correspondence, and indigenous language documents, forming one of the world's largest repositories on Native American history and culture.[37][38] Additional manuscript strengths encompass modern European post-1500 items (around 2,000 pieces, including individual codices and small collections) and over 1,200 modern American archival collections from 1700 onward, covering business records, literary papers (e.g., from Sherwood Anderson and Carl Sandburg), and social history.[39][40] These resources prioritize primary evidentiary value for humanities research, with access restricted to preserve physical integrity.[41]Genealogy, Local History, and Midwest Focus
The Newberry Library maintains one of the foremost collections for genealogy research in the United States, encompassing published genealogies, local histories, biographies, court and vital records, directories, censuses, newspapers, periodicals, maps, church records, military records, land records, cemetery records, and passenger lists.[42] These resources support investigations into family lineages and community origins, with particular depth in the Midwest, Northeast, Mid-Atlantic regions, Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland, and western Europe.[42] The collection includes hundreds of local and family history journals, such as The American Genealogist and The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, alongside reference guides spanning from the 15th century to the early 21st century.[42] Unique holdings highlight the library's historical scope in genealogy, including the earliest item in its possession—a seven-foot illuminated scroll titled Compendium Historiae in Genealogia Christi, dating to circa 1200, which traces the genealogy of Christ—and Memoirs of Capt. Roger Clap (1731), recognized as the first published genealogy in North America.[42] Researchers access these through on-site consultation and databases such as Fold3, which provides digitized military records drawn from the National Archives.[43] Local history materials intersect with genealogy via city directories, church records, and ephemera that document Midwestern settlement patterns, immigration waves, and institutional development.[44] The library's Midwest focus is anchored in the Midwest Manuscript Collection, initiated in 1942 under Librarian Stanley Pargellis and comprising over 600 discrete archival collections acquired over more than 80 years.[45] These unpublished primary sources—letters, diaries, organizational records, and business archives—cover Chicago's cultural and social history alongside broader Midwestern themes, including the Chicago Literary Renaissance (late 19th to early 20th century), railroad companies like Pullman (1867–1981) and Illinois Central, journalism from the Chicago Daily News, music institutions such as the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Ravinia Festival, and social movements involving settlement houses, labor organizations, and socialist publishing.[45] Over 500 collections specifically address Chicago's history, from the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 to the 1968 Democratic National Convention, integrating with local history through government documents, technical drawings, and employment records that illuminate economic and civic evolution.[44][5] This emphasis facilitates interdisciplinary research into Midwestern identity, with manuscripts emphasizing politics, Civil War-era activities, family papers, women's roles, business enterprises, and clubs, often revealing causal links between regional migration, industrialization, and cultural institutions.[45] Digital aids and research guides enhance accessibility, though the bulk of materials requires in-person use to verify provenance and contextual details.[46]Specialized Areas: Maps, Performing Arts, and Digital Resources
The Newberry Library maintains one of the world's premier collections of cartographic materials, encompassing hundreds of thousands of maps, over 12,000 atlases (with more than 5,000 predating 1850), and extensive travel ephemera.[47][48] The Hermon Dunlap Smith Center for the History of Cartography, established in 1971, supports scholarly research by promoting access to these holdings and hosting initiatives such as the Kenneth Nebenzahl, Jr., Lectures series, which have produced publications advancing cartographic history.[48][49] Notable recent efforts include the full digitization of the Franco Novacco Map Collection in October 2024, comprising over 750 sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Italian printed maps, enhancing global online accessibility.[50] Additional resources feature the Atlas of Historical County Boundaries, a digital project mapping U.S. county changes from 1629 onward with downloadable data for all states.[51] In performing arts, the library's holdings span music, theater, and related ephemera, including sheet music, libretti, musical treatises, periodicals, and manuscripts tied to composers and performers, enabling study of diverse traditions from medieval to modern eras.[52][53] Archival materials document Chicago's cultural scene, such as records from the Arts Club of Chicago (exhibitions, music series, and drama from the early twentieth century) and the Chicago Allied Arts, Inc. (performance files from the 1920s–1940s).[54][55] The Newberry Consort, an ensemble-in-residence since 1986, draws directly from these collections for historically informed live performances of early music, assembling professional singers and instrumentalists for programs spanning the Middle Ages through Baroque, including recent productions like Jacopo Peri's Euridice in collaboration with Haymarket Opera Company.[56][57] Digital resources at the Newberry provide open online access to digitized primary materials, including tens of thousands of high-resolution images from rare books, maps, manuscripts, music, and prints across six centuries.[58][59] The Digital Collections for the Classroom portal curates educator-selected primary sources with accompanying essays and discussion prompts for K-12 humanities instruction, covering topics from Shakespeare to U.S. expansion.[60] Specialized databases, such as the Saskia Digital Image Archive with 30,000 images of European and American art and architecture, support in-depth visual analysis.[43] Ongoing projects like Newberry Transcribe facilitate crowdsourced transcription of manuscripts, while initiatives such as Collection Stories offer thematic explorations, including digitized postcards and Halloween-related ephemera.[61] These tools extend the library's non-circulating collections to remote users, with policies ensuring preservation of originals.[4]Programs, Services, and Public Access
Offerings for General Public and Education
The Newberry Library provides a range of free public programs designed to engage diverse audiences with its collections and humanities scholarship, including author talks, historian discussions, dance performances, and theatrical readings.[62] These events, often held in the library's facilities or online, aim to foster cultural appreciation without requiring membership or prior expertise.[63] Exhibitions, such as the ongoing "Mapping Outside the Lines," offer public access to rare materials like maps and manuscripts, with interpretive tours highlighting historical contexts.[7] Adult education classes cater to lifelong learners through expert-led sessions on topics spanning literature, history, and material culture, typically spanning multiple weeks with fees around $220–$270 per course, including discounts for members, seniors, and students.[64] Examples include serial readings of George Eliot's Middlemarch, explorations of Indigenous Futurisms via literature and media, and hands-on tastings of early modern teas tied to trade networks and social customs.[65] [66] [67] Introductory workshops, such as "Newberry 101" and "Genealogy 101," provide free guidance on navigating collections for personal research.[68] Educational outreach emphasizes teacher professional development and student engagement, using the library's holdings to support K-12 curricula through custom programs and seminars tailored for Chicago Public Schools educators.[69] These initiatives promote active learning with primary sources in areas like American history and Midwest studies.[70] For undergraduates, the Newberry Library Undergraduate Seminar partners with institutions including DePaul University and Loyola University Chicago to offer intensive research experiences with rare books and manuscripts.[71] Broader public seminars, free with advance registration, invite community members to discuss scholarly papers on humanities topics.[72]Resources for Researchers, Scholars, and Students
The Newberry Library offers researchers, scholars, and students access to its collections via a Reader's Card, which is required for in-person use of books, maps, and archival materials in dedicated reading rooms on the second and fourth floors.[73] Materials are paged by library assistants with no limit on the number of items requested per visit, though restrictions apply to fragile or light-sensitive items under repair.[74] Reading rooms maintain a quiet environment conducive to study, with free lockers available for bags larger than 12 by 9 inches; smaller transparent plastic bags are permitted for security.[75] Reference services include consultations with librarians through the "Ask a Librarian" system, available via email, phone, or in-person at the Welcome Center, providing guidance on genealogy, local history, and specialized archives such as the Pullman Company records.[74] Research guides offer targeted bibliographies, checklists, and collection descriptions to aid navigation of core strengths like maps, postcards, religion, and performing arts, helping users identify relevant materials efficiently.[76] Digital resources, accessible online without a card, include thousands of high-resolution images from the collections for remote research, remixing, and analysis.[73] Undergraduate students benefit from programs like the Newberry Library Undergraduate Seminar (NLUS), a semester-long intensive offered in partnership with universities including DePaul, Loyola Chicago, Roosevelt, and the University of Illinois at Chicago, where participants conduct independent projects using primary sources and receive dedicated study space.[71] Past seminars have focused on topics such as "Chicago Memoir: From the Page to the Archive" in 2025 and "Inventing Mexico: Maps, Manuscripts, and Materiality, 1521-1921" in 2023, culminating in research papers and presentations.[71] Group visits and orientations are available to facilitate student access, emphasizing hands-on engagement with rare books and manuscripts.[71] All users must adhere to rules prohibiting disruptive behavior, eating outside designated areas, and unauthorized photography of people, with violations potentially resulting in loss of access privileges to preserve the scholarly environment.[75]Research Centers and Scholarly Support
Dedicated Centers and Their Focuses
The Newberry Library hosts several specialized research centers dedicated to advancing scholarship in targeted humanities fields, leveraging its collections to foster interdisciplinary inquiry and public engagement. These centers, established over decades, support fellows, host seminars, and collaborate with academic consortia to promote rigorous historical analysis. The Hermon Dunlap Smith Center for the History of Cartography, founded in 1971, concentrates on the study of maps as historical artifacts, aiding researchers, educators, and visitors in interpreting geographic representations to contextualize global and regional developments. It facilitates access to the library's extensive cartographic holdings, including rare maps from the Renaissance onward, and organizes exhibitions and workshops to enhance map literacy and scholarly output in cartographic history.[48][77] The Center for Renaissance Studies, established in 1979, operates as a hub for late medieval, Renaissance, and early modern scholarship through an international consortium of over 40 universities, enabling graduate students and faculty to conduct primary-source research using the Newberry's European manuscripts and printed works. It emphasizes collaborative programming, such as coding workshops for digital paleography and interdisciplinary seminars on topics like Reformation-era texts, to bridge archival materials with contemporary methodologies.[78][79] The D'Arcy McNickle Center for American Indian and Indigenous Studies, initiated in 1972, prioritizes ethical scholarship on Native American histories and cultures by integrating tribal perspectives with archival evidence from the library's indigenous collections, including treaties, ethnographies, and oral histories. It supports community-engaged projects, such as repatriation efforts and public programs, while critiquing Eurocentric narratives through evidence-based reinterpretations of colonial encounters and indigenous resilience.[80]Fellowships, Grants, and Collaborative Projects
The Newberry Library supports scholarly research through its fellowships program, which provides stipends, access to collections, and a community of scholars for projects aligned with its holdings in humanities fields such as American history, Indigenous studies, Renaissance materials, and cartography.[81] These fellowships emphasize original research using rare books, manuscripts, and other primary sources, with awards granted annually to postdoctoral scholars, PhD candidates (ABD status required), and select professionals like artists and writers.[82] [83] Short-term fellowships enable one to two months of focused investigation into specific collection items, offering a standard stipend of $3,000 per month; variations include higher amounts like $5,000 per month for American Indian and Indigenous studies affiliates and specialized awards for groups such as scholars of North American Indian heritage or BIPOC researchers in topics like beer history and brewing.[82] Long-term fellowships support four to nine months of in-depth residency, with stipends of $5,000 per month for postdoctoral scholars pursuing projects in areas like medieval studies, women's history, or environmental history.[83] Additional options include one-month artist-in-residence fellowships for visual and performing artists advancing creative practices through collection engagement, and scholars-in-residence for postdocs without fixed durations.[84] [81] Targeted grants complement these, such as Newberry Consortium in American Indian and Indigenous Studies (NCAIS) graduate student research grants providing one to two months of support for Indigenous-focused doctoral work, and travel grants through the Center for Renaissance Studies consortium for faculty, students, and staff from member institutions to attend programs or conduct research.[85] [86] Applications for most fellowships and grants close in December or January, with selections prioritizing innovative use of collections and diversity in scholarly backgrounds.[87] Collaborative projects arise through library centers and consortia, fostering partnerships with universities and communities; the NCAIS links institutions for graduate training in Indigenous studies, including joint seminars and access expansion initiatives with tribal groups to digitize and contextualize collections from Native perspectives.[85] [88] Similarly, the Center for Renaissance Studies consortium enables multi-institutional research collaborations, funding travel and hosting interdisciplinary workshops on early modern topics using Newberry holdings.[89] These efforts integrate fellows into broader networks, yielding outputs like community-engaged projects on Indigenous Chicago history.[90]Leadership, Governance, and Operations
Presidents, Librarians, and Key Administrators
The role of President and Librarian at the Newberry Library combines executive leadership with scholarly oversight of collections, a position established at the institution's opening in 1887. Early leaders focused on building the reference library's core holdings in humanities, while later presidents emphasized preservation, public engagement, and research support amid evolving funding and technological challenges.[2] William Frederick Poole served as the inaugural Librarian from 1887 to 1894, drawing on his prior experience at the Chicago Public Library to acquire foundational materials and develop cataloging systems; his tenure laid the groundwork for the library's emphasis on rare books and manuscripts.[91][20] John Vance Cheney succeeded Poole in 1894, managing acquisitions and administrative growth until around 1911, during which the library's printed catalogs and bibliographic resources expanded.[92][93] Stanley Pargellis, the fifth Librarian, held the position from 1942 to 1962, introducing public programming and navigating wartime and postwar collection development.[94][95]| President and Librarian | Tenure | Key Contributions |
|---|---|---|
| Charles T. Cullen (7th) | 1986–2005 | Oversaw modernization of facilities and scholarly programs; focused on legal history and institutional stability.[96][97][98] |
| David Spadafora | 2005–2019 | Advanced digital initiatives and fellowships; emphasized European intellectual history in curatorial decisions.[99][100][23] |
| Daniel Greene | 2019–2023 | Prioritized exhibitions and community outreach; departed to pursue other opportunities.[23][24] |
| Gail Kern Paster (interim) | 2023 | Provided transitional leadership drawing on her Folger Shakespeare Library experience.[24][101] |
| Astrida Orle Tantillo (10th) | 2023–present | First woman in the role; focuses on broadening access and strategic partnerships post her UIC deanship.[101][102][103] |