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Adelaide Rosalie Hasse (September 13, 1868 – July 28, 1953) is listed as one of the “100 most important leaders we had in the 20th century” in the December 1999 edition of American Libraries. She is credited with having developed the Superintendent of Documents Classification system used by the Government Printing Office and within the Federal Depository Library Program.

Early Life and Library Beginnings
Born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Hasse was the first-born of a surgeon of German ancestry, a fact of which she was very proud despite the negative impact it would have on her mid-career. While there is no record of her ever formally attending school, it is assumed that she would have been educated through the local public school system. Additionally, there is no record of her ever having attended college.

Eventually Hasse’s family made their way to southern California where she not only earned the title of “Champion Fast Lady Bike Rider of Los Angeles,” but also obtained her first library job. From 1889 to 1895, Hasse worked under the resolute tutelage of Tessa Kelso, the Head Librarian at the Los Angeles Public Library (LAPL). Hasse and Kelso became lifelong friends in their endeavors to collect, organize, and maintain libraries and their documents as well as to make the libraries, and the United States, in general, more equitable places for women to work and live.

Los Angeles Public Library
When Hasse was hired on at the LAPL as “Addie Hasse,” she dove into her work with a passion and eagerness that she managed to retain for the remainder of career. In her first six years of library work, she and Kelso took the LAPL’s collection from 6,000 items to 42,000 items. The two also worked to make the LAPL more user-friendly by offering free borrowing privileges, adding additional weekend hours, and allowing check-out of periodicals. Later, they developed a librarian training course that was offered through the library.

When the library officially became a depository in 1891, Hasse set to work on classifying its Department of Agriculture documents. The Dewey Decimal Classification system was largely in use at this time, but it was not “suitable” for Hasse’s needs. She needed a more specific system, and one not classified by author as government documents frequently do not have an official author listed beyond the department. Classifying by department seemed to make the most sense; however, this proved equally problematic as many departments begin with the same word. Thus, Hasse devised an inverted, departmental system for classification, e.g., Agriculture, Dept. of rather than Dept. of Agriculture. As her system for government documents differed significantly from the rest of the library’s collection, which was organized by DDC, Hasse marked them as a special collection.

During her tenure at the LAPL, Hasse also organized the Santa Barbara, Santa Monica, Pasadena, Riverside, and local normal school collections as well. She also began attending local and national conferences, publishing bibliographies with some regularity, was promoted to First Assistant, and began to go by “Adelaide R.” rather than simply, “Addie.”  Early in her career, Hasse was gaining the attention of prominent librarians and making a rather notable name for herself in the field.

While Hasse’s work with Kelso significantly improved many areas of the LAPL and earned them high marks with outsiders, the duo was increasingly finding themselves in trouble with the local library board. The board, consisting of men, was unhappy with their frequent travel to conferences, living arrangements, and outspokenness on community issues. After enduring much harassment, pay decreases, threats to cut library funding, and general moral outrage from the board, Hasse and Kelso resigned from their positions in 1895.

The Government Printing Office and the Work that Launched Her Career
Upon her departure from the LAPL, Hasse went to work in the newly formed Government Printing Office under Francis Crandall. Her assigned task was to collect, organize, and classify government documents from its various departments, divisions, and bureaus. Hasse set to work immediately, uncovering documents from all over Washington, D.C., even going so far as to look in ceilings and behind walls. In a New York Times article dated June 2, 1897, in regards to her work with the Department of Interior alone, that “unearth[ing] the heap from the sub-cellar of the Interior Department” took “ten men and four teams six weeks’ time to remove the mass to her office” from a room that had supposedly been sealed for almost two decades. Of this experience, Hasse reportedly stated: “I dare say never had a young collector been given such an opportunity to revel in a very orgy of collecting.”  In fact, in just a little over a year, Hasse had “unearthed” 252,602 volumes.

Once she had all of the documents, she had to come up with a way to classify them. Building on her work with the Department of Agriculture documents at LAPL, she devised a system that of letters and numbers that denoted the department, division, document type, and volume or series (if needed). This system is now generally referred to Superintendent of Documents Classification, or SuDocs. While she was collecting and organizing, Hasse continued to regularly publish not only bibliographies of government publications, but also of items such as “Travel and Exploration” as appeared in List of Books for Girls and Women and Their Clubs.

Crandall eventually hired several catalogers to assist in the GPO’s work. Edith Clarke was one such cataloger. Right away, Clarke made it clear to Hasse that their relationship was one of associate, not of supervisor-employee. In both Hasse and Clarke’s personal documents, there are vague references to regular squabbling over whether SuDocs or DDC was a better system; Clarke favored the latter, though later declared that SuDocs was “’indisputable’ for its special situation.”  Hasse grew tired of Crandall’s lack of recognition for her work and resigned from the GPO in March of 1897. Hasse’s worries about Crandall were not unfounded as he later accused her of stealing GPO documents and often publicly took the bulk of the credit for the system over which Hasse had labored. In the 1980s, Hasse finally received the GPO recognition she deserved when it named a room for her.

New York, New York
Once again, Hasse left an unpleasant situation only to land in the beginnings of an organization. Hasse had known John Shaw Billings for several years and was thrilled to work in the newly created Astor Library at the recently reorganized New York Public Library (NYPL). A reporter from the New York Times met Hasse on her second day of work and wrote an article entitled, “Miss Hasse’s Unique Task.” In it, Hasse described her previous work at the GPO and her hopes for developing a public documents division in New York.

When the NYPL consolidated its borough branches, it was said to be “one of the world’s greatest collections of government publications,” with items dating back to the American colonies. Hasse’s work developed and classifying this special collection garnered her praise from the top periodicals in the field, most especially for Library Journal, for which she was a regular contributor. She was also selected to serve on the ALA Committee on Public Documents in 1897, and from 1904-1908, even served as its chair.

Billings, like Kelso at the LAPL, was a warm, nurturing supervisor to Hasse, giving her free reign to work as she pleased. Due to this freedom, she was able to find the first book ever published in New York (1693), "Narrative of an Attempt Made by the French of Canada Upon the Mohaque’s Country," which, coincidentally, also happened to be the first government publication as it was written at the request of the governor. As Hasse became an increasingly household name for librarians, it was only natural that librarians in the Federal Depository system would begin requesting her assistance in dealing with their own documents. She even became known for assisting Oregon employment lawyers in compiling information and documentation to support their cases against the state, as in Muller v. Oregon and Bunting v. Oregon. At a time when women were expected to be seen and not heard, once again, her actions did not win her any friends.

In 1911, Hasse was moved to the Documents Division of the NYPL where she was also given the task of providing reference services, which greatly diminished the time she had available for working on the NYPL’s massive collection of government and municipal documents. The Documents Division was closely related to the Economics Division, which was lead by Charles Williamson. It was at this point that Hasse’s reputation as a misandrist and “classic difficult woman, selfish, bad-tempered, and unreasonable” began to unfold. As she became passed over for promotion with some regularity, her less experienced male supervisors sought to undermine her authority and expertise in government documents at every turn. In 1915, the Chief Reference Librarian, Harry Miller Lydenberg, under new Director Edwin Anderson, launched a campaign against her, claiming that entries were “erroneous or inconsistent.”  This campaign gathered steam and continued until her termination from the NYPL in 1919. The beginning of the end for Hasse was when Anderson and Lydenberg removed her from her special collection to the Cataloging Division because they claimed that she “refused to ‘coordinate’ with the cataloging office on her work.”  After twenty years of cataloging government documents on her own, she was now little more than just another cataloging staff member. Anderson eventually fired Hasse “via a two-sentence letter” and denied her request for a meeting as to why she was fired as well for a hearing. Patrons of the library were even told not to associate with her when she came in as a patron herself, and her supporters working in the library as well as those she hired were fired soon after.

The Anderson File
From 1917 forward, Hasse would struggle because of her German ancestry, support of the women’s suffrage movement and equal pay and working conditions, desire to aggressively market library services, and lack of a husband. Anderson began keeping a file on Hasse, documenting every questionable move she made, even misconstruing legitimate inquiries to suit his needs. He reported her to the Secret Service in 1917 for “suspicious activity,” which was largely due in part to her seeking other employment. President Wilson formed The Inquiry to “collect and organize information for the eventual peace conference” that would occur at the conclusion of World War I. Hasse inquired about work with the group only to find that Lydenberg and Anderson were already heading it up in the basement of the NYPL. Anderson claimed that since she had been born to German parents (she wasn’t) and was at a conference in Germany when the war began, she could not possibly have any other motive for working with The Inquiry other than that as a German spy.

The NYPL special collections division had an extensive collection of Latin American documents. There was, however, a gap in the collection, and in 1918, Hasse asked Anderson for permission to travel to Mexico on a vacation to California to collect the missing documents. Anderson again reported Hasse to the Secret Service for suspicious activity because this was a time of unrest in Mexico. She was denied permission to go to Mexico, but while she was in California, her house was searched by the Secret Service no fewer than four times over the course of six weeks. Later in 1918, the New York city police came to the library to inquire about possible suspicious activity by library employees, and Lydenberg readily offered Hasse up, claiming she had ties to Jews, Marxism, Trotskyism, and Bolshevism because of a thank you note she had written to him regarding a “Marx book” a patron had requested. Also in 1918, Anderson and Lydenberg hired Edith Clarke, Hasse’s colleague from the GPO, who eagerly “came out against Hasse’s work” and agreed that she was difficult to work with. The Anderson file also contained accusations that Hasse was a lesbian and was currently lovers with Tilloah Squires, an assistant Hasse hired in 1918 to work on the Foreign Relations Index.

As late as 1922, three years after her departure from the NYPL, Anderson was still reporting her to the Justice Department and even worked with J. Edgar Hoover and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to open a file on her. The Anderson file is located in the NYPL Archives, which, in addition to the Library of Congress, the National Archives, and FBI, also have their own files on Hasse. As of 2006, the FBI still refuses to release five pages of their file on Hasse.

Life After the NYPL
For the first time in her career, Hasse was out of a job and had no immediate prospects for one. From 1919 to 1923, she conducted research for the War Labor Policies Board, becoming an “expert in the Council of National Defense” and identified herself as a bibliographer rather than a librarian. She went on to found the School for Business Librarians within the Washington School for Secretaries and became editor of Special Libraries. She also wrote an autobiography entitled Compensations of Librarianship, in which she finally had her say against Anderson, Crandall, Clarke, and Lydenberg.

In 1923, she was hired on as a bibliographer for the Brookings Institution through 1932, at which time she was again out of a job, this time for a year. She finally obtained employment as an instructor at George Washington University and as a research consultant for what would later become the Works Progress Administration (WPA), publishing bibliographies of Social Security information. From there she worked temporarily for the Temporary National Economic Committee (TNEC) and then as indexer for the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and later still, as a bibliographer for the Immigration and Naturalization Bureau.

Lasting Contributions
Hasse died on July 28, 1953, with a fifty-four year career in library and information service. In those fifty-four years, Hasse made a significant mark on the field as a library assistant, indexer, cataloger, classifier, bibliographer, writer, editorial analyst, and author. She was an advocate of “efficient and effective” library service, public access to government materials, and the women’s movement. Hasse overcame great obstacles in her quest for efficiency and effectiveness. American Libraries states that she was best “known for her acerbic personality”; however, Gail K. Nelson and John V. Richardson, Jr., state that, regardless of what one may say of her professional relationships and personal life, the basis of the Superintendent of Documents Classification system still in use today was “essentially Hasse’s.”  Because of her work in the GPO, the American public has a system for easily accessing a century’s worth of government publications and documents.