HomeMy WebLinkAboutMounce, Clara (Librarian)
B-CS librarian
an open book
System recognizing Mounce
for (100 years: no-nonsense style
By COURTNEY GRAFFT
Eagle Staff Writer
Dressed sharply in a pinstripe suit in her larg~ office,
Clara Mounce looks more like a hard-nosed business-
woman on Wall Street than the community librarian:
It's her 25th year in that position, and March 12
marks Mounce's 75th birthday. To honor her "100
years," the Friends of the Bryan+College Station Public
Library System are hosting a roast next weekend.
The event will be Saturday at Pebble Creek Country
Club, and the mayors of Bryan and College Station will
Eagle photo/Dave McDermand
Clara Mounce Is celebratIng 25 years as head librarian of the
Bryan+Coilege Station Public Library System.
designate March 4, 2006, as Clara Mounce Appreciation
Day.
"It's a well-deserved honor," said roaster Marvin
Tate, who has known Mounce for 23 years. "She's been
instrumental in getting the library system to where it is
today. "
See MOUNCE, Page A6 I
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Page A6
The Bryan-College Station Eagle
Sunday, February 26, 2006
Mounce
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Mounce, who has become a
local celebrity during her time
as the community's chief
librarian, said she looks for-
ward to the luncheon and
catching up with friends.
"I love these people," she
said. "They never tell me no."
The phrase "Don't take no for
an answer" might as well have
originated with Mounce. As
she explained, "I like getting
my way. I lose some of the bat-
tles, but I win the war."
"She presents things that
make you think, 'How could
you not agree with her?'" said
Mary Fran Troy, co-chair of the
Friends of the Library board.
"She just allows you to under-
stand what the community
needs."
Mounce said some of the
things the community needed
during the past 25 years were a
larger College Station library
and a restoration' of the
Carnegie Library. Both goals
were accomplished.
During the Carnegie restora-
tion, Mounce would trek daily
to the downtown Bryan site
and don her customized gold
hard hat to watch every inch of
construction.
"Always having a project
kept me motivated," she said.
Mounce's 25 years have not
been without challenges. A
1995 arson that damaged the
Bryan Public Library shook
the community to the core, she
said.
"It took me a week to get over.
the shock of it, but after that
week, I said, 'Well, let's get to
work!'" Mounce said. I
FUN FACTS
LIVED IN BRYAN SINCE: 1978
FAVORITE BOOK: To Kill a Mock.
ingbird by Harper Lee
READING RIGHT NOW: The House
on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros
HOBBIES: Horses, reading
OTHER LANGUAGES: Italian
And get to work she did. The
library was open for business
164 days later - four months
earlier than initially anticipat-
ed.
"The fIre was a very devas-
tating blow, but we had a beau-
tiful building come out of it,"
Mounce said.
Through the years
Whether it's reading or writ-
ing, Mounce said she has ink in
her blood and always hopes to
learn more.
"[Learning] is like climbing a
mountain," she said. "The
higher you go, the more adren-
aline you get."
Libraries have changed a lot
since Mounce began her
career. She said computers and
other media besides books now
play a large role in what
attracts people to libraries,
which she describes as "the
original 'googlers.'''
Mounce has now served in
her position longer than any
other previous librarian, and
through the years she has met
her share of celebrities - fIrst
lady Laura Bush and authors
Rosemary Wells, Will Hobbs
and Jon Scieszka included.
Even after meeting such
high-profIle folks, Mounce said
the most interesting people to
. her are the devout library
users.
"It's just stimulating to be
able to have a conversation
with someone about what
you've read," she said. "People
who don't use the library just
don't know what they're miss-
ing."
The Bryan+College Station
Public Library System
includes three facilities - the
News
Bryan Public Library, the
Carnegie Library and the
Larry J. Ringer Library, which
opened in College Station in
1998. Mounce does everything
in the libraries from answering
e-mails about lost library cards
to managing the libraries'
budgets, not to mention being
responsible for 46 employees.
"I love the way she manages
people with her humor and her
fairness and her firmness,"
said Jeanne Mitchell, a mem-
ber of the library advisory
board.
The entire Mounce family
will be present Saturday for the
roasting. As of Friday, about
150 people had made reserva-
tions to attend the celebration.
"Other people say they make
contacts; Clara makes friends,"
Troy said.
The event begins with a
silent auction at 11 a.m., fol-
lowed by the lunch and pro-
gram at noon. Proceeds from
the silent auction will go to
Friends of the Library.
For more information about
the celebration, call Michele
Zinn at 690-3627.
Page A10
The Bryan-College Station Eagle
Sunday, March 12, 2006
.The Eagle
Donnis Baggett
Publisher and Editor
Robert C. Borden
Opinions Editor
Ray Wilkerson
Executive Editor
editboard@theeagIe.com
Happy birthday to a II
community friend I
It isn't polite to mention a lady's age, but today is too spe- I
cial to ignore. Clara Mounce, our wonderful community
librarian, turns 75 today, although it would be hard to
tell by looking at her. She still is full of vim and vigor and j
more than a little dose of vinegar. While the birthday alone I
would be worthy of notice, it is coupled with a celebration I
of her 25th year as community librarian, although the offi-
cial anniversary won't be until November.
Combined, the two events equal 100 years of Clara. Last
weekend, she was honored with a lunch hosted by the
Friends of the Bryan-College Station Library System. It
was billed as a roast, and the speakers had some amusing
stories, but it was hard to come up with anything embar-
rassing about Mounce. She's led too good a life, a life of
service and dedication to others.
This community has been lucky to have Mounce as our
librarian since 1978 - the fIrst three years as an assistant
librarian. Following in the footsteps of dedicated, involved
librarians over the past century, Mounce has worked hard
to make our library the best it can be - and that is pretty
I darned good. Most communities would be envious of a
library system as fme as ours.
We use the word "system" because it truly is. The Bryan
Library continues in its longtime location on 26th Street.
Bryan's fIrst public library, the 1903 Carnegie in downtown
Bryan, has been renovated and restored into the magnifi-
cent Carnegie Center for Brazos Valley History.
When thugs set fIre to the Bryan Library in 1995, many
people would have thrown up their hands. But not Clara
Mounce. She rolled up her sleeves and got to work.
Through persuasion, leadership and a lot of effort by the
head librarian, the library quickly reopened better than
ev~r in fIve months.
Thanks to Mounce's leadership, we now have a fme
library on Harvey Mitchell Parkway in College Station.
The College Station Library had its start as a branch of the .
Bryan Library in 1987, opening with 10,000 books in a rent-
ed 3,000 square-foot building. Two years later, it had
expanded to 6,000 square feet. College Station voters
approved construction of their fIrst permanent library in
1995, and it opened its doors on March 12, 1998, across from
A&M Consolidated High School. It is a fme addition to the
local library system.
Mounce also spearheaded efforts to automate many of the
library operations. Computer terminals and outlets for
patron laptops now are familiar and well-used in the local
. libraries.
Mounce has served on numerous library committees and
task forces around the state and country. Her reputation is
so great that people come calling from near and far to learn
how to improve their own local libraries.
Perhaps we feel a special kinship to Mounce, because the
Coleman native got her start as a proofreader at the Abilene
Reporter-News, and if she hadn't answered the siren call of
the Dewey Decimal System, she might have built a fme
career in journalism. We also love her because, over the
years, we have never been able to stump her or her staff
with a question they ~ouldn't fmd the answer to.
Clara Mounce is more than a fme librarian, though. She
. is an accomplished horsewoman with a great love for Ara-
bian horses, and she is a fme cook, specializing in Italian
dishes she learned to make when stationed with her Navy
husband in Naples, Italy.
Thankfully, Clara Mounce has no intention of retiring.
We wish her a very happy birthday today, and we know she
will be around promoting her libraries for years to come. In
fact, we'll make book on it.
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