John Howard Hickcox Sr. | |
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Born | Albany, New York, U.S. | August 10, 1832
Died | January 31, 1897 64) Washington, D.C., U.S. | (aged
Nationality | American |
Occupations |
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John Howard Hickcox Sr. (August 10, 1832 in Albany – January 31, 1897 in Washington D.C.),[1] a nineteenth-century librarian and bookseller, is best known for his efforts to organize and index federal government publications. He published United States Government Publications; a Monthly Catalogue, also known as Hickcox's Monthly Catalogue,[2] from 1885 [3] to 1894[4] in order to alert people to the availability of recent government publications—a function which the government was not performing. His catalog was the predecessor of the Monthly Catalog, of which he was the first compiler.
From 1858 to 1864, he was the Assistant Librarian at the New York State Library. He was employed at the congressional library in Washington, D.C. from 1874 to 1882, when he was arrested on charges of stealing letters addressed to the Librarian of Congress. The charges were eventually dismissed, but he never returned to the library.[5]
Hickcox was also a famous numismatist, and wrote books such as A History of the Bills of Credit or Paper Money Issued by New York, From 1709 to 1789 with a Description of the Bills, and Catalogue of the Various Issues[6] and Historical Account of American Coinage.
References
External links
- Works by John Howard Hickcox Sr. at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about John Howard Hickcox Sr. at Internet Archive
- Nancy F. Stimson and Wendy Y. Nobunaga, Life and times of John H. Hickcox: Government Publications History Revisited (1995). "Journal of Government Information". 22 (5), pp. 403–412. Postprint available for free at eScholarship
- Nancy F. Stimson and Wendy Y. Nobunaga, The arrest and vindication of John H. Hickcox (2004). "Journal of Government Information". 30 (5-6), pp. 751–758. Postprint available free at eScholarship
- Nancy F. Stimson and Wendy Y. Nobunaga, John H. Hickcox's Confession: An Addendum (2007). "Government Information Quarterly". 24 (1), pp. 216–217. Postprint available free at eScholarship