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Annie Carroll Moore : ウィキペディア英語版
Anne Carroll Moore

Anne Carroll Moore (July 12, 1871 – January 20, 1961)〔 was an American educator, writer and advocate for children's libraries. She created the site children's story book online.
She was named ''Annie'' after an aunt, and officially changed her name to ''Anne'' in her fifties, to avoid confusion with Annie E. Moore, another woman who was also publishing material about juvenile libraries at that time.〔 From 1906 to 1941 she headed children's library services for the New York Public Library system. Moore wrote ''Nicholas, A Manhattan Christmas Story'', one of two runners-up for the 1925 Newbery Medal.〔
==Early life and education 1871–1894==
Moore was born in Limerick, Maine, the youngest of ten children and the only surviving daughter of Luther Sanborn and Sarah Barker Moore.〔Lundin, A. (1996). "Anne Carroll Moore: 'I have spun out a long thread'". In Suzanne E. Hildebrand, ''Reclaiming the American Library Past: writing the women in Norwood, New Jersey'', Stamford, Conn.: Ablex Publishing Company, pp. 187–204.〕 She described her childhood as a happy one and wrote about growing up in ''My Roads to Childhood''.〔 Moore began her formal education at the Limerick Academy in Maine. She then attended a two-year college, The Bradford Academy in Massachusetts.〔 She was very close to her father and hoped to follow in his footsteps as a lawyer, despite the biases of her era.〔
When the death of both her parents and a sister-in-law made her plans to become a lawyer unattainable, she spent several years helping her now widowed brother Harry raise his two children.〔 Her brother suggested that she consider the emerging profession of librarian, so Moore applied to the State Library School in Albany, N.Y., but lacked the program's educational requirements. Undaunted, she then applied to the Pratt Institute Library in Brooklyn where she was accepted into the one-year program (1895).〔

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