Lotsee Patterson


Lotsee Patterson is a Comanche librarian, educator, and founder of the American Indian Library Association. She has written numerous articles on collection development, tribal libraries and Native American Librarianship.
A Native American, Lotsee Patterson first became interested in collecting Native American objects, as her mother was a collections director. In the late 1950s, she read the 1983 publication The Museum Handbook of Native American History. She saw that Native Americans were less well documented than other cultures and often paid exorbitant prices for materials that were soon obsolete.
Patterson is a University of Oklahoma Professor Emeritus of Library and Information Studies.

Early life and education

Patterson was born in 1931 and raised in southwestern Oklahoma, on a Native American land allotment near the town of Apache, Oklahoma. She started her professional career as a teacher at Boone School in 1959, a rural public school without a library. She taught at Riverside Indian School as well. These experiences led her to commit her professional life to determining the library needs of Native Americans and developing tribal libraries throughout the nation.
She attended the Oklahoma College for Women and earned a Bachelor of Science degree in 1959. She received her Masters of Library Science from the University of Oklahoma in 1969. In 1979, she completed her Ph.D.in Educational Teaching, also at the University of Oklahoma. During her graduate studies, she focused on procuring money for training librarians on how to work productively with Native American students and in selecting Native American materials of high quality.

Career and contributions

After completing her MLIS, Patterson worked in libraries at Riverside Indian School, Norman Public Schools and as Director of Library Media Services for the Oklahoma City Public Schools. She is a Professor Emeritus of Library and Information Studies at the University of Oklahoma. Prior to her position at the University of Oklahoma, she was faculty at the University of New Mexico and at Texas Woman's University.
As of 2009, Patterson was on the board for the National Medal for Museum and Library Service which advises the Institute of Museum and Library Services. As of 2015, she was on the Board of Trustees for Comanche Nation College.
In the 1970s, Patterson helped to found the Office of Library Outreach Services Subcommittee on the American Indian, now the American Indian Library Association. She wrote and received many landmark grants for projects that furthered the progress of librarianship for and in native nation lands, one of which was a training program for teacher's aides of Bureau of Indian Affairs schools to become librarians. She has been involved in the development of the International Indigenous Librarians' Forum. She has also served on many committees including American Library Association's Committee on Accreditation. She has acted as a consultant in the field of library studies to many archives and museums nationwide, including as a senior advisor to the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian.
Her life's work has consisted of recruiting and mentoring Native Americans in the field of librarianship, lobbying for funds to create and improve librarianship for native schools and educating students about librarianship.

Selected works