Steward

Steward

Steward

Library

Thinking up Big Ideas

The Science Center houses an extensive collection of scientific books and journals available to borrow.  We are proud to be able to offer this valuable resource to visiting scientists, students and locals.

View Catalog

(Library name is SSSC, no password required)

Many of the natural history and ethnography books in the Steward library were donated by Richard Nelson, a cultural anthropologist, writer and radio producer. The Skaggs Foundation provided support for cataloging and upgrading the library facilities. Margot O’Connell built the catalog and established the library. All of their contributions have made it a space where people can think about or hatch big ideas.

In Dedication

The Steward Library is named for Margaret and David Steward who have supported the Sitka Sound Science Center in a number of crucial areas. Stemming from their own childhood experiences in and around field stations, the Stewards were early supporters of the Science Center as a community resource, a touchstone for students to learn about the natural world, and a place to support locally relevant research. They believe that libraries are at the heart of every institution that seeks to understand our world and to expand our knowledge of it.

Margaret and David earned PhDs at Yale University.  They both taught at Emory University, and later Margaret became Professor in the Psychiatry Department at the University of California, Davis, School of Medicine and Associate Dean of the Medical School.  David taught at The Pacific School of Religion and The Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley where he worked as Convener of the GTU Inter-Area PhD program and Dean of Advanced Professional Studies at PSR.  They collaborated on research dealing with children and families at risk as they taught and published together.

The Steward Library is a physical symbol of our efforts  to foster learning and understanding of our world by bringing together Sitka’s outdoor places, and those who want to explore significant questions about our natural world.