We at Mooresville (Indiana) Public Library (MPL) were shocked earlier this week to learn that our long-time volunteer, Beth Hensley, had passed over (see her obituary online). Just the previous week, she had dropped by the library to help with assorted projects. It's heartbreaking to think that she's now gone.
"Beth-in-the-Box" at MPL (ca. 2005-2006)
Beth had volunteered weekly at the library (mostly on Tuesdays--hence, her nickname, "Beth on Tuesdays") since the late 1980s (either 1987 or 1988, depending upon who you were asking), but her ties with MPL reach back to 1953, when she began teaching at Mooresville High School (1953-1955). She taught English and was the school librarian.
Mooresville High School Yearbook, Wagon Trails
Beth with her student library staff and her faculty photo
from the 1954 Mooresville High School Yearbook, Wagon Trails
Between those yearbooks (specifically, on June 13, 1954), Beth married Mooresville native Maurice Hensley (1927-2017), who was longtime postmaster at the Mooresville post office, among the many businesses he and Beth operated together in town. Their Jack & Jill Shop, a children's clothing store, flourished in downtown Mooresville (in the Farmers State Bank building) from the mid-1950s through the early 1960s. The couple also owned and operated Hensley Coal & Oil Service from the mid-1950s through the 1970s.
Hensley business advertisements from the 1956
Mooresville High School Yearbook, Wagon Trails
Jack & Jill Shop (December 7, 2021)
Since 1953, Beth worked closely with Mooresville Public Library, as she wanted her lessons at the high school to support, and be supported by, the library's programs and resources. When she retired from teaching, she continued working with the library in her spare time to support its activities. Beth volunteered for dozens of MPL staffers, and she was also a member of the library's board of trustees during the 1980s. Her devotion to the library spanned a lifetime.
Beth's contributions as a library volunteer were legendary. She was honored in 2019 by the Indiana Library Federation for her efforts to enhance library service to the community.
As a volunteer, Beth was supremely creative. For decades she designed a multitude of displays, decorations, arts and crafts, and youth program materials. Today, almost anywhere you're standing at the library, if you turn in any direction, you will see something that Beth created. Her ingenuity was amazing. She could construct anything from cardboard and construction paper. Give her scissors, glue, string, wire, pens, markers, and a few other odds and ends, and she could make everything beautiful and interesting. There isn't room for all the photos of her creations, but you may see many of them on our Cat's Eye View @ MPL blog. The blog's author, Cauli Le Chat, who served as MPL feline roving reporter from 2010-2019, called Beth The Decorinator because she was all-powerful in crafting and artsy stuff.
I cannot overemphasize the significance of Beth's arts and crafts work to the library and its staff and patrons. It is a joy to see kids' and caregivers' faces light up when they see one of Beth's "crawl-through" creations at the MPL youth services entrance, or a book-themed display atop bookshelves or in display cabinets. Beth's backdrops for our adult programs (often featuring noted authors or speakers) were jaw-dropping; her attention to detail and cleverness in composition were stunning to behold. (Here's just one example; there are many, many more.)
Beth sitting in a rocking chair (above) and with
author Philip Gulley (below) at a 2009 library program
Beth loved working with the library's staff--most often, with the youth services department--to develop arts and crafts for various programs, events, displays, or just to promote items available to checkout. For example, kids loved her beds and sleeping bags (made from surplus cardboard and fabric) for the overnight stuffed animal sleepovers.
for the library's 2011 Teddy Bear Sleepover
Apart from her artistic talents, Beth was an encyclopedia of local knowledge. She knew practically everyone in town, and she could recite familial relationships (and places families lived) off the top of her head. More times than I can count, she filled-in missing details about Mooresville history that had stumped my best research efforts. What's more, Beth valued the community's local history and the ways the library strove to preserve it. For example, for decades Beth clipped obituaries from the Mooresville and Martinsville newspapers to place on file (and, more recently, to digitize and upload to our online database, Legacy Links). She made sure that those important pieces of historical and genealogical information were retained.
Beth also had an amazing memory for academic information. She could still recite poems she memorized decades before while attending high school or college (Indiana State Teacher's College, now Indiana State University), and she was an enthusiastic supporter of reading for all ages.
While Beth appreciated the practical value of technologies in libraries, she firmly believed that it was important for people to know how to function without the benefit of computerized gadgets. "They still need to know what they can accomplish with just pencil and paper," Beth once said. "The old ways of doing things can still be useful."
As part of her funeral planning, Beth arranged that memorial contributions could be made to Mooresville Public Library. That was so like her--always thinking of how best she, and others, could help the library serve the community. I can't imagine what we will do without her. But, everyday, whenever we are assisting patrons, MPL staffers will reflect for a moment and ask, "What would Beth have done to make this better?" Better was Beth's byword. It will be her lasting legacy to us. We're honored to have known, and worked with, her, and we trust that all who come after will enjoy her creativity on display throughout the library. "The Decorinator" was truly an inspiration to us all.
POSTSCRIPT: Here are some photos of Beth Hensley's creations (and a display honoring Beth) that you may now see in the library's grand hall.
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