Augusta Braxton Baker (born April 1, 1911, Baltimore, Md., U.S.—died Feb. 23, 1998, Columbia, S.C.) was an American librarian and storyteller who worked long and prolifically in the field of children’s literature. Her many accomplishments included the first extensive bibliography of children’s books portraying positive African-American role models.
Braxton was the only child of schoolteacher parents who introduced her at an early age to the joys of reading. At age 16, after earning her diploma at the all-black high school where her father taught, she enrolled at the University of Pittsburgh (Pennsylvania). She married at the end of her sophomore year, transferring to the New York College for Teachers in Albany, New York. Baker received a B.A. (1933) in education and a B.S. (1934) in library science from that institution. Shortly thereafter, the Bakers moved to New York City. Baker worked for a few years as a teacher, but in 1937 she became a children’s librarian at the 135th Street Branch (now the Countee Cullen Regional Branch) of the New York Public Library (NYPL).
Appalled by the depiction of black characters in the fiction then available to black children, Baker struggled to amass a collection of books that would provide inspiring black role models while at the same time presenting an accurate view of African-American life to young Americans of all races and backgrounds. The project, begun in 1939, culminated in the branch’s James Weldon Johnson Memorial Collection. Baker’s dedication to this cause helped produce children’s authors of the sort she was looking for as well as publishers eager to publish them. In 1957 Books About Negro Life for Children, the bibliography of the collection, was published; it contained hundreds of book titles.
In time Baker discovered her gift for storytelling, and so did the NYPL. In 1953 she was appointed “storytelling specialist,” and two years later, Talking Tree, the first of what would be four collections of stories by Baker, was published. A promotion in 1961—to the highest position within the city library system held by an African-American to that date—made Baker coordinator of children’s services in all 82 branches of the NYPL. While holding that position for the next 13 years, Baker strengthened the library’s collection by adding audiovisual materials and in the process brought her vision to the outside world. She became a consultant to television’s Sesame Street and began to teach and lecture widely on storytelling and children’s literature. Baker retired from her library work after 37 years. In 1980 she was appointed storyteller-in-residence at the University of South Carolina, a position she held for more than a decade.