Hugh Craig Atkinson (November 27, 1933 - October 24, 1986) was an American librarian known for his innovations in library automation and cooperation. He served as director of libraries at Ohio State University from 1971 to 1976 and at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign from 1976 to 1986. In 1999, American Libraries named him one of the 20th century’s 100 most important leaders in librarianship.
Hugh Atkinson was born in Chicago. He worked from 1951-56 as a junior accountant for Lawrence Scudder and Co. while studying accounting at St. Benedict's College. Upon receiving his accounting degree, Atkinson studied English at the University of Chicago, and then received his Masters in Library Science from the university's Graduate Library School while working in the University Library as a rare books assistant.
Atkinson’s professional library career began at Pennsylvania Military College, where he worked from 1958-61 as a reader services librarian. From 1961-67 he held several positions at the State University of New York at Buffalo library, as head of reference, assistant director for technical services, and as acting assistant director of the Health Sciences Libraries. Here, he oversaw the huge growth of the university library as the State University of New York system rapidly expanded.
In 1967, Atkinson moved to Ohio State University where he served as head of public services (1967–71), and then as director of libraries (1971–76). Here he played a seminal role in the creation of one of the first online library circulation systems, the Library Circulation System. The system was later known as the Library Computer System, but is most commonly referred to by the acronym LCS. The system was notable for its decentralized organization, allowing library users in any given branch of the library to view what was available in any other branch. In an interview with Technicalities in 1985, Atkinson stated, “The only way I can see in a decentralized world to maximize library use is to provide, at the varying sites, the ability to borrow freely throughout the campus.” This vision of automated cooperation between decentralized libraries was a key manifestation of Atkinson’s overall approach to librarianship, which he termed holistic librarianship. At the heart of this approach was a strong belief in “the ideal of cooperation.”