By James Pollard
The Associated Press

The former Librarian of Congress abruptly fired by President Donald Trump has found a new position with the countryโ€™s largest philanthropic supporter of the arts.

The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation exclusively told The Associated Press that Carla Hayden will join the humanities grantmaker July 7 as a senior fellow whose duties will include advising on efforts to advance public knowledge through libraries and archives.

The year-long post places Hayden back at the center of the very debates over American culture that surrounded her dismissal. The White House ousted Hayden, the first woman and the first African American to hold the title, after she was accused of promoting โ€œradicalโ€ literary material by a conservative advocacy group seeking to squash Trump opposition within the federal government.

Carla Hayden will join the Mellon Foundation as a senior fellow, returning to cultural leadership after her controversial ousting as Librarian of Congress. (AP Photo/Amanda Andrade-Rhoades)

Hayden acknowledged existing threats to โ€œthe free exchange of ideasโ€ in a statement to the AP.

โ€œFor generations, libraries, archives and cultural institutions have been the guardians of knowledge and the catalysts for human progress,โ€ she said. โ€œTogether, we will work to strengthen the public knowledge ecosystem and ensure that the transformative power of information remains accessible to all.โ€

Meanwhile, the Mellon Foundation has been working to fill fiscal holes for arts communities reeling from federal cuts. Its $15 million โ€œemergencyโ€ fund aims to offset the $65 million that were supposed to go to the state humanities councils that organize book fairs, heritage festivals, theater productions and other programs fostering cultural engagement.

The foundation has previously supported the American Library Associationโ€™s efforts to counter book bans, increase scholarships for librarians of color and boost adult literacy.

Mellon President Elizabeth Alexander said the foundation is thrilled to welcome Hayden, โ€œa leader with an unshakable regard for the public good of the American people,โ€ during such a โ€œcrucial time.โ€ Public knowledge institutions are navigating โ€œhistoric challenges and transformative advances,โ€ according to Mellon, including artificial intelligence, digital technologies, federal funding withdrawals and censorship efforts.

Haydenโ€™s tenure at the Library of Congress included modernizing its collection of the nationโ€™s books and history. Recent campaigns sought to improve accessibility for everyday visitors. She oversaw new initiatives reaching out to rural and online audiences. And it was Hayden who arranged for Lizzoโ€™s 2022 performance where the artist played a crystal flute owned by President James Madison โ€” among the Libraryโ€™s troves of artifacts.

Before her confirmation in 2016, Hayden spent more than two decades as CEO of Baltimoreโ€™s Enoch Pratt Free Library system and was president of the American Library Association from 2003 to 2004. A graduate of Roosevelt University and the University of Chicago, she is a member of the American Philosophical Society and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Associated Press coverage of philanthropy and nonprofits receives support through the APโ€™s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.