Boston Public Library(2)
未知 | 2013-06-07 16:21


• Dorchester
• Adams Street Branch, 690 Adams Street, Dorchester. "Service to the Adams Street neighborhood was first provided in 1875 through a delivery station on Walnut Street. A reading room was opened at 362 Neponset Avenue in 1947. The present branch library building was opened in 1951."[25]

• Codman Square Branch, 690 Washington Street, Dorchester. "Opened in 1905 the branch was named for John Codman a local preacher and patriot. Originally housed at 6 Norfolk Street, the branch moved to its present location in 1978. The building was designed by Eco-Texture, Inc."[26][27]

• Fields Corner Branch, 1520 Dorchester Avenue, Dorchester. "The Fields Corner Branch opened in 1969. It was the successor to the old Dorchester Branch which was also located in Fields Corner."[28]

• Grove Hall Branch, 41 Geneva Avenue, Dorchester. "The first library in this section of Roxbury opened May 1, 1898 in the rear of Mr. Mowry's Drug Store at the corner of Warren Street and Haynes Park with one table, eight chairs, two shelves and 200 books. ... In 1919 the building on the corner of Warren and Savin Streets officially became the Warren Street Branch Library. In 1926, this branch moved into its new quarters in the New Roxbury Memorial High School and thus became the Memorial Branch Library. The Memorial Branch was replaced in December 1970 by the Grove Hall Branch Library located at the corner of Warren and Crawford Streets. On April 4, 2009 the new branch library at 41 Geneva Avenue ... opened. Located in the newly-renovated Jeremiah E. Burke High School, the new library was designed by Schwartz/Silver Architects."[29]

• Lower Mills Branch, 27 Richmond Street, Dorchester. "Library service in Lower Mills was first offered through a branch delivery post in 1875; it was open three hours each day to take requests for books and to deliver books requested from the Central Library and the Dorchester Branch Library. Full branch services began in 1876 with a dedicated collection and expanded hours. In 1883, branch service was moved into the vacated Blue Hills Bank building. In 1931, space owned by the American Legion was purchased and in 1936 a small addition was completed. Eventually the collection outgrew that building and the present Lower Mills Branch Library building was opened in 1981."[30] The branch is scheduled to close in autumn 2010.[31]

• Uphams Corner Branch, 500 Columbia Road, Dorchester. "In 1904 the Uphams Corner Branch Library moved from a temporary store-front location on Dudley Street to the two-year-old municipal building on Columbia Road."[32]
 

 

East Boston Branch, 2008
 

 

Orient Heights Branch, 2011

• East Boston
• East Boston Branch, 276 Meridian Street, East Boston. "Established in 1869, the East Boston Branch Library was the first municipally supported branch library in the United States. It opened in the old Lyman School with the collections of the East Boston Library Association and the Sumner Library. In 1914, the present site was built."[16][33]
• Orient Heights Branch, 18 Barnes Avenue, East Boston. "The Orient Heights Branch Library opened in 1912. The building was built by the Druker family who leased it to the City of Boston. In 1986, the Druker family donated it to the City. Since 1967 the Branch has been linked with the East Boston Branch. After a fire damaged the collection in 1982 the building was reopened as a Reading Room."[34]The branch is scheduled to close in autumn 2010.[31]

• Hyde Park
• Hyde Park Branch, 35 Harvard Avenue, Hyde Park. "The town of Hyde Park opened its first library in the Cobb's block of Everett Square in 1873. In 1884 it moved to larger quarters in the Masonic Block at the corner of Harvard Avenue and River Street. Ground was broken for the Town Library in December 1898 and the ... building was opened in September, 1899. The Library became a branch of the Boston Public Library when the town joined the City of Boston in 1912. ... In 1997 ground was broken for a new addition and a renovation of the existing building," completed in 2000.[35]

• Jamaica Plain
• Connolly Branch, 433 Centre Street, Jamaica Plain. "Library service to the Hyde Square area of Jamaica Plain began in 1897 with a small book deposit in the rear of a neighborhood pharmacy at the corner of Lamartine and Paul Gore Streets. Eventually, in 1905 the Boylston Branch, named for the Boylston Railroad Station, opened its doors. Responding to the need for larger space, a beautiful white limestone building was built and opened in 1932. Designed by Maginnis and Walsh in the Jacobean style, the large arched entrance leads to a large interior space with wood and glass partitions dividing the adult and children's area. The ceilings, decorated with plaster moldings, are reputedly inspired by the Rufford Abbey Library in England. On December 12, 1940 , the name of the branch was officially changed to the Monsignor Arthur T. Connolly Branch, as a tribute to Monsignor Connolly, a long-time member of the Boston Public Library Board of Trustees and pastor of the neighboring Blessed Sacrament Church."[36]

• Jamaica Plain Branch, 12 Sedgwick Street, Jamaica Plain. "The Jamaica Plain Branch began in June, 1876, as a small Reading Room in Curtis Hall, with books supplied by the Roxbury Branch of the BPL. In September, 1877, it expanded and became the first BPL branch to purchase books from public funds. After a fire in 1908, the present building was constructed. The architecturally distinctive building features large schoolhouse windows and two fireplaces. It opened on July 24, 1911. An addition was built in 1936 and the interior was remodeled in 1963."[16][37][38]

• Mattapan
• Mattapan Branch, 1350 Blue Hill Avenue, Mattapan. A "small reading room was granted Branch status in 1923. ... On June 22, 1931 the Mattapan Library Branch at 10 Hazelton Street opened its doors. ... On February 28, 2009 the ... new Mattapan Branch at 1350 Blue Hill Avenue" opened, designed by William Rawn Associates Architects, Inc.[39]
 

 

Roslindale Branch, 2008

• Roslindale
• Roslindale Branch, 4238 Washington St., Roslindale. "Library service has been provided to Roslindale since 1898. At that time, a book delivery station was located in a drugstore at the corner of Washington and Ashland Streets. ... In 1900 the library was moved to the Old Taft's Tavern building. In 1918, having outgrown its quarters, the library moved to the Municipal Building at the Corner of Washington Street and Cummins Highway. When the municipal facility became outmoded plans were made to move the library again. At the corner of Washington and Poplar Streets was a fire house which was torn down for the new library site. In 1961, a semi-circular building with huge glass windows, topped with a low blue dome, was designed by Isidor Richmond and Carny Goldberg."[16][40]
 

 

Egleston Square, 2011

• Roxbury
• Dudley Branch, 65 Warren Street, Roxbury. "The Dudley Branch Library opened its doors in its current location at 65 Warren Street, in April of 1978, replacing both the Mount Pleasant Branch and the privately endowed Fellowes Athenaeum."[41]

• Egleston Square, 2044 Columbus Avenue, Roxbury. "Opened on July 8, 1953 the building was designed by the firm of Isidor Richmond and Carney Goldberg."[42]

• Parker Hill Branch, 1497 Tremont Street, Roxbury. "The Branch first opened in a rented space at 1518 Tremont Street in July 1907." In 1929 Ralph Adams Cram designed the current building, opened in 1931.[43]

• South Boston
• South Boston Branch, 646 East Broadway, South Boston. "The South Boston Branch first opened in April 1872 in the Masonic building at 372 West Broadway. It was the second branch library established in the United States. When the Masonic building was sold in 1948 the South Boston Branch was closed. ... The branch was reopened in June 1950 in a storefront at 385–8 West Broadway were it remained until destroyed by fire in May 1957. The present building ... consolidated the City Point Branch with the South Boston Branch."[16][44]

• Washington Village Branch, 1226 Columbia Road, South Boston, MA. "Originally named the Andrew Square Reading Room, or "Station Y", the Branch was first opened in January 1901 in the John A. Andrew School on Dorchester Street. In 1942 it was moved to 290 Old Colony Avenue in the Old Colony Housing Project, and was renamed the Washington Village Branch. The Branch was closed due to a fire in August 1972, and attempts to repair the building were unsuccessful. Library service to the Washington Village neighborhood was provided by a bookmobile until budget cuts closed the bookmobile service. ... A task force of Old Colony residents applied for a federal grant that enabled the Housing Authority to remodel two apartments into a small library facility. The Branch was reopened in 1983."[45] The branch in the Old Colony Housing Development is scheduled to close in autumn 2010.[31]

• West Roxbury
• West Roxbury Branch, 1961 Centre Street, West Roxbury. "In 1876 the Boston Public Library created a delivery station when it took over the collection of the West Roxbury Free Library. In 1896 it became a full branch of the Boston Public Library. In 1921–22 a new library building was built at the present site. In 1977 a devastating fire destroyed the neighboring West Roxbury Congregational Church and the land was deeded to the Trustees of the Boston Public Library for the purpose of an addition to the Branch building. On September 24, 1989 the new addition was opened to the public with community rooms, a gallery and a reading garden. The branch is home to the West Roxbury Historical Society."[16][46]

Notes
1. ^ "Retrieved 2010-06-08". Bpl.org. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
2. ^ "Retrieved 2010-06-08". Bpl.org. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
3. ^ Declared in 1970 by law. Massachusetts General Laws, Chapter 78, Section 19C, paragraph 4
4. ^ An Overview: 2010 The Boston Public Library. January 19, 2010.
5. ^ American Library Association, "ALA Library Fact Sheet 22 – The Nation's Largest Libraries: A Listing by Volumes Held". July 2010.
6. ^ July 1, 2008 through June 30, 2009; cf. Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners (2011). "FY 2009 Municipal Pie Report". Retrieved 2011-04-04.
7. ^ "The Boston Public Library Fact Sheet". Retrieved 8-9-2012.
8. ^ "The Boston Public Library". Retrieved 8-8-2012.
9. ^ MacQuarrie, Brian (2006-10-06)."Library lacks means to repair old tomes". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 2006-10-06.[dead link]
10. ^ Andrew Ryan (February 18, 2010)."Library may cut 10 of its branches: Boston weighs layoff of quarter of staff". The Boston Globe.
11. ^ McCrann, Grace-Ellen (2005): "Contemporary Forces That Supported the Founding of the Boston Public Library."Public Libraries, Vol. 44, no. 4, July/August 2005.
12. ^ McCrann, Grace-Ellen (2005): "Contemporary Forces That Supported the Founding of the Boston Public Library." Public Libraries, Vol. 44, no. 4, July/August 2005.
13. ^ For context, see: List of libraries in 19th-century Boston, Massachusetts
14. ^ a b McCrann 2005.
15. ^ Boston Public Library. "Online Database A - Z List". Electronic Resources. Retrieved 13 April 2012.
16. ^ a b c d e f g h i First Report of the Free Public Library Commission of Massachusetts. 1891; p.29.
17. ^ "Retrieved 2010-06-08". Bpl.org. 1967-06-01. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
18. ^ "Retrieved 2010-06-08". Bpl.org. 1971-06-07. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
19. ^ "West End Branch". BPL. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
20. ^ "Brighton Branch". BPL. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
21. ^ "Faneuil Branch". BPL. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
22. ^ In Mayor Menino's budget: 4 libraries will close, but… Allston / Brighton TAB. Apr 22, 2010
23. ^ "Honan-Allston Branch". BPL. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
24. ^ "Charlestown Branch". BPL. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
25. ^ "Adams Street Branch". BPL. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
26. ^ "Codman Branch". BPL. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
27. ^ Report of the Free Public Library Commission of Massachusetts, 1906
28. ^ "Fields Corner Branch". BPL. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
29. ^ "Grove Hall Branch". BPL. 2009-04-04. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
30. ^ "Lower Mills Branch". BPL. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
31. ^ a b c Trustees vote yes on library closings. Boston Globe. Apr 10, 2010
32. ^ "Uphams Corner Branch". BPL. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
33. ^ "East Boston Branch". BPL. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
34. ^ "Orient Heights Branch". BPL. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
35. ^ "Hyde Park Branch". BPL. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
36. ^ "Connolly Branch". BPL. 1940-12-12. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
37. ^ "Jamaica Plain Branch". BPL. 1911-07-24. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
38. ^ Libraries spared from closure, Jamaica Plain Gazette, Apr 16, 2010
39. ^ "Mattapan Branch". BPL. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
40. ^ "Roslindale Branch". BPL. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
41. ^ "Dudley Branch". BPL. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
42. ^ "Egleston Square Branch". BPL. 1953-07-08. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
43. ^ "Parker Hill Branch". BPL. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
44. ^ "South Boston Branch". BPL. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
45. ^ "Boston Public Library". Bpl.org. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
46. ^ "West Roxbury Branch". BPL. 1989-09-24. Retrieved 2013-01-02.

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