Difference between revisions of "Carnegie Library"

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[[Image:Carnegie_library.jpg|thumb|Little Rock Public Library, Little Rock, Arkansas.]]
 
[[Image:Carnegie_library.jpg|thumb|Little Rock Public Library, Little Rock, Arkansas.]]
Little Rock's '''Carnegie Main Public Library''' once stood at the corner of Seventh and Louisiana streets. The Greek Revival structure housing the main public library opened in 1908. The head librarian in the 1910s was [[Dorothy D. Lyon]]. Two important private libraries incorporated into the public library collections came from [[Uriah Rose]] and physician [[W. E. Green]]. The library had a Green Room for local Drama League activities as well as meetings of other local literary and social club meetings.
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Little Rock's '''Carnegie Main Public Library''' once stood at the corner of Seventh and Louisiana streets. The Greek Revival structure housing the main public library opened in 1908. The head librarian in the 1910s was [[Dorothy D. Lyon]]. Two important private libraries incorporated into the public library collections came from [[Uriah M. Rose]] and physician [[W. E. Green]]. The Uriah Rose room contained seven thousand volumes, most of them in French. The Green Room was reserved for local Drama League activities as well as meetings of other literary and social club meetings. The Charles H. Brough Room, named for former governor [[Charles H. Brough]], contained volumes on the subject of Arkansas.
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A substantial three-story annex was added to the library in 1939.
  
 
The Main Library was bulldozed to make way for a former Modernist-style public library that today houses a business data center. The [[Main Library]] of the [[Central Arkansas Library System]] is now located in the [[River Market District]].
 
The Main Library was bulldozed to make way for a former Modernist-style public library that today houses a business data center. The [[Main Library]] of the [[Central Arkansas Library System]] is now located in the [[River Market District]].
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==References==
 
==References==
  
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*Arkansas Writers' Project, ''Arkansas: A Guide to the State'' (Works Progress Administration, 1941), 177.
 
*Bernie Babcock, ''Yesterday and Today in Arkansas: A Folio of Rare and Interesting Pictures from Mrs. Babcock's Collection for Stories and Legends of Arkansas'' (Jordan & Foster Printing Co., 1917), n.p.
 
*Bernie Babcock, ''Yesterday and Today in Arkansas: A Folio of Rare and Interesting Pictures from Mrs. Babcock's Collection for Stories and Legends of Arkansas'' (Jordan & Foster Printing Co., 1917), n.p.
 
*Kane Webb, "Beauty and Blight: Little Rock's Diametrical Downtown," ''Arkansas Democrat-Gazette'' October 7, 2007.
 
*Kane Webb, "Beauty and Blight: Little Rock's Diametrical Downtown," ''Arkansas Democrat-Gazette'' October 7, 2007.

Revision as of 21:55, 2 May 2009

Little Rock Public Library, Little Rock, Arkansas.

Little Rock's Carnegie Main Public Library once stood at the corner of Seventh and Louisiana streets. The Greek Revival structure housing the main public library opened in 1908. The head librarian in the 1910s was Dorothy D. Lyon. Two important private libraries incorporated into the public library collections came from Uriah M. Rose and physician W. E. Green. The Uriah Rose room contained seven thousand volumes, most of them in French. The Green Room was reserved for local Drama League activities as well as meetings of other literary and social club meetings. The Charles H. Brough Room, named for former governor Charles H. Brough, contained volumes on the subject of Arkansas.

A substantial three-story annex was added to the library in 1939.

The Main Library was bulldozed to make way for a former Modernist-style public library that today houses a business data center. The Main Library of the Central Arkansas Library System is now located in the River Market District.

References

  • Arkansas Writers' Project, Arkansas: A Guide to the State (Works Progress Administration, 1941), 177.
  • Bernie Babcock, Yesterday and Today in Arkansas: A Folio of Rare and Interesting Pictures from Mrs. Babcock's Collection for Stories and Legends of Arkansas (Jordan & Foster Printing Co., 1917), n.p.
  • Kane Webb, "Beauty and Blight: Little Rock's Diametrical Downtown," Arkansas Democrat-Gazette October 7, 2007.

External links