Welcome to Edgartown Library, Edgartown, United States. n 1904, the town of Edgartown received two major gifts: $4,000 from the American steel magnate Andrew Carnegie (pictured at right) and $1,000 from an Edgartown resident, Mrs. Caroline F. Warren (her portrait, below, hangs in the Library entrance). From these funds, the committee paid contractor William W. King $4,774.75 to construct the new Library. The gift of the site for the new Library from Caroline F. Warren is recorded in the Dukes County Registry of Deeds. The document stipulates: “In the event of the discontinuance of said Library after its erection, this conveyance shall be null and void and said land shall revert to me and my heirs.”
Mr. Carnegie, sometimes called the “patron saint of libraries,” gave more than $56 million between 1881 and the early 1920s – that’s more than $1 billion in today’s dollars – for the construction of public libraries throughout the English-speaking world. In the United States alone, he was responsible for the building of 1,681 libraries at a cost of $41.2 million.
Across New England, 85 libraries were built with gifts from Mr. Carnegie, and 68 of them are still in use as libraries. Mr. Carnegie wrote in his 1920 autobiography: “It was from my own early experience that I decided there was no use to which money could be applied so productive of good to boys and girls who have good within them and ability and ambition to develop it, as the founding of a public Library in a community.
Mr. Carnegie didn't ask for his name to be emblazoned over the entrance to the Library, or inscribed on a plaque inside. But one of his favorite symbols was the rising sun, which expressed his belief that the public Library embodied the dawn of knowledge. That symbol is used in the detail of the large windows at the front of the Edgartown Library -- you can see it in the logo at the top of this page.
The first report from the Library board appeared in the town’s annual report for calendar year 1914. Wrote the trustees: “The home circulation of books for the past year has been 6,125, an increase of 25 per cent over that of the previous year. There have been added to the Library 225 volumes. The reading room is supplied with the following magazines: Harper’s, Scribner’s, Review of Reviews, Scientific American, Youth’s Companion, St. Nicholas, and Our Dumb Animals. “We are crowded for shelf room, every available space being used.” The brick Carnegie building has been expanded upon three times over the years: with the addition of 836 square feet in 1937, another 200 square feet in the 1950s, and finally a 5,000-square-foot expansion in 1975. This brings the Edgartown Library to a total usable area of 6,842 square feet.
The back wall of the present Library runs just inches from the property line. Until the town purchased the Warren House property next door on North Water Street in 2004, expanding the Library on its present site seemed impossible. But using the larger property envelope, the Library trustees and architects Schwartz Silver of Boston have developed plans for a new Edgarton Library designed to serve its community for the next generation. The design preserves the Carnegie building as the jewel at its center, moving it 30 feet closer to North Water Street and providing for 22 parking spaces hidden behind the new structure. A model is on display in the reference room.
Edgartown Library reviews
Login to comment