In this digital age, it’s difficult to imagine being unable to easily access reading material. Yet without public libraries, communities found themselves in an information desert more than a hundred years ago.
Philanthropist and steel baron Andrew Carnegie changed all that in the mid-19th century, donating $40 million to build 1,679 libraries across the United States. He mandated certain rules, known as “the Carnegie formula,” that included public fundraising and proof that a library was needed.
Port Jervis Free Library; Chatham’s library boasts a Tiffany window |
In honor of National Library Week, April 8–14 (which itself marks a milestone, celebrating its 60th anniversary this year), we look at Carnegie libraries that were built in the Hudson Valley:
To view more photos, go to www.hvmag.com/carnegielibraries