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Cleveland Public Library

Cleveland Public Library, located in Cleveland, Ohio, operates the Main Library on Superior Avenue in downtown Cleveland, 27 branches throughout the city, a mobile library, a Public Administration Library in City Hall, and the Ohio Library for the Blind and Physically Disabled. The library replaced the State Library of Ohio as the location for the Ohio Center for the Book in 2003.[4]

Cleveland Public Library
Front entrance to the Cleveland Public Library Main Library on Superior Avenue
CountryUSA
EstablishedFebruary 17, 1869; 153 years ago (1869-02-17)
Location325 & 525 Superior Avenue Cleveland, Ohio 44114
BranchesMain Library and 27 branch libraries
Collection
Size13,167,127 (2020)[1]
Legal depositSelective federal depository library[2]
Access and use
Circulation3,477,830 (2020)[3]
Other information
DirectorFelton Thomas, Jr. (2009)
Websitewww.cpl.org
Map

History

Founding

In 1811, the idea behind the Cleveland Public Library came "out of small beginnings" when sixteen of Cleveland's sixty-four residents subscribed to its first library, established to distribute the rare printed book. The members read books such as the history of Rome, Lives of the English Poets, Goldsmith's Greece, and Don Quixote.[5]

In 1867, the Cleveland, Cincinnati, and Dayton Boards of Education petitioned the Ohio General Assembly for authority to levy a tax for the maintenance of free public libraries, permitting boards of education with populations over 20,000 to levy a tax of one-tenth of a mill for each dollar evaluation of their taxable property. Cleveland Superintendent, the Reverend Anson Smyth, who has been doubtfully called the "father of the Cleveland Public Library," supported this law in his Superintendent position, helping in the laws' development.[5]

The new law provided for a Cleveland library that was part of the school system, controlled by the Cleveland Board of Education throughout the first decade of the library's existence, except for the years 1871–1873.[5]

The Cleveland Public Library opened on February 17, 1869, on the third floor of the Northup and Harrington Block on West Superior Avenue, The library room was adjacent to the Cleveland Board of Education, and opened with approximately 5,800 books.[5]

Luther Melville Oviatt was the first librarian at Cleveland Public Library from 1869 to 1875. During his first year, patrons borrowed 65,000 books. Forwarding thinking in his views, Oviatt wanted to provide books that would interest both children and adults, the mechanic, businessman, and scholar. He had open shelves because, "without a catalog, the only way potential borrowers could ascertain what books were available was to look at them." Oviatt resigned in June, 1875, the victim of governing boards or their subsidiaries, who micromanaged daily operations of the library.[5]

Librarian William Howard Brett opened the library's first stand-alone children's room on February 22, 1898.[6] Effie Louise Power was appointed Cleveland's first children's librarian.

In 1916, the Cleveland architectural firm of Walker and Weeks won a competition to design a new library building.[7] Construction of their classical Renaissance design, delayed by the First World War, began in 1923 under Linda Anne Eastman. Eastman (1867–1963) was the first woman to head a major U.S. city library system and a pioneer in the modern library system. She opened bookshelves to patrons, replacing the New York Public Library system in which a librarian fetched the books.

Main Library

 
Louis Stokes Wing at the corner of Superior Avenue and East 6th Street in downtown Cleveland.

The Main Library consists of two buildings. The older wing, completed on May 6, 1925, and renovated between 1997 and 1999, has five stories, each as high as two stories in most buildings. The renovations included the restoration of Dominance of the City[8] a large mural painted by Ora Coltman in 1934 for the Federal Arts Project. The painting was restored by the Intermuseum Conservation Association.[9]

In 1957, the library purchased the six-story Plain Dealer Building at 710 Superior Avenue (now the site of the Louis Stokes Wing).[10] The library won passage in November 1957 of a $3 million bond levy to pay for the purchase of the building.[11] The structure was purchased on December 22, 1957,[12] and the new Business and Social Sciences Annex opened on August 24, 1959.[13]

The annex was demolished in 1994 to make way for a second building, named after former Representative Louis Stokes, was dedicated on April 12, 1997. Stokes commented, "This is the most beautiful that I have ever seen." The $65 million structure of fritted glass panels and Georgia marble housed eight million items and two million titles on its grand opening.[14] The two buildings are connected by underground corridor below the Eastman Reading Garden, which was designed by landscape architecture firm OLIN, and includes sculptures by Maya Lin and Tom Otterness.

Special Collections

The Special Collections Department was created through the work of John G. White, who served as president of the Cleveland Public Library Board of Trustees from 1884 to 1886 and 1913 to 1928. In addition to donating and purchasing many rare books to the library, White underwrote the construction of the Fine Arts and Special Collections reading room and the Exhibit Corridor. The Cleveland Public Library consolidated all rare holdings from subject departments into a unified collection. Most materials are hosted on the library's online catalog, but some are only accessible through the Fine Arts and Special Collections reading room. Collection highlights include:[15]

(Former) Sub-Branches

The Cleveland Public Library had Sub-Branches (Stations) named Alliance, Alta House, Brooklyn, Detroit, Glenville, Hiram House, Lorain, Lorain-Clark, Prospect, South Brooklyn, Superior, and Temple. [18]

Branches

 
Rookwood Installation at Carnegie-West Branch
 
Carnegie-West Branch

During the 1890s, William Howard Brett opened four self-contained branch libraries in leased buildings. As early as 1891, he asked Andrew Carnegie for building permanent structures, but the steel-mogul-turned-philanthropist refused the librarian's requests for 12 years. Brett persisted and in 1903 Carnegie donated $250,000 to build seven branches, including the Woodland Branch. Carnegie was so impressed with Brett's money management of the funds, he eventually increased the amount to $507,000, which built 15 branches-the foundation for what would become one of the largest branch systems in the United States. Children living in the city's poorest manufacturing districts could not visit the library downtown or the new branches, so William Howard Brett and Miss Eastman put small reading collections in neighborhood homes. By 1913, there were 57 "home libraries" in seven different working class districts, serving 11 different nationalities: Italian, Greek, Syrian, Polish, Bohemian, Hungarian, Slovak, Irish, German, Danish, and Norwegian.[5]

 
Lorain Branch
 
South Branch

Currently, the Cleveland Public Library has 27 neighborhood branches located throughout the city in addition to the Ohio Library for the Blind and Physically Disabled:[19]

  1. Addison Branch
  2. Brooklyn Branch
  3. Carnegie-West Branch - the biggest neighborhood branch at 25,000 square feet (2,300 m2)
  4. Collinwood Branch
  5. East 131st Street Branch
  6. Eastman Branch
  7. Fleet Branch
  8. Fulton Branch
  9. Garden Valley Branch
  10. Glenville Branch
  11. Harvard-Lee Branch
  12. Hough Branch
  13. Jefferson Branch
  14. Langston Hughes Branch
  15. Lorain Branch
  16. Martin Luther King, Jr. Branch
  17. Memorial-Nottingham Branch - also the location of the Ohio Library for the Blind and Physically Disabled
  18. Mount Pleasant Branch
  19. Public Administration Library
  20. Rice Branch
  21. Rockport Branch
  22. South Branch
  23. South Brooklyn Branch
  24. Sterling Branch
  25. Union Branch
  26. Walz Branch
  27. West Park Branch
  28. Woodland Branch
 
Sensory Garden at the Ohio Library for the Blind and Physically Disabled

A Sensory Garden is also adjacent to the Ohio Library for the Blind and Physically Disabled. The garden was first organized in 1998 and was significantly enlarged the following year. The garden features plants specifically for the tactile sensations they provide and unique scents.[20]

Revitalization

In 2019 the library announced it was undertaking a decade-long $100 million revitalization project to redevelop all 27 branches. The project began with a $4.1 million renovation of the South Branch, which transformed the 1911 Gothic Revival structure into "...a light-filled jewel box." After finishing all the branch work, CPL will then begin a $65 million rehabilitation of the downtown Main Library. Phase I-A of the plan, affecting six branches, is scheduled for completion in 2024.[21]

Notable Art and Architecture

The Public Works of Art Project came to Cleveland in 1933, with far-reaching lines of job-seeking artists extending around the Cleveland Museum of Art. Linda Eastman was invited to consult with Cleveland Museum of Art Director William Milliken. What resulted from this interaction were murals of Willam Sommer's "The City in 1833", Donald Bayard's "Early Transportation", and Ora Coltman's "The Dominance of the City." Linda Eastman believed if art could lead readers to books, if art could enlighten and educate in itself, than art was acceptable at the Cleveland Public Library.[22]

To complete the decoration of Brett Hall, Cleveland Public Library partnered with the Cleveland Area Arts Council to select three new artists to paint new murals for the walls. "Sommer's Sun" by Edwin Mieczkowski's, Christopher Pekoc's "Night Sky", and "Public Square" by Robert Jergens.[23]

 
Terrestrial Globe

Hanging from the Main Library entrance hall is a large terrestrial pearl-gray art glass globe made by the Sterling Bronze Company in 1925. This globe is based on a Leonardo da Vinci map, now housed at Windsor Castle. The map is one of earliest to depict the Americas-with North America indicated simply by small islands.[24]

The portraits of former members of Congress Louis Stokes and Stephanie Tubbs Jones are housed at the Cleveland Public Library, painted by artist Khaz Ra'el.[25]

Recent History

In 2002, the Cleveland Public Library had annual attendance of 804,692 and an annual circulation of 1,698,928 items. In 2020, the library's collection totaled 13,167,127 items.[26] The Cleveland Public Library is a member of CLEVNET, a consortium of 44 public libraries throughout northern Ohio. In 1947, it became a depository library for the United Nations Library network, holding documents for the state of Ohio. There are only 400 UN depository libraries worldwide.

In 2002, Northern Ohio library patrons had access to download digital books and periodicals through a new e-book system headquartered at Cleveland Public Library. The Clevnet consortium of libraries entered in a $50,000 setup-free agreement with the Cleveland-based company OverDrive to allow patrons to download text from e-books to their personal computer.[27]

In 2012, the library released a strategic plan focusing on communities of learning and preparing for its 150th anniversary in 2019.[28]

Cleveland Public Library launched Tech Central on June 14, 2012, featuring a computer lab with 90 computers, tables encouraging collaboration, a 3D printer, and a MyCloud service. This $1 million launch was funded primarily through the library's existing budgets, in which the MyCloud service was partially funded through corporate partners.[29]

Cleveland Public Library, along with three other Ohio Libraries (Columbus, Toledo, and Cincinnati), opened digitization hubs, with $1 million in funding dispersed among them, funded by Ohio Public Library Information Network and the Library Services Technology Act.[30] The digitization hub at Cleveland Public Library was named the Cleveland Digital Public Library and debuted February 14, 2015.[31][32] As stated by Chatham Ewing, Cleveland Public Library's Digital Strategist, "It's a way for us to strike up some partnerships with local organizations that have historical objects they are interested in stewarding and digitizing."[33]

In 2018, Cleveland Public Library was designated an official Digital Access Partner with the Federal Depository Library Program for its digitized multi-volume set of the First United States Army Report of Operations during World War II.[34]

Cleveland Public Library celebrated its 150th anniversary in 2019. Events included a street festival, puppet exhibit, and a Writers and Readers author event. Cleveland Print Room partnered with Cleveland Public Library to present photographers chronicling Cleveland through the lens of its communities and Ideastream presented audio stories of Clevelanders.[35]

Notable former Cleveland Public Library staff members

  • William Howard Brett – Head Librarian of Cleveland Public Library, 1884 to 1918. One of the "100 most important [librarians] in the 20th century"[36]
  • Marilla Waite Freeman – Head Librarian of the Cleveland Public Library's Main Library, 1922–1940; nationally known librarian, author, and library school instructor
  • Eleanor Edwards Ledbetter – Librarian at the Broadway Branch of the Cleveland Public Library during the Progressive Era and the Great Depression; considered one of the first librarians to advocate for multiculturalism instead of Americanism
  • Lawrence Quincy Mumford – Cleveland Public Library Director went on to become Librarian of Congress[37]
  • Andre Norton – Cleveland Public Library librarian, science fiction and fantasy author of numerous titles including the Witch World series[38]
  • Effie Louise Power – Pioneering champion of library services to children and youth
  • John Griswold White – Cleveland Public Library board member and president, noted chess historian

See also

References

  1. ^ "2020 CPL Annual Report" (PDF). Cleveland Public Library. Retrieved 31 December 2020.
  2. ^ "Ohio". GPO Federal Library Directory. United States Government Printing Office. Retrieved July 10, 2020.
  3. ^ "2020 CPL Annual Report" (PDF). Cleveland Public Library. Retrieved 31 December 2020.
  4. ^ "Cleveland PL New State Center for the Book". Library Journal. November 21, 2003. Retrieved April 24, 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Cramer, C.H. (1972). Open Shelves and Open Minds: A History of the Cleveland Public Library. Cleveland, OH: Press of Case Western Reserve University. ISBN 9780829502190.
  6. ^ Cleveland Public Library, Digital Gallery (n.d.). Retrieved May 24, 2009 from http://cplorg.cdmhost.com/cdm4/item_viewer.php?CISOROOT=/p4014coll13&CISOPTR=173&COSOBOX=1&REC3.
  7. ^ The New Cleveland Public Library : May the sixth : 1925. Cleveland: The library. 1925. p. 3.
  8. ^ Cleveland Public Library, Digital Gallery [1].Accessed 2007-05-14.
  9. ^ Cleveland Public Library, Dominance of the City 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed 2007-07-25.
  10. ^ "Library Will Seek Funds to Buy Old Plain Dealer Building". The Plain Dealer. March 21, 1957. p. 8.
  11. ^ Kane, Russell W. (November 6, 1957). "Library Issue and School Levy Pass". The Plain Dealer. pp. 1, 15.
  12. ^ "Library to Open Annex in 1958". The Plain Dealer. December 22, 1957. p. 9.
  13. ^ "Library-School Board Finance Feud Flares". The Plain Dealer. August 26, 1959. p. 4.
  14. ^ Mason, Marilyn Gell. "Annual report of the Cleveland Public Library for 1997". Cleveland Public Library. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  15. ^ Special Collections. Accessed 2019-03-10.
  16. ^ Chessbook Chats: The John G. White Collection Accessed 2019-03-10.
  17. ^ Cleveland, Ohio: Former Smallest Book in the World Accessed 2019-03-10.
  18. ^ Cleveland Public Library, Preservation Office (1911). "Library Directory". The Open Shelf. 111 (1).
  19. ^ "Locations". Cleveland Public Library. Retrieved April 26, 2017.
  20. ^ Spector, Kaye (May 19, 2005). "Garden for blind people is a treat for senses". The Plain Dealer. Cleveland, Ohio. p. E15 – via NewsBank: America's News – Historical and Current. ...The Sensory Garden at the Library for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, part of the Cleveland Public Library system, has plants specially selected for their scents and textures so that blind and disabled people can enjoy them: nutty geranium, root beer plant, lime basil, pineapple sage, peppermint and sweet bay magnolia, among dozens of others. ... The garden was first planted in 1998 and substantially expanded in 1999. It is maintained through donations. (excerpt)
  21. ^ Litt, Stephen (25 August 2019). "Cleveland Public Library to kick off 10-year, $100M project to improve 27 neighborhood branches". Cleveland.com. Cleveland OH: AdvanceOhio.
  22. ^ Marling, Karal Ann (1974). Federal Art in Cleveland, 1933-1943. Cleveland, OH: Cleveland Public Library.
  23. ^ Kaplan, Andrew (30 June 2017). "Homage to Artist Edwin Mieczkowski (1929-2017)". Cleveland Public Library.
  24. ^ Vincent, Ph.D., Marc (1999). Cleveland Public Library, The Art, Architecture, and Collections of the Main Library. Cleveland, OH: Cleveland Public Library.
  25. ^ Dixon Murray, Teresa (April 1, 2018). "Public art- Library unveils donated portrait of Stokes, Jones". The Cleveland Plain Dealer.
  26. ^ "2020 CPL Annual Report" (PDF). Cleveland Public Library. Retrieved 31 December 2020.
  27. ^ "Cleveland PL Debuts New E-Book Loan Program". American Libraries. 34: 22 – via MasterFILE Premier Access.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-05-16.
  29. ^ Good, T. "Three Makerspace Models that Work". American Libraries. 44: 45–47 – via Masterfile Premier.
  30. ^ "Ohio Digitization Hubs Project". oplin.org. Retrieved 2018-08-21.
  31. ^ "Ohio: Grand Opening of Cleveland Digital Public Library (ClevDPL) Taking Place Today". LJ infoDOCKET. Retrieved 2018-08-21.
  32. ^ Thomas, Felton Jr. "2017 Report to the Community". Cleveland Public Library. Retrieved April 24, 2022.
  33. ^ O'Brien, Erin (October 15, 2014). "Cleveland Digital Public Library will offer High-tech Scanning for the Masses". FreshWater.
  34. ^ "Cleveland Public Library Partners with GPO to Provide Access to World War II Army Operations Reports". Federal Depository Library Program. 13 August 2018. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
  35. ^ Troy, Terry (May 1, 2019). "Celebrating 150 Years of Cleveland Success". Cleveland Magazine.
  36. ^ Leonard Kniffel, P. S. (1999, December). 100 of the Most Important Leaders we had in the 20th Century. American Libraries
  37. ^ "Previous Librarians of Congress | About the Librarian | About the Library | Library of Congress". Library of Congress.
  38. ^ "Andre Norton: Librarian, Writer, and Fantasy Grande Dame » Public Libraries Online".

Further reading

  • Cleveland Public Library (1889), Alphabetic catalogue of the English books in the circulating department of the Cleveland public library, Cleveland: Cleveland printing & publishing company, OCLC 1454982, OL 22845061M
  • Cramer, C.H. (1972), Open Shelves, Open Minds: A History of the Cleveland Public Library, Cleveland: Press of Case Western Reserve University, ISBN 0-8295-0219-X
  • Cleveland Public Library. (1925). The New Cleveland Public Library: May the sixth : 1925. Cleveland: The library. OCLC 803862726

External links

  • Cleveland Public Library home page
  • Images and architectural information
  • Five pieces of artwork in the Main Library produced during the New Deal
  • Digital Access Partner

Coordinates: 41°30′04″N 81°41′30″W / 41.50107°N 81.69164°W / 41.50107; -81.69164

cleveland, public, library, located, cleveland, ohio, operates, main, library, superior, avenue, downtown, cleveland, branches, throughout, city, mobile, library, public, administration, library, city, hall, ohio, library, blind, physically, disabled, library,. Cleveland Public Library located in Cleveland Ohio operates the Main Library on Superior Avenue in downtown Cleveland 27 branches throughout the city a mobile library a Public Administration Library in City Hall and the Ohio Library for the Blind and Physically Disabled The library replaced the State Library of Ohio as the location for the Ohio Center for the Book in 2003 4 Cleveland Public LibraryFront entrance to the Cleveland Public Library Main Library on Superior AvenueCountryUSAEstablishedFebruary 17 1869 153 years ago 1869 02 17 Location325 amp 525 Superior Avenue Cleveland Ohio 44114BranchesMain Library and 27 branch librariesCollectionSize13 167 127 2020 1 Legal depositSelective federal depository library 2 Access and useCirculation3 477 830 2020 3 Other informationDirectorFelton Thomas Jr 2009 Websitewww wbr cpl wbr orgMap Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding 2 Main Library 2 1 Special Collections 3 Former Sub Branches 4 Branches 4 1 Revitalization 5 Notable Art and Architecture 6 Recent History 7 Notable former Cleveland Public Library staff members 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory EditFounding Edit In 1811 the idea behind the Cleveland Public Library came out of small beginnings when sixteen of Cleveland s sixty four residents subscribed to its first library established to distribute the rare printed book The members read books such as the history of Rome Lives of the English Poets Goldsmith s Greece and Don Quixote 5 In 1867 the Cleveland Cincinnati and Dayton Boards of Education petitioned the Ohio General Assembly for authority to levy a tax for the maintenance of free public libraries permitting boards of education with populations over 20 000 to levy a tax of one tenth of a mill for each dollar evaluation of their taxable property Cleveland Superintendent the Reverend Anson Smyth who has been doubtfully called the father of the Cleveland Public Library supported this law in his Superintendent position helping in the laws development 5 The new law provided for a Cleveland library that was part of the school system controlled by the Cleveland Board of Education throughout the first decade of the library s existence except for the years 1871 1873 5 The Cleveland Public Library opened on February 17 1869 on the third floor of the Northup and Harrington Block on West Superior Avenue The library room was adjacent to the Cleveland Board of Education and opened with approximately 5 800 books 5 Luther Melville Oviatt was the first librarian at Cleveland Public Library from 1869 to 1875 During his first year patrons borrowed 65 000 books Forwarding thinking in his views Oviatt wanted to provide books that would interest both children and adults the mechanic businessman and scholar He had open shelves because without a catalog the only way potential borrowers could ascertain what books were available was to look at them Oviatt resigned in June 1875 the victim of governing boards or their subsidiaries who micromanaged daily operations of the library 5 Librarian William Howard Brett opened the library s first stand alone children s room on February 22 1898 6 Effie Louise Power was appointed Cleveland s first children s librarian In 1916 the Cleveland architectural firm of Walker and Weeks won a competition to design a new library building 7 Construction of their classical Renaissance design delayed by the First World War began in 1923 under Linda Anne Eastman Eastman 1867 1963 was the first woman to head a major U S city library system and a pioneer in the modern library system She opened bookshelves to patrons replacing the New York Public Library system in which a librarian fetched the books Main Library Edit Louis Stokes Wing at the corner of Superior Avenue and East 6th Street in downtown Cleveland The Main Library consists of two buildings The older wing completed on May 6 1925 and renovated between 1997 and 1999 has five stories each as high as two stories in most buildings The renovations included the restoration of Dominance of the City 8 a large mural painted by Ora Coltman in 1934 for the Federal Arts Project The painting was restored by the Intermuseum Conservation Association 9 In 1957 the library purchased the six story Plain Dealer Building at 710 Superior Avenue now the site of the Louis Stokes Wing 10 The library won passage in November 1957 of a 3 million bond levy to pay for the purchase of the building 11 The structure was purchased on December 22 1957 12 and the new Business and Social Sciences Annex opened on August 24 1959 13 The annex was demolished in 1994 to make way for a second building named after former Representative Louis Stokes was dedicated on April 12 1997 Stokes commented This is the most beautiful that I have ever seen The 65 million structure of fritted glass panels and Georgia marble housed eight million items and two million titles on its grand opening 14 The two buildings are connected by underground corridor below the Eastman Reading Garden which was designed by landscape architecture firm OLIN and includes sculptures by Maya Lin and Tom Otterness Special Collections Edit The Special Collections Department was created through the work of John G White who served as president of the Cleveland Public Library Board of Trustees from 1884 to 1886 and 1913 to 1928 In addition to donating and purchasing many rare books to the library White underwrote the construction of the Fine Arts and Special Collections reading room and the Exhibit Corridor The Cleveland Public Library consolidated all rare holdings from subject departments into a unified collection Most materials are hosted on the library s online catalog but some are only accessible through the Fine Arts and Special Collections reading room Collection highlights include 15 John G White Chess and Checkers Collections John G White Collection of Folklore and Orientalia 16 John F Puskas Miniature Books Collection 17 Tobacco Collection Schweinfurth Collection Rare architectural publications Anisfield Wolf Book Awards The only American book award designed to recognize works addressing issues of racism and diversity Former Sub Branches EditThe Cleveland Public Library had Sub Branches Stations named Alliance Alta House Brooklyn Detroit Glenville Hiram House Lorain Lorain Clark Prospect South Brooklyn Superior and Temple 18 Branches Edit Rookwood Installation at Carnegie West Branch Carnegie West BranchDuring the 1890s William Howard Brett opened four self contained branch libraries in leased buildings As early as 1891 he asked Andrew Carnegie for building permanent structures but the steel mogul turned philanthropist refused the librarian s requests for 12 years Brett persisted and in 1903 Carnegie donated 250 000 to build seven branches including the Woodland Branch Carnegie was so impressed with Brett s money management of the funds he eventually increased the amount to 507 000 which built 15 branches the foundation for what would become one of the largest branch systems in the United States Children living in the city s poorest manufacturing districts could not visit the library downtown or the new branches so William Howard Brett and Miss Eastman put small reading collections in neighborhood homes By 1913 there were 57 home libraries in seven different working class districts serving 11 different nationalities Italian Greek Syrian Polish Bohemian Hungarian Slovak Irish German Danish and Norwegian 5 Lorain Branch South Branch Currently the Cleveland Public Library has 27 neighborhood branches located throughout the city in addition to the Ohio Library for the Blind and Physically Disabled 19 Addison Branch Brooklyn Branch Carnegie West Branch the biggest neighborhood branch at 25 000 square feet 2 300 m2 Collinwood Branch East 131st Street Branch Eastman Branch Fleet Branch Fulton Branch Garden Valley Branch Glenville Branch Harvard Lee Branch Hough Branch Jefferson Branch Langston Hughes Branch Lorain Branch Martin Luther King Jr Branch Memorial Nottingham Branch also the location of the Ohio Library for the Blind and Physically Disabled Mount Pleasant Branch Public Administration Library Rice Branch Rockport Branch South Branch South Brooklyn Branch Sterling Branch Union Branch Walz Branch West Park Branch Woodland Branch Sensory Garden at the Ohio Library for the Blind and Physically DisabledA Sensory Garden is also adjacent to the Ohio Library for the Blind and Physically Disabled The garden was first organized in 1998 and was significantly enlarged the following year The garden features plants specifically for the tactile sensations they provide and unique scents 20 Revitalization Edit In 2019 the library announced it was undertaking a decade long 100 million revitalization project to redevelop all 27 branches The project began with a 4 1 million renovation of the South Branch which transformed the 1911 Gothic Revival structure into a light filled jewel box After finishing all the branch work CPL will then begin a 65 million rehabilitation of the downtown Main Library Phase I A of the plan affecting six branches is scheduled for completion in 2024 21 Notable Art and Architecture EditThe Public Works of Art Project came to Cleveland in 1933 with far reaching lines of job seeking artists extending around the Cleveland Museum of Art Linda Eastman was invited to consult with Cleveland Museum of Art Director William Milliken What resulted from this interaction were murals of Willam Sommer s The City in 1833 Donald Bayard s Early Transportation and Ora Coltman s The Dominance of the City Linda Eastman believed if art could lead readers to books if art could enlighten and educate in itself than art was acceptable at the Cleveland Public Library 22 To complete the decoration of Brett Hall Cleveland Public Library partnered with the Cleveland Area Arts Council to select three new artists to paint new murals for the walls Sommer s Sun by Edwin Mieczkowski s Christopher Pekoc s Night Sky and Public Square by Robert Jergens 23 Terrestrial Globe Hanging from the Main Library entrance hall is a large terrestrial pearl gray art glass globe made by the Sterling Bronze Company in 1925 This globe is based on a Leonardo da Vinci map now housed at Windsor Castle The map is one of earliest to depict the Americas with North America indicated simply by small islands 24 The portraits of former members of Congress Louis Stokes and Stephanie Tubbs Jones are housed at the Cleveland Public Library painted by artist Khaz Ra el 25 Recent History EditIn 2002 the Cleveland Public Library had annual attendance of 804 692 and an annual circulation of 1 698 928 items In 2020 the library s collection totaled 13 167 127 items 26 The Cleveland Public Library is a member of CLEVNET a consortium of 44 public libraries throughout northern Ohio In 1947 it became a depository library for the United Nations Library network holding documents for the state of Ohio There are only 400 UN depository libraries worldwide In 2002 Northern Ohio library patrons had access to download digital books and periodicals through a new e book system headquartered at Cleveland Public Library The Clevnet consortium of libraries entered in a 50 000 setup free agreement with the Cleveland based company OverDrive to allow patrons to download text from e books to their personal computer 27 In 2012 the library released a strategic plan focusing on communities of learning and preparing for its 150th anniversary in 2019 28 Cleveland Public Library launched Tech Central on June 14 2012 featuring a computer lab with 90 computers tables encouraging collaboration a 3D printer and a MyCloud service This 1 million launch was funded primarily through the library s existing budgets in which the MyCloud service was partially funded through corporate partners 29 Cleveland Public Library along with three other Ohio Libraries Columbus Toledo and Cincinnati opened digitization hubs with 1 million in funding dispersed among them funded by Ohio Public Library Information Network and the Library Services Technology Act 30 The digitization hub at Cleveland Public Library was named the Cleveland Digital Public Library and debuted February 14 2015 31 32 As stated by Chatham Ewing Cleveland Public Library s Digital Strategist It s a way for us to strike up some partnerships with local organizations that have historical objects they are interested in stewarding and digitizing 33 In 2018 Cleveland Public Library was designated an official Digital Access Partner with the Federal Depository Library Program for its digitized multi volume set of the First United States Army Report of Operations during World War II 34 Cleveland Public Library celebrated its 150th anniversary in 2019 Events included a street festival puppet exhibit and a Writers and Readers author event Cleveland Print Room partnered with Cleveland Public Library to present photographers chronicling Cleveland through the lens of its communities and Ideastream presented audio stories of Clevelanders 35 Notable former Cleveland Public Library staff members EditWilliam Howard Brett Head Librarian of Cleveland Public Library 1884 to 1918 One of the 100 most important librarians in the 20th century 36 Marilla Waite Freeman Head Librarian of the Cleveland Public Library s Main Library 1922 1940 nationally known librarian author and library school instructor Eleanor Edwards Ledbetter Librarian at the Broadway Branch of the Cleveland Public Library during the Progressive Era and the Great Depression considered one of the first librarians to advocate for multiculturalism instead of Americanism Lawrence Quincy Mumford Cleveland Public Library Director went on to become Librarian of Congress 37 Andre Norton Cleveland Public Library librarian science fiction and fantasy author of numerous titles including the Witch World series 38 Effie Louise Power Pioneering champion of library services to children and youth John Griswold White Cleveland Public Library board member and president noted chess historianSee also EditCuyahoga County Public LibraryReferences Edit 2020 CPL Annual Report PDF Cleveland Public Library Retrieved 31 December 2020 Ohio GPO Federal Library Directory United States Government Printing Office Retrieved July 10 2020 2020 CPL Annual Report PDF Cleveland Public Library Retrieved 31 December 2020 Cleveland PL New State Center for the Book Library Journal November 21 2003 Retrieved April 24 2022 a b c d e f Cramer C H 1972 Open Shelves and Open Minds A History of the Cleveland Public Library Cleveland OH Press of Case Western Reserve University ISBN 9780829502190 Cleveland Public Library Digital Gallery n d Retrieved May 24 2009 from http cplorg cdmhost com cdm4 item viewer php CISOROOT p4014coll13 amp CISOPTR 173 amp COSOBOX 1 amp REC3 The New Cleveland Public Library May the sixth 1925 Cleveland The library 1925 p 3 Cleveland Public Library Digital Gallery 1 Accessed 2007 05 14 Cleveland Public Library Dominance of the City Archived 2007 09 28 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 2007 07 25 Library Will Seek Funds to Buy Old Plain Dealer Building The Plain Dealer March 21 1957 p 8 Kane Russell W November 6 1957 Library Issue and School Levy Pass The Plain Dealer pp 1 15 Library to Open Annex in 1958 The Plain Dealer December 22 1957 p 9 Library School Board Finance Feud Flares The Plain Dealer August 26 1959 p 4 Mason Marilyn Gell Annual report of the Cleveland Public Library for 1997 Cleveland Public Library Retrieved June 20 2018 Special Collections Accessed 2019 03 10 Chessbook Chats The John G White Collection Accessed 2019 03 10 Cleveland Ohio Former Smallest Book in the World Accessed 2019 03 10 Cleveland Public Library Preservation Office 1911 Library Directory The Open Shelf 111 1 Locations Cleveland Public Library Retrieved April 26 2017 Spector Kaye May 19 2005 Garden for blind people is a treat for senses The Plain Dealer Cleveland Ohio p E15 via NewsBank America s News Historical and Current The Sensory Garden at the Library for the Blind and Physically Handicapped part of the Cleveland Public Library system has plants specially selected for their scents and textures so that blind and disabled people can enjoy them nutty geranium root beer plant lime basil pineapple sage peppermint and sweet bay magnolia among dozens of others The garden was first planted in 1998 and substantially expanded in 1999 It is maintained through donations excerpt Litt Stephen 25 August 2019 Cleveland Public Library to kick off 10 year 100M project to improve 27 neighborhood branches Cleveland com Cleveland OH AdvanceOhio Marling Karal Ann 1974 Federal Art in Cleveland 1933 1943 Cleveland OH Cleveland Public Library Kaplan Andrew 30 June 2017 Homage to Artist Edwin Mieczkowski 1929 2017 Cleveland Public Library Vincent Ph D Marc 1999 Cleveland Public Library The Art Architecture and Collections of the Main Library Cleveland OH Cleveland Public Library Dixon Murray Teresa April 1 2018 Public art Library unveils donated portrait of Stokes Jones The Cleveland Plain Dealer 2020 CPL Annual Report PDF Cleveland Public Library Retrieved 31 December 2020 Cleveland PL Debuts New E Book Loan Program American Libraries 34 22 via MasterFILE Premier Access CPL Strategic Plan CPL150 Archived from the original on 2015 05 16 Good T Three Makerspace Models that Work American Libraries 44 45 47 via Masterfile Premier Ohio Digitization Hubs Project oplin org Retrieved 2018 08 21 Ohio Grand Opening of Cleveland Digital Public Library ClevDPL Taking Place Today LJ infoDOCKET Retrieved 2018 08 21 Thomas Felton Jr 2017 Report to the Community Cleveland Public Library Retrieved April 24 2022 O Brien Erin October 15 2014 Cleveland Digital Public Library will offer High tech Scanning for the Masses FreshWater Cleveland Public Library Partners with GPO to Provide Access to World War II Army Operations Reports Federal Depository Library Program 13 August 2018 Retrieved 16 August 2018 Troy Terry May 1 2019 Celebrating 150 Years of Cleveland Success Cleveland Magazine Leonard Kniffel P S 1999 December 100 of the Most Important Leaders we had in the 20th Century American Libraries Previous Librarians of Congress About the Librarian About the Library Library of Congress Library of Congress Andre Norton Librarian Writer and Fantasy Grande Dame Public Libraries Online Further reading EditCleveland Public Library 1889 Alphabetic catalogue of the English books in the circulating department of the Cleveland public library Cleveland Cleveland printing amp publishing company OCLC 1454982 OL 22845061M Cramer C H 1972 Open Shelves Open Minds A History of the Cleveland Public Library Cleveland Press of Case Western Reserve University ISBN 0 8295 0219 X Cleveland Public Library 1925 The New Cleveland Public Library May the sixth 1925 Cleveland The library OCLC 803862726External links EditCleveland Public Library home page Images and architectural information The World s Greatest Chess Library Five pieces of artwork in the Main Library produced during the New Deal Digital Access PartnerCoordinates 41 30 04 N 81 41 30 W 41 50107 N 81 69164 W 41 50107 81 69164 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cleveland Public Library amp oldid 1132031609, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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