Birmingham Public Library: Difference between revisions
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
==History== | ==History== | ||
The Birmingham Public Library was established in [[1886]] | The Birmingham Public Library was established in [[1886]], but quickly foundered. It re-opened in [[1891]] under the auspices of the [[Birmingham Board of Education]], using a large room in the [[Enslen Building]]. The public paid a $2 annual fee for membership. | ||
In [[1903]] the library relocated to the 4th floor of [[Birmingham City Hall (1901)|Birmingham City Hall]]. It was made a free public library by the [[Birmingham Public Library Association]] in [[1908]]. The Association was succeeded by a city-created [[Birmingham Public Library Board]] in [[1913]]. | |||
The library was housed in the was destroyed in the [[1925 City Hall fire]]. A new library building, built in part with donated funds, was opened on [[Linn Park|Woodrow Wilson Park]] on [[April 11]], [[1927]]. | |||
A new [[Birmingham Central Library]] was built across [[21st Street North]] in [[1984]], designed by [[KPS Group]]. The 1927 building was completely renovated and reopened in [[1985]] as the [[Linn-Henley Research Library]]. | A new [[Birmingham Central Library]] was built across [[21st Street North]] in [[1984]], designed by [[KPS Group]]. The 1927 building was completely renovated and reopened in [[1985]] as the [[Linn-Henley Research Library]]. |
Revision as of 14:17, 8 January 2011
The Birmingham Public Library (BPL) is the name for the library system for the city of Birmingham. It consists of the Birmingham Central Library and Linn-Henley Research Library downtown, as well as 19 branches throughout the city. The BPL is a major part of the Jefferson County Library Cooperative.
The Director of the Birmingham Public Library is Renee Blalock. The Library Board is headed by Lillie Fincher.
History
The Birmingham Public Library was established in 1886, but quickly foundered. It re-opened in 1891 under the auspices of the Birmingham Board of Education, using a large room in the Enslen Building. The public paid a $2 annual fee for membership.
In 1903 the library relocated to the 4th floor of Birmingham City Hall. It was made a free public library by the Birmingham Public Library Association in 1908. The Association was succeeded by a city-created Birmingham Public Library Board in 1913.
The library was housed in the was destroyed in the 1925 City Hall fire. A new library building, built in part with donated funds, was opened on Woodrow Wilson Park on April 11, 1927.
A new Birmingham Central Library was built across 21st Street North in 1984, designed by KPS Group. The 1927 building was completely renovated and reopened in 1985 as the Linn-Henley Research Library.
Collections
The Birmingham Public Library houses numerous notable collections in its archives, including the Tutwiler Collection of Southern History and Literature and the Rucker Agee Collection of Maps of the Southeast.
Directors
- Carl Milam, 1915
- Lloyd Josselyn, 1927
- Lila Mae Chapman, 1930s
- Fant Thornley, 1953-1970
- George Stewart, 1984
- Barbara Sirmans, 2002-2008
- Pamela Lyons, 2008-2009 (interim)
- Renee Blalock, 2009-current
Branches
The Birmingham Public Library has the following branches:
- Avondale Library (regional)
- East Lake Library
- Eastwood Library
- Ensley Library
- Five Points West Library (regional)
- North Avondale Library
- North Birmingham Library (regional)
- Powderly Library
- Pratt City Library
- Smithfield Library
- Southside Library
- Springville Road Library (regional)
- Titusville Library
- West End Library
- Woodlawn Library
- Wylam Library
Former branches
- East Ensley Library (closed 2010)
- Inglenook Library (closed 2010)
- Slossfield Library (closed 2010)
2010 closings
In preparing to submit his 2011 Birmingham budget, Mayor William Bell asked Library director Renee Blalock to provide a list of five of the city's 19 branches that she could recommend for temporary closure in order to cut costs. The initial list included the Slossfield, North Avondale, East Ensley, Inglenook and Ensley branches. Blalock subsequently developed a plan to cut $900,000 from the library's budget by closing three of the branches (Slossfield, East Ensley and Inglenook), cutting part-time staff, reducing utility costs, and ending Saturday hours except at the Central library and regional branches.
References
- Alabama Historical Association. (2001) "The Birmingham Public Library" Historical Marker. Linn Park. [1]
- Wolfson, Hannah K. (December 26, 2009) "Main Birmingham library's map collection ancient, 'priceless'." Birmingham News
- Wolfson, Hannah (June 18, 2010) "Three Birmingham library branches to close by end of July." Birmingham News
External links
- Birmingham Public Library website
- Jefferson County Library Cooperative online catalog
- BPL Digital Collections
- BPL news blog
- BPL photos on Flickr.com