Established 1901 Budget 25,619,800 Phone +1 615-862-5800 Population served 1,500,000 Type of business Public library | Director Kent Oliver Date founded 1901 Staff 366 | |
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Branches Main Library, 20 Branches, Metropolitan Government Archives of Davidson County, Talking Library Address 615 Church St, Nashville, TN 37219, USA Hours Closed now Monday9AM–6PMTuesday9AM–6PMWednesday9AM–6PMThursday9AM–6PMFridayClosedSaturday9AM–5PMSunday2–5PMSuggest an edit Profiles |
Nashville public library
Nashville Public Library is the public library serving Nashville, Tennessee and the metropolitan area of Davidson County. The library's mission is to ″inspire reading, advance learning and connect our community." In 2010, the Nashville Public Library was the recipient of the National Medal for Museum and Library Service.
Contents
- Nashville public library
- Nashville public library s all about the books outtakes
- History
- Branches
- Programs and Services
- Friends of the Library and Library Foundation
- References
Nashville public library s all about the books outtakes
History
A succession of public libraries, known by a variety of names, served the people of Nashville. The early libraries were generally small, offered a narrow range of services, and operated on a fee schedule. In 1897, the Tennessee General Assembly authorized cities of a certain size to establish and maintain free public libraries and reading rooms. With this authority, in 1901 the Howard Library became Nashville’s first free circulating library. Also in 1901, Andrew Carnegie offered to donate $100,000 for a new library building if the city would take care of its maintenance. The city accepted those terms, and in 1904, the Carnegie Library Building was completed on Polk Avenue. Andrew Carnegie enabled the building and opening of an additional three branches between 1912 and 1919. Two of those buildings are still in use today, the North Branch and the East Branch.
The Carnegie Library Building was razed and replaced with the Ben West Public Library in 1963. The Main Library was housed in the Ben West building for 38 years.
In 2001 the new Main Library Building, designed by Robert A. M. Stern was opened.
Previously on the site for the Main Library was a downtown shopping mall called Church Street Center.
Branches
There are 20 library branches in the Nashville Public Library system. They are:
Programs and Services
The Nashville Public Library features a variety of public programming. The library offers puppet shows in the Main Library as well as throughout the Nashville community.
The library offers digital collections, e-book and audiobook downloads, language learning services, and computer classes. There are a variety of book clubs hosted throughout the library system.
In 2010, the Nashville Public Library began partnering with Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools to offer the students access to the public library materials. Called "Limitless Libraries," this program offers access to approximately 1.5 million information resources.
The Main Library's Special Collections Division contains several archival and oral history collections highlighting Nashville history. Among them, the Civil Rights Room, documenting the African-American Civil Rights Movement (1955–1968) in Nashville, and an oral history collection documenting the 2010 Tennessee floods in Nashville.
Friends of the Library and Library Foundation
Friends of the Nashville Public Library is a non-profit that offers memberships and supports the library through book sales. The Friends of the Nashville Public Library offer support for the summer reading program as well other programs and collection development.
The Nashville Public Library Foundation is a non-profit founded in 1997 to raise funds for the Nashville Public Library. Depending on private donors, the Nashville Public Library Foundation offers funds for various programs, services, and building improvements in the library system. These include funding of the Bringing Books to Life pre-school literacy program, the Special Collections' Civil Rights Room, and $5 Million dollars in collection development funds.