Library
History
Library
History Timeline
January
2, 1823- A meeting was held at the home of
Mr. Oliver Lee. A subscription Library was established
and a Board of twelve Trustees was elected. More than
$100 was raised. No location is mentioned, but later
a Mechanics Reading Room located on the west side of
Main Street was started in 1841. It was mentioned in
Beer's County History (1880).
December 15, 1869- At the meeting of
Trustees for the Union Free School, a Library Committee
was appointed: Professor Charles Henry Dan (School Principal),
Linus W. Thayer Esq., Rev. John V. Stryker, William
H. Merril (Western New Yorker Publisher), and John Ransom
(Wyoming Democrat Publisher).
January 6, 1870- The Library Committee
selected $500.00 worth of books to be kept at the Academy
(Union Free School). Half of the funds were from new
subscriptions, and half were from the State Literature
Fund. Approximately 400 books were purchased, and 500
more were donated.
February 24, 1870- The rooms in the
school set aside for the Library were almost ready.
March 10, 1870- Drawing of books by
the public began. It cost $2.50 to subscribe to the
Library, or a patron could pay $.10 a week. One book
could be checked out at a time. Books were lent for
two weeks and overdue fines were $.10 a week. The Library
was open to the public once a week on Wednesday afternoons.
June 9, 1870- The first Library Catalogue
was printed.
1903- The Warsaw Board of Education
contacted Andrew Carnegie requesting funds for a new
Library Building. Interest in a separate building was
expressed as far back as 1898. The land where the Library
is now located was donated by the Honorable Augustus
Frank.
December 12, 1903- The Town Board became
involved. Mr. Carnegie's personal secretary was contacted.
He reported that if the town voted to raise $1,000 a
year for Library upkeep, Mr. Carnegie would donate $10,000
for the building.
January 26, 1904- The special town
vote was nearly unanimous in favor of the new Library,
390 for and 16 against according to the Western New
Yorker, and 173 for and 16 against according to the
Warsaw Town Board Minutes. The Board of Education would
donate the Library Corporation to the Township. The
circulating Library consisted of 5,381 volumes valued
at $5,000.
March 10, 1904- The Warsaw Town Board
appointed a Library Board consisting of: Mrs. Agnes
M. Frank, John B. Smallwood, N.S. Beardslee, W.H. Cheney,
I.B. Smith, and S.B. Whitlock.
April 29, 1905- Mrs. Augustus Frank
formally deeded the property at Main and Court Streets
to the Town of Warsaw.
May 1904- The Library Board received
its Charter from the New York State Board of Regents
and the authority to build a Library.
May 14, 1905- The architect Albert
Randolph Ross (1869-1948) toured the site.
June 16, 1905- The first sod was turned
for construction.
May 1906- The Library opened with no
formal ceremony.
June 3, 1991- The Dedication of the
Warsaw Public Library Expansion and Renovation took
place. The total cost of the project was $423,404.26,
paid for using funds from a Federal Library Services
and Construction Act Title III grant, a citizen fundraiser
and bonds issued by the town of Warsaw.
Library Directors- Helen Cameron- 1906-1942, Agnes McConnell-
1942-1964, Margaret Davis- 1964-1992, Clare Keating-
1992-2000, Angela Gonzalez- 2000-present.
Sources
Dedication of the Warsaw Public Library Expansion and
Renovation, program. Young, Andrew, W.
History of the Town of Warsaw New York, Buffalo: Sage,
Sons and Co., 1869
Dann, Mary E. History of Warsaw Public Library Founded
in 1870 by Charles Henry Dann. East Aurora: Roycrofters,
1917.
Bishop, Lewis, H. The Libraries of Warsaw, a paper.
Lane, David, M., Questions and Answers about the Beginnings
of the Warsaw Public Library Building, a paper, 1989(?).
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Excerpt
from catalogue
Library Regulations
Governing Use of Books, Use of Library and Conduct in
the Building
Any resident of the town of Warsaw shall be entitled
to the free use of the Library.
Any person living outside the township shall be entitled
to the use of the Library upon the annual payment of
one dollar ($1.00). Non-resident pupils attending the
public school shall be permitted the free use of the
Library during the school year.
The reading rooms are free to all for the purpose of
consulting books and periodicals.
A card will be issued to each borrower and this card
must be presented whenever a book is taken. Books may
be retained two weeks and may be renewed for two succeeding
weeks, except those marked "7 days," which
books cannot be retained more than one week. Renewed
books cannot be transferred. Two cents a day will be
charged for books kept over time. No person owing a
fine shall be allowed to draw a book. Writing in or
marking books, tearing or turning down leaves is prohibited,
and all injuries to books beyond reasonable wear, and
all losses shall be promptly adjusted to the satisfaction
of the Board of Trustees. All conversation and all conduct
inconsistent with quiet and order are prohibited in
the Library. Any person abusing the privileges of the
Library, or violating the foregoing regulations shall
be temporarily denied the use of the Library; or such
person may forfeit all right to further use of the Library.
The Library will be closed on legal holidays, and at
the discretion of the Trustees. The State laws regarding
Public Libraries (a copy of which is herewith appended)
will be enforced:
Penal Code
"A person who maliciously cuts, tears or defaces,
disfigures, soils, obliterates, breaks or destroys a
book , map, picture, engraving, statue, coin, model,
apparatus, specimen, or other work of literature, or
subject of art, or curiosity, deposited in a public
library, gallery, museum, collection, fair or exhibition
is punishable by imprisonment in a State prison for
not more than three years, or in a county jail for not
more than one year, or by fine of not more than five
hundred dollars, or by both such fine and imprisonment."

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