Library Postcards
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WestVirginia
JAN
09
Public Library, Sistersville, West Virginia
By:
Unknown
on
JAN
09
LIB076203
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JAN
08
Public Library, Martinsburg, West Virginia
By:
Unknown
on
JAN
08
LIB124937
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JAN
31
1984 Library, Shepherdstown, West Virginia
By:
Unknown
on
JAN
31
[LIB7462] When it was built in 1800, the Market House that today houses the Shepherdstown Public Library offered local farmers a sheltered place to sell their wares, and a centrally located spot for residents to buy farm fresh products. During its long history, it has, in turn, been home to the fire department, the town council offices, a butcher shop, a school and the local jail. A pigpen and a public whipping post were located in back. Today, it is the home of a thriving library that is literally and figuratively the heart of Shepherdstown. The building—the most distinctive in Shepherdstown and the one most frequently noticed by visitors—is West Virginia’s longest continuously occupied library building. [Website]
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APR
24
Library, West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia
By:
Unknown
on
APR
24
[LIB6650]
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JUN
29
Public Library, Clarksburg, West Virginia
By:
Unknown
on
JUN
29
[LIB2182] This handsome southern home known as "Waldomore," and the spacious grounds surrounding it, situated in the heart of Clarksburg, were devised to the city in 1930 by Mrs. May Goff Lowndes for use as a public library and museum. The home was built in 1839 by her father, Waldo P. Goff. The name "Waldomore" was given to the property by Mrs. Lowndes in honor of her father and mother. The city's public library was established in 1907 and has been permanently located in Waldomore since 1931. [From the back of the card]
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MAY
07
1909 Carnegie Library, Huntington, West Virginia
By:
Unknown
on
MAY
07
[LIB1621] "We'll lend you the world!" Plans to establish a library in the city of Huntington were begun in late 1897 and a resolution by the Ministers Association was adopted in 1898 to open a public library. In 1899, books were collected for the establishment of a library and in late 1901, a room was leased for the library in the Florentine Annex. On March 1, 1902, the library was opened to the public. That same year, Andrew Carnegie donated $25,000 for a new building. On July 27, 1904, the new library was opened on the corner of Ninth Street and Fifth Avenue. [Read more of the history of this beautiful library at their website!]
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