Reading newspaper accounts during the early months of 1925 (namely the Pasadena Post) there was much drama inflicted towards the contractor (William Crowell); there were cantankerous members of the board of city directors; there were ill-feelings of some about the influence of Chicagoans in Pasadena's architectural plans (e.g the influence of the City Beautiful Movement and Chicago architect Daniel Burnham, plus Myron Hunt had gone to school in Chicago but moved to Southern California in 1903); and, according to the Pasadena Post, the architects appeared to disagree on the size of sand grain that should be used in the concrete (Hunt voted for fine grain while Chambers preferred coarse grain). Did I mention it rained the day they started construction?
Los Angeles is fortunate to have some of the greatest and most diverse libraries in the world. I want to visit all of them, one road trip at a time.
Wednesday, May 19, 2021
Pasadena Public Library Construction
Reading newspaper accounts during the early months of 1925 (namely the Pasadena Post) there was much drama inflicted towards the contractor (William Crowell); there were cantankerous members of the board of city directors; there were ill-feelings of some about the influence of Chicagoans in Pasadena's architectural plans (e.g the influence of the City Beautiful Movement and Chicago architect Daniel Burnham, plus Myron Hunt had gone to school in Chicago but moved to Southern California in 1903); and, according to the Pasadena Post, the architects appeared to disagree on the size of sand grain that should be used in the concrete (Hunt voted for fine grain while Chambers preferred coarse grain). Did I mention it rained the day they started construction?
Friday, May 14, 2021
Lennox Branch of the Los Angeles County Library Opens in Civic Center
The branch closed in late 2012 for renovation and reopened April 11, 2014.
Monday, May 3, 2021
Richard Henry Dana Branch of the Los Angeles Public Library
Thursday, April 29, 2021
A.K. Smiley Public Library Dedicated April 29, 1898
The beautiful library was the subject of many souvenir postcards. Additionally, impressive photos can be found from the library itself, as well as California Historical Society via USC Digital Library and the Redlands Area Historical Society. A nifty souvenir plate featuring the library is in the collection of the Museum of Redlands. The library is open and welcoming patrons but if you can't make it be sure to check out the informative virtual 360 degree tour of the library.
Wednesday, April 7, 2021
A Look at the Mobilibraries of the Los Angeles County Library
From September 17 through October 3, 1948, Los Angeles County Fairgoers in Pomona got their first glimpse of the Mobilibrary. It was parked right there in front of the race track grandstand on the main thoroughfare and was visited by approximately 1000 people according to the library's staff newsletter. Mobilibrary Unit No. 1 was the first bookmobile of the Los Angeles County Library system and two librarians were there from 2pm to 8pm daily to explain how it would be used. The bookmobile, or mobile unit as the library called it, had been on display for one day, September 9, at the Antelope Valley Fair. Its purpose was to provide service to smaller communities in the Antelope Valley, not including Lancaster and Palmdale which already had library branches.
The end of 1949 saw the start of Mobilibrary Unit No. 2 service to western Los Angeles County--Malibu, Topanga, Cornell, Agoura and Calabasas, which was not already served by branch libraries. The bookmobile--which also provided reference, reader's advisory and accepted requests for any book in the system-- stopped at schools, fire stations, post offices and beaches. Some stops were as short as fifteen minutes while others stretched to three hours. Scheduled stops were adjusted over time based on popularity and use. However, the wear and tear of servicing such large areas weekly necessitated the request for new Mobiliibraries in 1950.
County of Los Angeles Public Library History Collection
County of Los Angeles Public Library History Collection
A new Mobilibrary, with capacity for 1700 books, was added in March 1956. It was broken in by subbing for a Lancaster bookmobile which was in the shop. It would soon make its way to the Malibu route and the (old) Malibu Mobilibrary will take over for the Puente Valley Mobilibrary, which will become a spare bookmobile. Additional mobile units on some routes and replacement vehicles for the bookmobile service were often noted in the staff newsletters. Three $9,000 bookmobiles were ordered in 1957 and arrived in 1958. This meant a second Mobilibrary (aka Newhall Mobilibrary) could be added to the Antelope Valley, which allowed for longer stops, and better service, for the outlying areas. The late 1950s summer schedules of the Newhall Mobilibrary even included brief stops to homes! Second mobilibraries were also added to the East San Gabriel Valley Region (housed at the West Covina Branch) and Malibu.
October 17, 1958
At the height of Mobilibrary service there were seven community Mobilibraries and one institutional (Wayside) Mobilibrary that, along with branches, served an area of 3315 square miles (per 1959-60 Los Angeles County Library Annual Report). That is a pretty impressive feat. Today, the Antelope Valley and Santa Clarita (aka Newhall) bookmobiles continue to provide service. A third, known as the Urban Outreach bookmobile, serves areas of Whittier, East Los Angeles, La Puente, Rowland Heights and Azusa. A tip of the hat to Los Angeles County Library bookmobile drivers and librarians, past and present!
Thursday, April 1, 2021
Frank Lloyd Wright's Hollyhock House as a branch of the Los Angeles Public Library?
Sunday, March 28, 2021
Monica Shannon: Advocate for Libraries, Leprechauns and Luckless Pigwidgeons
Bruggemeyer Memorial Library Dedicated in March 1929
Judge Mancha Bruggemeyer gifted Monterey Park with a library on March 28, 1929. The $40,000 library, at 256 W. Garvey, was complete with automatic heating/cooling and shelves full of donated books.
It was built as a memorial to Bruggemeyer's late wife, (Ro)Berta Pauline Bruggemeyer. A portrait of Mrs. Bruggemeyer by artist Mischa Askenazy was hung in the "memory room" of the library. According to the Los Angeles Times, "objects in memory of Mrs. Bruggemeyer will be placed [in the memorial hall] until such time as the demand for book space shall call for a change of plans."
Monterey Park mayor, Sam B. Jones, accepted the library from Bruggemeyer. The library was, at that time, a branch of the Los Angeles County Library system. County Librarian Helen E. Vogleson and Monterey Park branch librarian, Mrs. Helen Thomas, were also in attendance at the library dedication.
Mrs. Helen Thomas and Mr. Bruggemeyer were married the next month, on April 21, 1929.
Thursday, January 28, 2021
The Story of the Texas Twin to the Old Lancaster Branch of the Los Angeles County Library
In 1950, three siblings from Texas paid a visit to the Pasadena Public Library. John, Louemma and Winnie May Reber sought the advice of Doris Hoit, City Librarian of Pasadena. Could she recommend any small library buildings for them to tour? The siblings wanted to donate a library to their community of Raymondville in Willacy County, Texas and were looking for inspiration.
The Rebers grew up working on their family's 260-acre farm in Illinois. Those early lessons of hard work stuck with them throughout life. As an adult in his early 40s, John Reber moved to Texas for health reasons and purchased land and cattle. With the help of his sisters who also moved, they soon had a "model ranch," according to local newspaper reports. The Reber sisters helped organize a woman's club in Raymondville (Texas) and that's when the need for a library was most keenly felt. Club meetings involved presentations based on essays that members were assigned to write on a variety of topics. Without a library nearby, club members used the Reber family's set of Encyclopedia Brittanica to conduct research for their essays. The Reber siblings talked it over and offered the county $50,000 to build a library, if the county would finance the book collection, fund the personnel and run the library. County officials agreed. Fast forward to the Rebers on their library exploratory trip in Southern California during the summer of 1950.
Ms. Hoit suggested they visit the newly dedicated Los Angeles County Branch Library in Lancaster on Fig Avenue. This library was in service from April 1950 until a new Lancaster Library (on Avenue J at Kingtree) was built in 1964. The Rebers were impressed with the Lancaster Library. They contacted the County of Los Angeles Board of Supervisors for permission to use the library's plans and specifications in order to build the Reber Memorial Library in Texas. The architects of the library, [Robert Farquhar] Train and [Robert George] Smith, were also consulted.
References
"County Librarian Flies Again." News Letter Los Angeles County Library, October-November 1951, p. 3.
Hendry, A.B. "Reber Family 'Builds' Library in Raymondville." Valley Morning Star [Harlingen, TX], 7 Jan 1955, p. 13.
News Letter Los Angeles County Library, January 1951, p. 4.
"Visits Reber Memorial Library." Valley Morning Star [Harlingen, TX], 7 JNov 1951, p. 3.