
Prescott Public Library
Anyone interested in the founding of libraries across the country will delight in delving into Prescott Public Library, which showcases the pivotal role the establishment played in the Arizona city's history. The Prescott Public Library was created in 1917 when the City of Prescott took over management of the formerly private library. Prescott was established in the middle of the Civil War when Union sympathizers found gold in the Bradshaw Mountains. Even in those Wild West days, territorial secretary Richard McCormick brought with him a wagon full of 300 books, establishing a library that would become the lifeblood of the territorial capital. The Prescott Library Association was founded in 1870, and it was at the helm of the Monday Club (established 1890) that a library building was constructed. This became the Carnegie Library in 1903, the first approved in the state of Arizona. This library opened with 1,300 books in its collection. In the last century, the Prescott Public Library has grown with Prescott. Now located on Goodwin Street, the library contains over 113,000 items in its collection and serves its patrons in new and exciting ways. With more to share in the future, Prescott Public Library welcomes everyone into "Prescott's Living Room."
Kristen Kauffman is a librarian in Prescott and a guest writer with Sharlot Hall Museum's Days Past articles. Several of the photographs that did not come from the Prescott Public Library's photograph archives are used with generous permission from the Sharlot Hall Museum.
- Kirjailija
- Kristen Kauffman
- ISBN
- 9781467163385
- Kieli
- englanti
- Paino
- 141 grammaa
- Julkaisupäivä
- 1.7.2026
- Kustantaja
- Arcadia Publishing (SC)
- Sivumäärä
- 128