
Hannibal Free Public Library - Hannibal, Missouri
N 39° 42.450 W 091° 21.523
15S E 640699 N 4396581
Quick Description: This is the First free tax-supported public library in Missouri, founded in 1845.
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 11/5/2008 8:10:27 AM
Waymark Code: WM53GA
Views: 15
Long Description:From the website:
In 1840 many citizens of Hannibal, Missouri
felt a need for a public library. Judge John Marshall Clemens (Mark
Twain's father), Zachariah Draper, Dr. Hugh Meredith, and Sam Cross
took on the responsibility of this task. They organized the
Hannibal Library Institute. On March 19, 1845 this library was
chartered by the General Assembly of Missouri. The books were kept
in Dr. Meredith's office in a building at the corner of Main and
Bird Streets. This was not a free library. Users paid a membership
fee that entitled them access to the 425 books. However, by 1870
the Hannibal Library Institute ceased to function.
In 1870 the Mercantile Library Association was formed. This
one was located at 110 N 4th Street over L.B. Seaton's store. A
person could purchase 2 or more shares at $20 each for lifetime
library privileges. Or a person could pay $3 a year or $1 a
quarter. By October 1871 the library had 1500 volumes. In 1876 the
Mercantile Library ceased. Its books were sold or distributed among
members.
The Hannibal Library Association was organized in October
1881. The library rooms were located on the 2nd floor of the Opera
House (later known as the Park Theater) at 5th and Center
Streets.
In April 1885 the Missouri General Assembly passed a bill
providing that any city, upon an affirmative vote of its citizenry,
could set apart a one mill tax per dollar of assessed value for the
endowment and support of a FREE public library. Robert Elliot, a
native of England, who had moved to Hannibal as a young man and
become a successful businessman, was instrumental in the formation
of the Hannibal Library Association. He now took on the cause of
the free public library. Because of his devotion and hours of work,
he is considered to be the founder of the free public library in
Hannibal. He spoke to groups and wrote a persuasive circular to be
distributed to the citizens. In the May 1889 city election the tax
levy and the organization of a free public library was approved.
Hannibal had the 1st free public library in the State of Missouri!
It opened in December 1889 on the 2nd floor of the Park Theater. It
contained 3820 books, 3181 had been donated by the Hannibal Library
Association. A year and a half later it moved to the former First
Christian Church building at 5th and Church. By 1900 the library
had accumulated 7000 volumes.
In 1901 Helen Kercheval Garth and her daughter Anna H.
Goodlett donated $25,000 to the City for the erection and
furnishing of a library building as a memorial to their husband and
father, John H. Garth. Helen was a native of Hannibal and had been
a childhood and lifelong friend of Mark Twain. John Garth, a native
of Virginia, had come to Hannibal with his parents. After attending
the University of Missouri, he returned to Hannibal to join his
father and brother in the tobacco business. Later he went into
banking and became the president of the Farmers and Merchants Bank.
He died in 1899.
The site of the new building would be on the old site at 5th
and Church. A parade and ceremony celebrated the laying of the
cornerstone on May 16, 1901. The Garth Memorial Library opened
February 15, 1902. Miss Lizzie Lingle, the librarian received $25 a
month. Her assistant, Miss Lizzie Hunt received $15 a
month.
In 1987 an addition was added to the building that doubled
the library's usable space. Today there are over 16,000 patrons and
over 83,000 items.
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