For other Carnegie Libraries, see Carnegie library (disambiguation)
Old Tampa Free Public Library | |
Location | 102 E. Seventh Ave., Tampa, Florida |
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Coordinates | 27°57′37″N 82°27′38″W / 27.96028°N 82.46056°W |
Area | less than one acre |
Architect | Fred J. James; Aulick, Bates & Hundall |
Architectural style | Classical Revival |
NRHP reference No. | 91000618[1] |
Added to NRHP | May 16, 1991 |
The Old Tampa Free Public Library (also known as the Exceptional Children Education Center) is a historic building in the Tampa Heights neighborhood of Tampa, Florida. Located at 102 E. 7th Avenue, it was one of 10 Florida Carnegie libraries to receive grants awarded by the Carnegie Corporation of New York from 1901 to 1917.[2] It was designed by Tampa architect Fred J. James and constructed from 1915 to 1917. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1991.
Steel magnate and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie provided funding for more than 3,000 Carnegie libraries in the United States, Canada, and Europe.[3] The library was built using a $50,000 grant from Carnegie. The library's first director was Helen V. Stelle.
It was Tampa's main library until 1968. It includes a T-plan, masonry, brown and yellow brick atop a rusticated granite basement, and is topped by a barrel tile roof. The building was rehabilitated in 1999 by the City of Tampa for public offices.[4] It has been occupied by the administrative staff of the Tampa-Hillsborough County Public Library System since November 2016[5] and also houses the Hillsborough Literacy Council, which is affiliated with the Tampa-Hillsborough County Public Library system.[6]
Library Usage and Floorplan
editThe library was widely used by patrons across Tampa who had fewer branches to choose from at the time of its use as an active branch. University students would enjoy the ample collection in order to do the research and study required of them.[7] High school students would also research at the branch, and some would enjoy going to the pool hall across the street from the library,[8] which was notorious among patrons as well as librarians for having a diverse and interesting clientele that was not always a welcome presence at the library and would sometimes be a source of mischief.[9] At the "7th Avenue Library," as it was called by some patrons, children would enjoy storytelling, which would happen once or twice in the afternoon according to patron memories,[10] and book selection in the children's library on west side of the basement level.
Bernadette Storck, a worker of the library with the cataloging and processing department, details her memories of the library's floorplan and processes: The library had a circulation desk on the first floor, with reference on one side and popular materials on the other. In the downstairs area, the west side housed the children's department, where story time took place and children's material was kept. On the east side of that floor, cataloging and processing took place. This involved hand lettering along spines in order to determine branches and subjects. The bookmobile collection was also housed there, as Tampa's first bookmobile was kept at the Tampa Free Library. Upon patron request, back issues of newspapers and magazines, kept behind smoked glass, would be sent upstairs. A dumbwaiter was used to put materials in and take them upstairs, as the building's current elevator had not been added yet.[9]
Reasons for Closure
editBuilt in 1915, the Tampa Free Library originally stood as Tampa's main public library. However, over the decades, the library was no longer able to adequately meet the needs of the growing population. Concerns over the small size of the library, lack of expansion, and inability to assist the growing population eventually led to a new building being constructed in downtown Tampa. The original building was constructed and designed to serve 50,000 people which was adequate at the time of its construction. However, by the early 1960s, Tampa maintained a population of 274,407 people. In addition, other old, historical libraries in Tampa were also unable to meet the needs of the public due to poor parking, small size, and cramped collections.[11] This led to questions of whether newer, larger libraries should begin replacing the older, historical models. The Tampa Free library endeavored to cater to the population by expanding hours. In April 1960 the Tampa Public Library's expanded its hours, from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday, increasing the library's open hours from 66 to 72 hours per week. This was done with the hope that it would be more convenient for people working downtown to visit the library.[12]
In 1961, the library was no longer seen as an adequate facility for the growing city of Tampa. As evidenced in an article by the Tampa Tribune in 1961, the library designed to serve a community of 52,000 people was rightfully determined to be insufficient for a community of 274,407 people.[13] A former worker of the library who'd been involved in cataloging and processing also recalled insufficient shelving space, stating that the huge collection of books, newspapers, and magazines was "falling off the shelves."[9] Patrons also had to travel quite far to reach the library, as it was being used by patrons who lived in Hyde Park and Palma Ceia.[7]
Eventually the need for space and change led to the creation of a new main library, and on April 21, 1968, The Tampa Public Library (renamed John F. Germany Public Library in 1999) opened on 900 N Ashley Drive. The John F. Germany Public Library still serves as the main library in the Tampa-Hillsborough County Library system.
Uses After Closure
editIn 1968, the building was converted into a center for academically advanced students, the "Exceptional Children Education Center". This program ended in 1986 when the city stopped busing gifted students out of their local schools.[14] In 1987, the city of Tampa sold the building to the nonprofit Tampa Bay Economic Development Corporation for $1. The corporation would do the necessary renovations and improvements after finding someone to lease the building and repay those costs over time.[14] In 1995, the Tampa Free Library once again garnered notice after the roof had to be patched to stop an influx of water from destroying the interior. It was at this time that Tampa's Architectural Review Commission unanimously voted to recommend the building for local landmark designation.[15] In 1998, the United Way of Hillsborough County considered making the Tampa Free Library building its new headquarters, but reconsidered due to the price tag of renovating the then 83-year-old-building.[14][16] In 1999 the city agreed to foot the 2.2 million dollar renovation costs by entering a 25-year lease agreement with Tampa Bay Economic Development Corporation, at the end of which, the city would purchase the building back for the $1 they sold it for in 1987.[14] Beginning in 1999, three agencies would share the newly renovated space: The Division of Neighborhood Improvement, the Women & Minority Business Enterprise Program, and the Office of Human Rights and Community Services.[14] In November 2016, the administrative offices for the Tampa-Hillsborough County Public Library were relocated to the Tampa Free Library from the fourth floor of the John. F. Germany Library in downtown Tampa.[17]
In May 2024, USF approached the county about repurposing the Tampa Free Library into an art museum.
References and external links
editGallery
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The Tampa Free Library on the roadside on March 18, 1919[18]
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Front of Tampa Free Library
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The Tampa Free Library on the roadside in the 2000s
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Detail of Tampa Free Library building
References
edit- ^ "National Register Information System – (#91000618)". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- ^ Tampa Bay Business Journal.
- ^ Bobinski, George (1969). Carnegie Libraries: Their History and Impact on American Public Library Development. American Library Association. ISBN 0-8389-0022-4.
- ^ "Tampa Free Public Library". Retrieved 11 October 2013.
- ^ "Tampa Mayor Bob Buckhorn eyeing changes at site of downtown library annex".
- ^ "Hillsborough Literacy Council – Teaching adults to read and speak English".
- ^ a b "Video memory of Malcom Smith, Jr. on the Tampa Public Library (7th Avenue), Sept. 24, 2011". HCPLC Digital Collections. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
- ^ "Video memory of David Smith on the Tampa Public Library (7th Avenue), Sept. 24, 2011". HCPLC Digital Collections. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
- ^ a b c "Video memory of Bernadette Storck on the Tampa Public Library (7th Avenue), Sept. 24, 2011". HCPLC Digital Collections. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
- ^ "Video memory of William Grahm, Jr. on the Tampa Public Library (7th Avenue), Sept. 24, 2011". HCPLC Digital Collection. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
- ^ "CONTENTdm".
- ^ "CONTENTdm".
- ^ "Small library falls short of Tampa's needs". Tampa Tribune. 2 April 1961.
- ^ a b c d e Anchors, Sarah (10 July 1999). "New city offices take landmark library off shelf". The Tampa Tribune. NewsBank inc. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
- ^ Hathaway, Ivan J. (13 August 1995). "County's 2nd public library turns another page". The Tampa Tribune. NewsBank inc. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
- ^ Pedreira, David (30 January 1998). "Historic library building to be renovated in Tampa Heights". The Tampa Tribune. NewsBank inc. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
- ^ Danielson, Richard (3 February 2017). "Local Plea for Library Resources". The Tampa Tribune. NewsBank inc. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
- ^ "Florida Memory - The Free Library on the roadside - Tampa, Florida". Archived from the original on 2019-03-28.