The Chicago Lyceum, a debating society, met at this "Saloon Building," which stood on the southeast corner of Clark and Lake Streets. NOTE: The word "saloon" at that time did not imply so much a tavern as a spacious meeting hall; it derived from the French word "salon." It offered the largest hall west of Buffalo, NY, for concerts, debates, dramatic performances, political ceremonies and private club offices. Chicago received its city charter under its roof in 1837 and served as city hall and Municipal Court until 1842. |
In the aftermath of the Fire, Londoner A.H. Burgess, with the aid of Thomas Hughes, drew up what would be called the "English Book Donation," which proposed that England should provide a free library to the burnt-out city.
After circulating requests for donations throughout English society, the project donated 8,000 books. Their donors autographed many volumes, including Queen Victoria, Benjamin Disraeli, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Robert Browning, Charles Darwin, John Stuart Mill, John Ruskin, and Matthew Arnold.
With these books as the collection base, Chicago's leaders established the Chicago Public Library in April 1872.
The book room in the Old Water Tank, the "Original Library," on the site that is now the Rookery Building at LaSalle and Adams Streets, Chicago. (1873) |
The Library Board arranged for the collection to be housed in an old water tank. For many years, the library occupied various temporary spaces while Board members looked for a permanent site. By 1874, the collection was available for circulation without charge to all Chicagoans, and two years later, it had 120,000 volumes! By 1891, Chicago boasted the most extensive library system in the country. William Frederick Poole, the city's distinguished librarian and a nationally recognized scholar, is credited for much of the library's success in that era.
Burgess wrote on December 7, 1871, in the London Daily News, "I propose that England should present a Free Library to Chicago, to remain there as a mark of sympathy now, and a keepsake and token of true brotherly kindness forever..."In Chicago, town leaders petitioned Mayor Joseph Medill to hold a meeting and establish the library. The meeting led to the Illinois Library Act of 1872, which allowed Illinois cities to establish tax-supported libraries. In April 1872, the Chicago City Council passed an ordinance establishing the Chicago Public Library.
In the rebuilding section of the city, on January 1, 1873, the Chicago Central Library, as it was initially named, officially opened its doors in an abandoned iron water tank (fireproof) at LaSalle and Adams Streets. The collection included 3,157 volumes. The water tank was 58 feet in diameter, 21 feet high and with a 30-foot foundation. A two-story building was soon built around it to hold city offices, and a third-floor reading room was created for the library.
Controversy and legal squabbles troubled the efforts to build a permanent home for the Chicago Public Library. The search became a high priority in the 1890s when the library's priorities shifted from service to enlightenment.
Dearborn Park, the future site of the Chicago Central Library, looking north from Washington Street. (circa 1890) |
Looking southeast towards Michigan Avenue from Randolph Street, Chicago. (circa 1890) |
Construction of the Chicago Central Library. (circa 1895) |
Frederick Hild, Chief Librarian at the time, campaigned to move the library from its quarters in City Hall to Dearborn Park, a lot fronting Michigan Avenue.
On Monday, October 11, 1897, the Chicago Central Library opened its doors on Michigan Avenue between Washington and Randolph streets. The building, on the grounds of Dearborn Park (named for the Fort Dearborn Military Reservation that formally encompassed the area), cost about $2 million (about $58,500,000 today).
The original Central Library was built on the Dearborn Park site between Washington and Randolph streets on Michigan Avenue. Circa 1898. |
The Chicago Central Library building served two purposes as the first permanent home for the Library (the building's south/Washington Street side) and the headquarters for the Grand Army of the Republic, the Civil War Union Army veterans' organization (the building's north/Randolph Street side).
By the mid-1920s, the library began to outgrow its space. As early as the 1930s, inadequate library space became a public discussion topic. Between the 1930s and 1970s, the scope of the library's offerings continued to expand; it was clearly overcrowded.
Even as early as the 1920s, the Chicago Public Library had already established itself as a landmark in the hearts of Chicagoans.
A 1967 architectural survey conducted by Chicago architects Holabird and Root confirmed that although the building was still structurally sound, the mechanical, electrical and communication systems were obsolete. Some changes were necessary.
A design competition for the renovation of the Chicago Public Library was held in 1970. Two architectural firms from Madison, Wisconsin, shared the prize for the winning design, estimating that the project would cost a prohibitive $28 million. Soon the library became the center of a spirited public debate. City officials were challenged to provide Chicagoans with a cost-effective, updated public library, and some suggested demolishing the building. Preservationists wanted to save it for its magnificent beauty and as a monument to the past.
Approximately half of the library's books and periodicals had been moved to another location by 1974. Consequently, the library's collection was then housed in two facilities. That same year, Holabird and Root were selected as the architects for a much-needed building renovation. The architects viewed the structure as a historical treasure, and their sensitive design kept the exterior and most of its decorative features intact and unchanged. The renovation began in 1974 and was completed in 1977 when the Chicago Public Library building was renamed the Chicago Cultural Center.
The center of this building, now known as Preston Bradley Hall (Preston Bradley was on the Chicago Public Library Board for over 25 years), contains a dome and hanging lamps designed by the Tiffany Glass Company of New York. The Washington Street entrance, grand staircase and dome area have inscriptions of 16th-century printers' marks, authors' names and quotations that praise learning and literature in mosaics of colored stone, mother of pearl and favrile glass. The Chicago Public Library is home to the world's largest Tiffany stained glass dome.
The Preston Bradley Hall |
Then in 1991, the Chicago Public Library vacated the building when it opened its new State Street location named the Harold Washington Library Center, after the first African–American to be elected as mayor of Chicago. Washington served from 1983 until he died in office in 1987. In 1991, the new Harold Washington Library Center was dedicated.
The Harold Lee Washington Library, 400 South State Street, Chicago, Illinois. |
The Chicago Cultural Center is listed as a Chicago Landmark and on the National Register of Historic Places.
Compiled and Edited by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.
Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs; Chicago Public Library; Newberry Library
Keep on writing, great job!
ReplyDeleteYou really have our history together....I love it Neil!
ReplyDeleteThank you for another bit of history of this beautiful city of which I was unaware.
ReplyDeleteSome coverage of the 17 year "wanderings" of the "Temporary" Central Library might be nice. The last location was at 400 North Franklin, close to the Mercantile Mart; with the move into that location, the Administrative and Tech Services sections were shifted to a separate building of their own, so for the final four+ years of the perambulation there were three distinct buildings required to house the entirety of the central collections. I worked at CPL 1988-1994, right out of library school, initially in the 400 North Franklin location.
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