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In 1948 the library became a branch of the Montgomery County government, with an allocated budget of US$25,000. The first librarian was Katherine Ard. A bookmobile was purchased to help serve the outer areas of Montgomery County. [1] In 1950 the library was relocated to a vacated automobile showroom.
Library service in Montgomery County started in 1869 when a group of Rockville and other area residents assembled in the County Courthouse to plan a joint stock library. Other independent libraries were formed in Montgomery County in the following years. For example, in 1893 a group of private citizens in Kensington established the Noyes Library.
Jeff Davis County Public Library: 189 E. Jarman Street, Hazlehurst, GA 31539 Ladson Genealogical Library: 125 Church Street Suite 104, Vidalia, GA 30474 Montgomery County Public Library: 215 Railroad Avenue, Mount Vernon, GA 30445 Nelle Brown Memorial Library: 166 West Liberty Street, Lyons, GA 30436 Tattnall County Public Library
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The $370 million mixed use center, is a public / private venture and includes the Rockville Branch of the Montgomery County Library; Rockville Arts and Innovation Center; ground-level retail, restaurants, shops, food stores; public parking garages; and about 680 units of residential housing in a pedestrian friendly setting. [7] [8]
The largest branch is the Ludington Library, with almost 168,000 items in circulation, and the smallest branch is Belmont Hills, with almost 17,000 items available. [3] Lower Merion Library System's governing board is the Board of Directors, which consists of 14 members, some of whom serve ex-officio as commissioners on the Lower Merion Board ...
E L Lowder Regional Library; Rufus A. Lewis Regional Library; Coliseum Boulevard Branch Library; Governors Square Branch Library; Bertha Pleasant Williams Library — Rosa L. Parks Avenue Branch (named after Bertha Pleasant Williams (1923–2008), the first black professional librarian in Montgomery)