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The Minuteman Library Network (MLN), [1] founded in 1984, is a consortium of 41 public and academic libraries in the MetroWest and Middlesex County areas of eastern Massachusetts, US that share resources, patrons and services.
Pages in category "Libraries in Middlesex County, Massachusetts" The following 40 pages are in this category, out of 40 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Library Web site Town/City County Friends-group link Consortium; Abington Public Library: Abington: Plymouth: OCLN: Acton Memorial Library: Acton: Middlesex: MLN: West Acton Citizens' Library
The library organizes events open to the public including book clubs, English immersion classes, and movie nights. One major project is the Natick Veterans Oral History Project. In 1998, Eugene Dugdale, who was a Pearl Harbor survivor, proposed a project to "collect and preserve the personal recollections of those men and women who have served ...
The Central Library is the main branch of the Somerville, Massachusetts, public library system.It is an architecturally distinguished Renaissance Revival brick building designed by Edward Lippincott Tilton and was built in 1914 with funding assistance from philanthropist Andrew Carnegie. [2]
The Barron Library is a historic building located at 582 Rahway Avenue in Woodbridge Township, Middlesex County, New Jersey. Formerly a public library, it is now the Barron Arts Center. [3] The building was documented by the Historic American Buildings Survey in 1976. [4]
Location of Middlesex County in Massachusetts. This is a listing of places in Middlesex County in the U.S. state of Massachusetts that are listed in the National Register of Historic Places. With more than 1,300 listings, the county has more listings than any other county in the United States.
The library is a public library, founded in 1874 "largely through the efforts of Rev. George S. Shaw." [25] In the 1890s it was "kept in a private house" open to the public Tuesday and Friday afternoons. [26] Around 1890 the Ashby library had "1,584 volumes, with which its inhabitants have a pleasant and profitable acquaintance." [27]