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Free public library buildings of Massachusetts: a roll of honor, 1918. Wright & Potter printing co., state printers, 1919 Wright & Potter printing co., state printers, 1919 External links
The Washburn Square–Leicester Common Historic District encompasses the historic civic heart of Leicester, Massachusetts.It includes Washburn Square, as the town common is called; the buildings along its perimeter; and the properties along Main Street extending east along Main Street to its junction with Henshaw Street.
Carnegie Corporation Library Program 1911–1961. New York: Carnegie Corporation. OCLC 1282382. Bobinski, George S. (1969). Carnegie Libraries: Their History and Impact on American Public Library Development. Chicago: American Library Association. ISBN 0-8389-0022-4. Jones, Theodore (1997). Carnegie Libraries Across America. New York: John ...
The Fort Worth city council still needs to give the final okay at its Sept. 26 meeting.
Lee Library (Massachusetts) Leicester Public Library (Massachusetts) Lenox Library (Massachusetts) Leominster Public Library; Leroy Pollard Memorial Library; Leverett Library (Massachusetts) Levi Heywood Memorial Library; Lincoln Public Library (Lincoln, Massachusetts) Lowell City Library (Massachusetts) Lunenburg Public Library (Massachusetts)
The library board appealed to the Public Works Administration in 1933 for funds with $400,000 in subsidies finally arrived in Fort Worth in 1937. A three-story, triangular PWA Moderne structure designed by Joseph R. Pelich was built over the spot of the old neoclassical Carnegie library and opened in 1938.
Lincoln Public Library is a public library at 3 Bedford Road in Lincoln, Massachusetts. The library collection began in the late 1700s with a private subscription library started by Reverend Charles Stearns, [ 1 ] and later a donation by Eliza Farrar of her husband, Professor John Farrar 's library collection. [ 2 ]
What is now Leicester was originally settled by the Nipmuc people and was known by them as Towtaid.On January 27, 1686, [2] the territory of eight square miles was purchased for 15 pounds by a company of nine proprietors engaged in land speculation: Joshua Lamb of Roxbury, Nathaniel Page of Bedford, Andrew Gardner of Roxbury, Benjamin Gamblin of Roxbury, Benjamin Tucker of Roxbury, John ...