Dakota County Library

Dakota County Public Library System
Established 1969
Location Dakota County, MN
Headquarters: Eagan
Branches 9
Collection
Size 919,077
Access and use
Circulation 3,731,955
Population served 362,064
Other information
Director Margaret Stone
Staff 148
Website http://dakotacounty.us/library/
Wescott Library in Eagan houses the administrative offices of the library system

The Dakota County Library system is a regional public library system in Dakota County, Minnesota, headquartered in the Wescott Library in Eagan.[1][2] The system includes 9 branch libraries and shares borrowing privileges with the City of South St. Paul public library. It is a member of MELSA (the Metropolitan Library Service Agency), a consortium of eight Minnesota library systems.

History of the Dakota County Library System

Early history

The Dakota County Library System as it exists today is a combination of several smaller library systems. The earliest of these were the Farmington, Minnesota, library, established in 1871 and the Hastings, Minnesota, library, established in 1873. Both were established as subscription libraries, and were relatively short-lived projects, although they paved the way for municipally funded libraries in the early 20th century . The City of South St. Paul, Minnesota, Library was established in 1916. It initially received a $10,000 grant from the Carnegie Foundation, but development of the library was halted due to the outbreak of World War I. In 1926, the library received municipal bond funding in the amount of $25,000 for the establishment of a library building, which opened in August 1927, as the first public library in Dakota County.[3]

Era of growth

Bolstered by the post-World War II influx to suburban areas as well as the passage of the 1956 Congressional Library Services Act,[4] libraries in Dakota County were ready to expand. To maximize resources, the county entered into a partnership with its neighbor to the west, Scott County and in 1959, the Dakota-Scott Regional Library System was formed. Originally operated out of 2 classrooms in a Savage elementary school with 9 people on staff, the system quickly expanded, with the Farmington and Hastings libraries joining by the end of the year. Bu 1968, the system had opened a new library in Hastings, acquired a 6,000 book capacity bookmobile, purchased land off of County Road 42 in Burnsville, Minnesota for a new branch location and was using a storefront location in Burnsville as a temporary library to help alleviate demand on the other outlets. However, throughout this time, Dakota and Scott County had been growing apart from one another - both in terms of population growth and in their vision for the library's future. As a result, the assets of the collection were divided proportionately to county population and by December 31, 1968, the two-county system was dissolved.[3]

Creation of the Dakota County Library System

The Dakota County Library System was born on January 1, 1969. The early years were a time of cooperation and technological change. The system joined the Metropolitan Library Service Agency (MELSA) in 1970 [3] and entered into a reciprocal borrowing agreement with the City of South St. Paul library [5] in 1975.[3]

The Burnhaven Library in Burnsville

In 1971, the library made available for check out the first computer-created book catalog in Minnesota. Technological innovations continued with the opening of the Burnhaven library in 1974, which included record and cassette listening terminals. By the beginning of the 1980s, the Dakota County Library System had over 200,000 books and 175,000 patrons, and was entering a period of steady growth. 1981 saw the opening of the Wescott Library in Eagan, Minnesota, which has housed the system's administrative headquarters since its opening. Wescott was followed by the Galaxie Library in Apple Valley in 1990 and the Wentworth Library in West St. Paul in 1992. The Pleasant Hill Library in Hastings was built after a 1993 fire in the previous building caused 1 million USD in damage - including the destruction of an estimated 73,000 books. In 1995, a new "special service library" was opened in Farmington. Inver Glen Library in Inver Grove Heights and the Heritage Library in Lakeville both opened in 2000.[3] The 9th library branch in Rosemount, Minnesota is the Robert Trail Library, which is housed in a 23,000-square-foot (2,100 m2) facility and had approximately 45,000 volumes in its collection at its opening.[6]

Dakota County Library today

Dakota County Library branches

The Dakota County Library System is made up of 9 branch locations, the 9th branch recently opened in Rosemount, Minnesota in early 2009.[6] Bookmobile service was discontinued in December 2010. The administrative headquarters are located in Eagan, Minnesota.

Branch locations include

The Galaxie Library in Apple Valley
A staff member walks alongside the Bookmobile in a local parade

Law library services are provided at the Apple Valley and Hastings libraries [7]

System profile

Circulation Statistics, 2005[10][11][12]
Number of Hennepin County Library Minneapolis Public Library Dakota County Library
Visits 5,080,927 1,521,489 1,665,874
Visits per capita 7.22 8.21 9.498
Total circulation 12,702,317 2,474,437 3,731,955
Total circulation per capita 18.06 7.00 11.16

Note - the Hennepin County and Minneapolis Public Library systems have merged into a unified system since these statistics were recorded [13]

References

  1. "Departments." County of Dakota. Retrieved on October 3, 2010. "Library Administration & Support Services Administrative Offices Wescott Library 1340 Wescott Rd Eagan MN 55123-1029"
  2. "Library Administration & Support Services." County of Dakota. Retrieved on October 3, 2010. "Library Administration & Support Services Ken Behringer, Director Wescott Library 1340 Wescott Rd Eagan MN 55123-1029."
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 http://www.co.dakota.mn.us/NR/rdonlyres/00D8A92D-379B-49A3-B725-F8AF4A2152D6/7927/DCL_history1rev.pdf
  4. http://www.ideals.uiuc.edu/bitstream/2142/6831/1/librarytrendsv24i1d_opt.pdf
  5. http://www.melsa.org/about.cfm
  6. 1 2 http://ci.rosemount.mn.us/vertical/Sites/%7B9EB5E841-C29C-4154-8A28-AC41E049797A%7D/uploads/%7B0B4688B2-C923-468F-A9F6-D931601DEC01%7D.PDF
  7. http://www.startribune.com/local/south/26473359.html?elr=KArksUUUU
  8. http://www.co.dakota.mn.us/NR/rdonlyres/00001806/dtmecgrjvtroagztpcouezwcyrkziwcw/AnnCommunityReport_Final.pdf
  9. 1 2 http://nces.ed.gov/surveys/libraries/librarysearch/library_detail.asp?Search=1&LibraryName=dakota+county&State=27&County=Dakota&LibraryType=LS&LibraryType=CE&LibraryType=BR&LibraryType=BS&LibraryType=BM&ID=MN0039&details=2
  10. http://nces.ed.gov/surveys/libraries/librarysearch/Library_detail.asp?Search=1&details=0&LibraryName=Dakota+county&State=27&County=dakota&LibraryType=LS&ID=MN0039
  11. http://nces.ed.gov/surveys/libraries/librarysearch/Library_detail.asp?Search=1&details=3&State=27&County=hennepin&LibraryType=LS&LibraryType=CE&LibraryType=BR&LibraryType=BS&LibraryType=BM&LibraryPageNum=2&ID=MN0041
  12. http://nces.ed.gov/surveys/libraries/librarysearch/Library_detail.asp?Search=1&details=3&LibraryName=minneapolis&State=27&County=hennepin&LibraryType=LS&LibraryType=CE&LibraryType=BR&LibraryType=BS&LibraryType=BM&ID=MN0042
  13. http://www.startribune.com/local/12970451.html

Coordinates: 44°49′4″N 93°9′48″W / 44.81778°N 93.16333°W / 44.81778; -93.16333

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