Hubbard Free Library
Country | United States |
---|---|
Type | Public Library |
Location |
115 Second Street Hallowell, Maine |
Website | |
Hallowell Historic District | |
Coordinates | 44°17′9.28″N 69°47′29″W / 44.2859111°N 69.79139°WCoordinates: 44°17′9.28″N 69°47′29″W / 44.2859111°N 69.79139°W |
Built | 1879-80, 1893-94, 1897-98 |
Architect | Alexander C. Currier |
Architectural style | Gothic Revival |
NRHP Reference # | 70000076[1] |
Added to NRHP | October 28, 1970 |
The Hubbard Free Library is the public library serving Hallowell, Maine and the surrounding communities of Chelsea and Farmingdale.[2] Built in 1879-80, it is the oldest library building in Maine built for that purpose.[3] It was designed by architect Alexander C. Currier to resemble an English country church.[3] Dedicated in 1880 as the Hallowell Library, it was renamed the Hubbard Free Library in 1894, after a $20,000 donation from philanthropist Thomas Hubbard.[4] The building is a contributing property in the Hallowell Historic District.
Founding
The Hallowell Social Library was instituted in 1843, by forty-three stockholders, who paid $20. When first established, the collection was inaccessible to the general public; only subscribers and members of their families were entitled to use the books.[5] The library became a public library five years later, and the use of the library to individuals of the public other than stockholders was available for $3 per year. This fee was reduced to $2 annually the following year, in 1848.[6]
The Friends group began a campaign to raise money for a permanent building in 1878, and in 1880 the building was dedicated.[7] The cost of the original library was $8,300, which included the land and building.[5] Alexander C. Currier donated his services, designing and supervising the construction of the original building.[8] The entire building is of Hallowell granite and was contributed by Joseph R. Bodwell, then-president of the Hallowell Granite Co. and later Governor of Maine.[9] The iron fret work that originally adorned the peaks of the building was donated by Prescott & Fuller Iron Foundry.[10]
Expansion
In 1893, Thomas Hubbard, a Civil War Colonel, lawyer, railroad executive, financier, businessman and philanthropist, donated the funds for the construction of a free library. In March 1894, the new structure was complete and was renamed Hubbard Free Library.[11] The money was used to build an addition to the existing building, in the form of a cross-axial transept, in keeping with the original church design.[8]
A second addition was added in 1897, with $10,000 donated by Eliza Clark Lowell of Hallowell, a direct descendant of Deacon Pease Clark, who was the first settler in Hallowell.[12]
- Interior, circa 1880.
- Interior, 1971.
References
- ↑ National Park Service (2007-01-23). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
- ↑ Hubbard Free Library
- 1 2 Library Postcards
- ↑ Old Hallowell on the Kennebec, 1909, p. 21.
- 1 2 Manual of public libraries, institutions, and societies: in the United States, 1859, p. 71.
- ↑ The New England Register 1880, p. 294.
- ↑ Address and Poem at the Dedication of the Hallowell Library: March 9, 1880, p. 17
- 1 2 http://lcweb2.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/me/me0000/me0057/data/me0057data.pdf
- ↑ Maine Memory Network - Gov. Joseph R. Bodwell, Hallowell, ca. 1887
- ↑ Historic Hallowell - The Fuller Foundry
- ↑ Address and Poem at the Dedication, March 15, 1894
- ↑ Maine Memory Network - Eliza Clark Lowell, Hallowell, ca. 1897