Madison Public Library (Madison, Wisconsin)
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Madison Public Library (MPL), originally called the Madison Free Library, is the public library system in
Madison, Wisconsin Madison is the county seat of Dane County and the capital city of the U.S. state of Wisconsin. As of the 2020 census the population was 269,840, making it the second-largest city in Wisconsin by population, after Milwaukee, and the 80th-lar ...
, United States, consisting of a central library and 8 neighborhood libraries. Madison Public Library is part of the
South Central Library System The South Central Library System (SCLS) is a consortium of 53 public libraries in 7 Wisconsin counties: Adams, Columbia, Dane, Green, Portage, Sauk, and Wood. The mission of the South Central Library System is " to help its member libraries ...
, the second-largest public library system in
Wisconsin Wisconsin () is a state in the upper Midwestern United States. Wisconsin is the 25th-largest state by total area and the 20th-most populous. It is bordered by Minnesota to the west, Iowa to the southwest, Illinois to the south, Lake M ...
after
Milwaukee Public Library Milwaukee Public Library (MPL) is the public library system in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States, consisting of a central library and 13 branches, all part of the Milwaukee County Federated Library System. MPL is the largest public library syst ...
.


History

Madison Public Library was created by city ordinance in November 1874 under the persuasion of Mayor Silas Pinney. It opened on May 31, 1875 as the "Madison Free Library" in two rooms of City Hall. It would keep that name until it was renamed the Madison Public Library effective on January 1, 1959. The original collection was a gift of 3,170 volumes from the Madison Institute, whose library had occupied the same space before the Madison Free Library was created. The collection increased by 200 after city residents were invited to donate books to the library on its opening day. The first librarian, Virginia Robbins, was paid $400 per year to "function primarily as a clerk to dispense requested books" and to supervise the Library, while the Library Board of Directors controlled all book selection and arrangement. She used beans to keep track of the number of books that were borrowed and what genre they were.
There was a collection box with sections labeled history, literature, religion, travel, fiction, and science. When patrons checked out a book, they dropped a bean in the proper compartment of the box. Sometimes when patrons neglected to drop their beans, Miss Robbins put two or three extra beans in the boxes to keep the count as closely accurate as possible.
The Library stayed in the City Hall until 1906, when it moved into a new Carnegie library building that included a
library school Education for librarianship, including for paraprofessional library workers, varies around the world, and has changed over time. In recent decades, many institutions offering librarianship education have changed their names to reflect the shift from ...
on the second floor until 1938 when the school became part of the
University of Wisconsin–Madison A university () is an educational institution, institution of higher education, higher (or Tertiary education, tertiary) education and research which awards academic degrees in several Discipline (academia), academic disciplines. Universities ty ...
and moved to the University. In 1965, the Central Library moved to its current location at 201 West Mifflin Street. In 1913, the Library opened its first branch in the Sixth Ward on Williamson Street (which would eventually become the Hawthorne Neighborhood Library after several moves and name changes) and opened its second in late 1916/early 1917 in the Neighborhood House on East Washington Avenue. In addition to traditional branches, the Library also operated book deposit stations in Madison storefronts, factories, and fire stations starting in 1903; and, starting in 1911, the Library operated libraries in Madison public schools until they were moved under the jurisdiction of the Madison Board of Education in 1952.


Library locations

*Alicia Ashman *Central Library *Goodman South Madison *Hawthorne *Lakeview *Meadowridge *Monroe Street *Pinney *Sequoya


References


External links

*
Madison Public Library websiteSouth Central Library System
{{authority control Public libraries in Wisconsin Buildings and structures in Madison, Wisconsin Library buildings completed in 1875 1875 establishments in Wisconsin