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RCPL

  1. Library History: Dream to Reality

    October 9 , 2008 by Chantelle Janelle

    More than two million visits by users to the library in one year show the appeal of the library’s services to the greater metropolitan Columbia area. For not only are the physical facilities new and state of the art, but so too are the technical aspects of the new system.

  2. Setting the Standard

    October 9 , 2008 by Chantelle Janelle

    Library History

  3. 1933-1968 RCPL History

    October 9 , 2008 by Chantelle Janelle

    In 1933, the county assumed fiscal responsibility for the library and assessed tax millage. The 1934 South Carolina General Assembly established the library as a county institution supported by the one mill tax and governed by a Board of Trustees. The library’s name changed for the final time. Now officially the Richland County Public Library (RCPL), user privileges became completely free for all county residents. Two years later the Phillis Wheatley Branch was moved to new, larger quarters on Gervais Street. This new Waverly Branch, located in a former church, was popular and widely used. A new or second bookmobile was acquired in 1936 to cover routes in outlying county areas. During the 1930s, a branch library was also established in Eastover.

  4. 1926-1934 RCPL History

    October 9 , 2008 by Chantelle Janelle

    1926 brought not only the move to Kramer’s, but also an amazing windfall through a series of unusual events. The county had contracted to build a new Broad River Bridge. During the new bridge’s construction, the old, still-insured bridge burned. The insurance money was duly deposited in a bank to earn interest and await dispersal determination. During this interim, the bank failed. Citizen interest and a petition resulted in a county delegation promise that any recovered funds would be used for the public library. Ultimately, the library received $40,000 of recovered funds which became a new books reserve fund. The most important gain, however, was the county delegation’s realization that the community highly valued the library. Consequently, the county delegation now fully supported the library and even encouraged expanding the services to county schools and rural areas.

  5. 1865-1924 RCPL History

    October 9 , 2008 by Chantelle Janelle

    The rebuilding of Columbia after 1865 went slowly. As late as the 1870s, most of Richardson Street still stood in ruins and the bridge across the Congaree River had not been replaced. Proposals to start a new library were made with the National Library Crusade, a movement aimed to better educate the general public, providing a much needed impetus. However, their efforts came to naught. Finally, a Columbia matron’s group founded the Union for Practical Progress in 1896, which successfully established a small lending library on the first floor of City Hall. This Lend-A-Hand library soon became the Columbia Library Association; Dr. James Woodrow served as the first president, while Wade Hampton III and other leading citizens donated their own books to the collection. Three years later, located at 1528 Main (formerly Richardson) Street, the building and the books burned; a loss keenly felt by the city’s citizens. Fortunately, the library soon rebuilt at the same location. Librarians Mrs. Cramer and Miss Ellen Elmore managed this new book collection, again a gift from the city’s leading citizens.