| The
first library of Nashua was started with books donated at a book
shower. These books were gathered in a room over the Bartish & Nafus
Racket Store along with books from the traveling library out of
Des Moines. The first librarian was Miss Fanny V. Eastman. In 1903
the library was moved to a building on Madison Street after a 3-mill
tax was passed in 1902 to cover expenses.
In
1903 several members of the Nashua Isabella Club began corresponding
with Mr. Andrew Carnegie asking for enough money to build a library
facility in Nashua. The correspondence was, however, one-sided.
Some of the residents of Nashua joked that Mr. Carnegie did not
give libraries to such small towns! Others commented we must have
a least $10,000 before he would even consider us worthy of notice.
But
the women of the Isabella Club had a mission and they were not going
to be easily discouraged. Their correspondence continued for months
with Mr. Carnegie.
Close
to a year passed and like a thunderbolt from a clear sky a proposition
arrived from Mr. Carnegie - an offer of $5,000 to put up a building
if the council would support the tax and the citizens furnish the
site.
The
council accepted the conditions, the site was secured, the plans
and specifications were drawn and the contractor was hired. Nashua
was going to have a library building that they could be proud of.
The Carnegie Library was completed in 1905 and dedicated in 1906.
The
Carnegie Library served the community of Nashua for 80 years. In
1986 a building addition to the Carnegie was completed. The Carnegie
Library had become too small to adequately meet the needs of the
community. The new addition has 3,000 square feet for the lobby,
furnace room and bathroom. The facility was totally paid for by
local donations and grants when the doors opened.
As
Mr. Andrew Carnegie's generosity provided the community with a beautiful
library, it is the communities support that has kept the shelves
filled with books and the door open for close to a century. |