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The Rosenberg Library,
successor to the Galveston Mercantile Library, which was founded in 1871,
is the oldest public library in Texas in continuous operation. With
funding provided through a bequest from Henry Rosenberg,qv
the Rosenberg Library Association was organized in 1900 as a private
corporation to give free library service to all Galvestonians. Since its
incorporation the institution has been governed by a board of twenty
trustees, who meet annually to elect a nine-member board of directors.
The Rosenberg Library opened in 1904.
A year later it absorbed the
collections of the Galveston Public Library, thus formalizing its new role
as the public library for the city of Galveston. From the beginning, the
Rosenberg Library has been more than a simple book repository. Its early
history reflects its cultural importance. Led by the board of directors,
the first librarian, Frank C. Pattenqv
(librarian from 1904 to 1934), initiated several programs that emphasized
community involvement. Early lecture series, for example, often attracted
audiences of 700. Patten and the board worked together to develop
collections that went far beyond the scope of most public libraries. As a
result of their work and that of succeeding boards and staff, the library
has compiled outstanding collections of manuscripts, maps, artifacts, and
printed items.
The
Galveston and Texas History Center, for example, collects materials
relating to Galveston and early Texas. Major manuscript collections
include the papers of Samuel May Williams, Gail Borden, John Grant Tod,
Jr., and James Morgan;qv the records of
several nineteenth and early twentieth century businesses, including those
of Harris Kempner, Henry M. Trueheart,qv
and J. C. League; the records of several organizations and churches in the
area; and twentieth-century collections reflecting recent events and
activities in Galveston and the upper Gulf Coast. The map collection
includes maps and charts of Texas, the Gulf of Mexico, the Caribbean Sea,
and adjacent coasts dating from the sixteenth century to the present.
Holdings of the museum department include historical artifacts pertaining
to Galveston or early Texas, paintings of Galveston subjects or by such
local artists as Julius Stockflethqv and
Boyer Gonzalez, and a sizable collection of Russian and Greek icons. The
rare book collection contains incunabula, first editions, and examples of
fine printing.
The library staff and board of directors have continued the tradition
of varied library services. In addition to developing special collections
and circulating over 250,000 books annually, the library offers art and
historical exhibits, lectures, film series, and meeting
facilities for over 1,600 meetings per year. Since 1941 the city and county of
Galveston have contributed to the support of the library. About
three-fourths of the operating budget comes from public funds, while the
remainder derives from private endowments and gifts. The Rosenberg Library
is the headquarters library for the Galveston County Library System, a
structure in which the head of the Rosenberg Library is also the county
librarian. In 1967 the library board of directors launched a campaign to
build a wing that more than doubled the size of the original library
building. Funded by the Moody Foundationqv
and countless gifts from other sources, the Moody Wing opened in 1971-100
years after the Galveston Chamber of Commerce established the Galveston
Mercantile Library.
"ROSENBERG LIBRARY." The Handbook of Texas Online.
http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/RR/lcr2.html
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