History of the Bellingham Public Library
Compiled by Marian Sandsberry July, 1989
June 4, 1891
Bellingham Bay Public Library Association was organized in Room 11, Lighthouse Block,
by 12 women of New Whatcom.
June 15, 1891
Bellingham Bay Public Library opened to the public, in Room 11, 12, and 17 of the
Lighthouse Block, (old First National Bank Bldg. later torn down and replaced by
present SeaFirst National Bank Bldg.), Holly at Dock Street (now Cornwall). It was
a subscription library which cost $1.00 plus $.50 monthly for the privilege of borrowing
one book at a time. It opened with 286 books and $44.84 in cash. Mrs. Mary B. Bruce was
temporary librarian until October 13, 1891; Miss Carrie E. Smith until February 1892.
June 1892
P.B. Cornwall presented the Association with a lot on the SE corner of Magnolia and
Dock (Cornwall - site of Pay 'n Save). He offered to build a story-and-a-half frame
structure as a library. The new building was occupied on September 3, 1892 (picture
in Daily Reveille). On August 9, 1892, Mrs. Katherine M. Ryan was elected librarian at
$20.00 per month.
May 16, 1902
P.B. Cornwall donated the adjoining lot, proposed moving the building 50 feet to the
SE along Magnolia and raising it one floor to provide additional facilities by erecting
a first story and an annex or wings. By October 15, 1902 the building had been moved.
On March 10, 1903, the new "Reading Room" opened hut the lower floor was not yet finished.
By the time the framework and the outside were completed, the money was exhausted. The
work was not resumed until after consolidation, when the new Library Board took over.
1903
Association transferred the Library to the City of Whatcom, to be managed as a free
library named the Bellingham Public Library.
Jan. 7, 1904
New Library Board named. At consolidation time, Bellingham Bay Library had 3,020 volumes.
Fairhaven Library had 2,626 volumes. The Board made its first order of business the
completion of the physical plant, so the lower floor was completed, a stack room and
delivery counter in the rear, a small reference room, and a "reasonably commodious
reading room" were provided. Also added were a new hot water heating system, convenient
plumbing, gas and electric light.
July 1904
New building ready for use, books moved downstairs. The vacated upper floor was rented to
the Northwest Business College at $25.00 per month (NW Business College remained one
year), from August 1, 1904 to July 31, 1905. Picture of 2-story building was taken that
year.) Frontage 50' on Magnolia, 110' on the alley, Block 45, Lots 7 and 8.
1905
Grace Switzer, librarian
1906
Andrew Carnegie was approached again, for a grant for another library in Bellingham.
After much negotiation, he offered to give $20,000 if the City supplied the lot and
guaranteed proper support. The City exchanged the current lot and building at Magnolia
and Dock for a larger area on a rocky hill t the corner of Commercial and Champion.
Feb. 21, 1908
The new building was formally opened with 57 steps to climb. For the next 40 years patrons struggled with inaccessibility, inconvenience and a burgeoning public attendance.
April 1924
Silver Beach branch established. It operated until 1975.
1947-1951
All-out efforts for a new building at the "Civic Center" site.
Aug. 19, 1951
New building, at its present location at 210 Central opened for use. Two years after
the dedication, the old deserted Carnegie Building was demolished and the rocky
pinnacle was graded down to the street level. The site is now a parking lot behind
the Federal Building.
1890
A private reading room and subscription library was set up in the Fairhaven Bank
building (Waldron Block, 1308- 1314 12th Street and Harris) from money donated by
public spirited citizens who felt that there should be someplace for men to spend
their evenings besides the saloons. (The Waldron Block was never completed.)
1891
The Library moved to two rooms in the Mason Block (The Marketplace) at 1200 - 1206
Harris, as a subscription library with money from Cyrus Gates, C.X. Larrabee, Major
Wilkins and E.M. Wilson.
Nov. 1891
C.X. Larrabee of Fairhaven and P.B. Cornwall of Whatcom offered to donate a library
building to be shared by Whatcom and Fairhaven, to be built on the boundary line between
the two. The "Panic of 1892" spiked that prosperity bubble, and the cities could not
contribute to its cost.
1892
The City of Fairhaven, newly incorporated, took over the little library and appropriated $50,00 a month for its support. C.X. Larrabee was a prime mover and served on the first library board. Soon the Council became hard pressed for cash and could not increase the appropriations. In 1894, Larrabee and two other trustees resigned. The library struggled along anyway.
1902
Mrs. Laura Shaw was elected full-time librarian at $20.00 per month. She was head of
the Fairhaven Library until 1920 when Edith Carhart succeeded her.
Dec. 1903
Whatcom and Fairhaven were consolidated into one town.
Jan. 7, 1904
The new library board was organized to run both the Fairhaven and Bellingham Bay
libraries. It was headed by Frothingham. Fairhaven had already been promised a Carnegie
grant of $12,000 for a new building. The lot was donated by C.X. Larrabee at 1117
12 St. Carnegie eventually added another $3,500 to the grant.
Dec. 20, 1904
The new Fairhaven Library building was dedicated (construction actually completed
in July, 1905).