I wrote this for an event but it didn't make the cut, so I post it here for your amusement:
As we start to celebrate the next 150 years of LAPL, I was thinking of things that I know that would be lost to history if I don’t put them on virtual paper. So here, in no particular order is
Betcha didn’t know that:
The old Westchester branch (1950) was SO SMALL it did not have a
building address. Everyone just knew where it was.
The oldest building is the Vermont Square Branch. The
branch was the first one built by the City of Los Angeles with a grant from the
Carnegie Foundation. Built in 1913, the Grand Old Lady of the Library
remains spry and vital at the ripe old age of nearly 110.
The largest branch is the Mid Valley Regional which houses a Regional
Branch, an area Office and the Shipping hub. Originally designed to be
the home base for the Valley Mobile Unit, the department created a shipping hub
to better serve Valley Branches when the bookmobiles were phased out.
There were originally ten Carnegie Branches in the City of
Los Angeles:
·
Arroyo Seco which was torn down to build a new branch in 1960 on
the same site. THAT building was torn down in 2001 and a new building built on
the same site.
·
Benjamin Franklin was destroyed in the 1971 Sylmar Quake. The new
branch was built on the same site. It was a twin to the Exposition Park
Branch,
·
Eagle Rock The building is still there, now serving the
community as the Eagle Rock Center for the Arts, BUT before it became an arts
center, it starred in a few low budget horror films as the “Creepy Library”
·
Goldwyn-Hollywood burned down in 1983 due to an arson fire. It
was rebuilt in 1986 on the same site.
·
San Pedro was torn down to rebuild the new branch. The old
building remained in service to the community while the new branch was being
built on the same grounds. Where the branch stood is now the parking lot.
·
Vernon was destroyed in the 1971 Sylmar quake. A new branch
was built on the same site.
·
Watts. There is no documentation as to what happened to the
branch at 9901 S. Grandee when they relocated to a larger branch built as part
of the 1957 Bond, at 1501 E. 103rd St.
There are three that remain in service:
·
Cahuenga. It was expanded and renovated as a result of the 1989
Bond.
·
Lincoln Heights. It was expanded and renovated as a result of
the 1989 Bond.
·
Vermont Square. It was expanded and renovated as a result of the
1989 Bond.
North Hollywood Library was originally named after an obscure
poet named Sidney Lanier. The Board of Library Commissioners at the time
felt it was important to name branches after historical figures who had a
connection to California or libraries. The library collection began with
a donation of books stamped “SL” Staff searched and found Sidney Lanier,
although he had no local affiliation, he was the best they could find.
Years later, the branch was renamed after Amelia Earhart. Over the mantlepiece
in the reading room, there is a quote “I am but a small, winged bird, but I
would conquer the world”. The quote is NOT, as assumed, from
Amelia. It’s Sidney.
In 1957, LAPL built 28 branches. It was a massive undertaking,
but they did save money on design. Many of the branches had the exact
same floor plan. For instance, Fairfax, Studio City and El Sereno were
“triplets”, Pacoima and Sylmar were mirror images. A sub who worked at
both places remarked once that they kept going the wrong way to get to the
workroom.
After the 1986 fire, the
original “Light of Learning “Torch was removed from the roof during
construction. The torch was considered to be too fragile to return to the
roof, but as a valued artifact, it was installed and can still be seen in an
alcove off the Rotunda on the second floor of Central Library. The
architect also repurposed some of the walls of the old children’s courtyard as
the entrance to the Taper Auditorium.
Who Ya gonna Call? Ghostbusters! The interior shots in the
opening sequence of the classic 1984 film were in the basement of the Central
Library, in an area called Toad Hall and Rat Alley (a nod to The Wind in the
Willows as well as probably acknowledging the other residents of the room)