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Carnegie Branch Library (Meridian, Mississippi)

Carnegie Branch Library
Carnegie Branch Library (Meridian, Mississippi) is located in Mississippi
Carnegie Branch Library (Meridian, Mississippi)
Carnegie Branch Library (Meridian, Mississippi) is located in the US
Carnegie Branch Library (Meridian, Mississippi)
Location 2721 13th St., Meridian, Mississippi
Coordinates 32°22′10″N 88°42′23″W / 32.36944°N 88.70639°W / 32.36944; -88.70639Coordinates: 32°22′10″N 88°42′23″W / 32.36944°N 88.70639°W / 32.36944; -88.70639
Built 1913
MPS Meridian MRA
NRHP Reference # 79003385
Added to NRHP December 18, 1979

The Carnegie Branch Library at 13th St and 28th Ave in Meridian, Mississippi is one of two former Carnegie libraries in the city, both funded by a grant from Andrew Carnegie in 1904. This library was built for blacks while the other was built for whites. The other library was built at 25th Ave and 7th St and now houses the Meridian Museum of Art. Both buildings were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. The black library was demolished in 2008.

A group of women in the city had formed the Fortnightly Book and Magazine Club in the 1880s and began raising money to build a library for the city. The books they collected and shared within the club were later the basis of the library collection for Meridian. With wide support for the library, the club enlisted Israel Marks, a city leader, to approach the national philanthropist Andrew Carnegie for funding assistance. Marks, who helped operate the Marks-Rothenberg Department Store next door to the Grand Opera House, was an acquaintance of Carnegie and convinced him to issue a $38,000 grant in 1904 to the city's government to build two Carnegie libraries — one for whites and one for African-Americans. The white library would receive $30,000 while the African American one would receive $8,000.

It was asserted to be the only Carnegie library ever built for African Americans in the country, however the 1905-built Louisville Free Public Library, Western Colored Branch appears to be another.

The city used the money both to renovate the vacant building (formerly owned by the First Presbyterian Church of Meridian) at 25th Ave and 7th St and transform it into the white library and to build the African American library at 13th St and 28th Ave on land donated by a local Methodist church. The African American library was the first and only library for blacks in the state until after World War I.


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