By 1812Blockhouse

As National Library Week begins, we reflect on the Mansfield/Richland County Public Library as it in turn reflects more than a century of evolution tied directly to community identity and access to knowledge.

First, as the week gets underway, the MRCPL is marking the occasion with a simple invitation: stop in, check something out, and you could walk away with a stack of new reads. Anyone who borrows at least one item this week will be entered into a drawing for a bestseller bundle featuring titles by Virginia Evans, Marissa Meyer, and Mychal Threets, with three winners—representing northern branches, southern branches, and the Main Library/Bookmobile—set to be notified on Monday, April 27.

🏛️ The origin story

  • Mansfield’s earliest public library dates to 1855, but the modern institution began in 1887.
  • Three local women—Mrs. E.O. Huggins, Mary B. Mitchell, and Helen P. Weaver—organized the effort, arguing the city could not be considered “cultured” without a public library.
  • The library opened in 1889 with about 700 books and a set of the Congressional Record.

🏗️ Carnegie-era investment

  • The original Third Street Carnegie library became a defining civic structure.
  • Funded through Andrew Carnegie’s library program, it reflected classical Greek and Roman design influences.
  • The building remains part of today’s Main Library complex and a lasting architectural landmark.

📈 Expansion and modernization

  • Under head librarian Lois McKellar (1937–1963):
  • Branches opened in Bellville, Plymouth, and Lexington.
  • A 1951 expansion enlarged the main facility.
  • Services included a radio story hour on WMAN and a Branchmobile outreach program.
  • The Friends of the Library formed in 1960, strengthening community support.
    By the late 1960s, the library added then-modern features like a photocopy machine and public telephone.

⚙️ Structural change and challenges

  • In 1965, the library drew attention when part of the roof collapsed above the circulation desk.
  • In 1977, governance shifted from the school district to county oversight, and the system was renamed the Mansfield/Richland County Public Library.

🏢 The library today

  • A 1986 bond issue funded preservation of the historic Carnegie structure alongside construction of the current facility.
  • The present expanded Main Library building was dedicated on February 12, 1989, anchoring a countywide system of branches and services.

🎉 This week

Visitors who check out at least one item during National Library Week are entered to win a bestseller bundle, with winners drawn April 27 across three service areas (see above).

Bottom line

What began as a small, advocacy-driven collection in the 1880s has grown into a countywide system shaped by architecture, innovation, and sustained public investment, still grounded in its original mission of free access to information.

Photo: 1812Blockhouse File Photo

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