Tacoma Public Library

The Tacoma Public Library system serves residents of Tacoma, Washington. It operates eight library branches, which include a central library in downtown Tacoma, two regional locations in north and south Tacoma, and five neighborhood branch locations. Tacoma Public Library has nearly 150,000 registered users, and over 2 million items in circulation. Tacoma Public Library serves a population of 198,100 people.

Main library, Tacoma, 2015

The Main, or central, library is one of 43 Carnegie libraries built in the state of Washington. Carnegie libraries are those built with money donated by philanthropist Andrew Carnegie. This particular library was built in 1903. The Main library has been expanded since the original building was erected, and the Carnegie portion of the building now houses the Northwest Room and the Handforth Gallery. The Northwest Room holds a special collection of information on Tacoma and the Pacific Northwest. It includes photography, genealogy, rare books, and newspapers. The Handforth Gallery displays the work of local artists year round.

Tacoma Public Library offers the use of computers, databases, books, DVDs, music, ebooks, downloadable audio books, as well as programming for children, teens and adults. The library director is Kate Larsen[1]

Branches

  • Downtown Tacoma (Main) Library
  • Fern Hill Branch Library
  • Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Library (closed due to budget cuts on January 29, 2011)
  • Kobetich Library
  • Moore Library
  • Mottet Library
  • South Tacoma Branch Library
  • Swan Creek Library & Literacy Center (closed due to budget cuts on January 29, 2011)
  • Swasey Branch Library
  • Anna Lemon Wheelock Library
gollark: …
gollark: I'm not sure "choose not to be insulted" has ever actually worked.
gollark: Gambling is actually bad though.
gollark: I suppose I could add that if I had a sufficiently large dataset of fish.
gollark: ABR has no "fishing" capability presently.

References

  1. "Contact Us". 2018-11-12.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.