Morton Grove Public Library
Encyclopedia
The Morton Grove Public Library serves residents and businesses of the village of Morton Grove, Illinois
. Morton Grove is located 12 miles (19.3 km) north of downtown Chicago
. The Library is located at 6140 Lincoln Avenue, Morton Grove, IL 60053 and serves a population of 23,270 residents. The mission of the Morton Grove Public Library is to provide a place offering materials, programs, and services to assist the community in its pursuit of personal growth and lifelong learning.
The library is a member of the Reaching Across Illinois Library System (RAILS), a consortium of 1,500 public, private, academic, and school libraries located throughout northern and western Illinois covering an area of 27,000 square miles and one of three Illinois library systems. The library was formerly a member of North Suburban Library System (NSLS).
(WPA) financial assistance supplementing community action and in response to the educational and cultural needs of a growing community of interested and spirited citizens during the Great Depression
years. Beginning with a volunteer staff and 300 books collected through donations placed in a barrel at Village Hall, the first Library was opened using floor space in a store at 6100 Lincoln Avenue. The Library
remained at this location for about seven years until the owner of the store needed to expand.
The Library was moved to another store located at 6244 Lincoln Avenue. Volunteers manned the desk and the Library remained at this location for three years when it was forced to find a new location.
The Library made its second move to a temporary home in 1948 when it relocated to the second floor of the old Callie Avenue fire station. The Fire Department's need to reclaim that space spurred efforts to obtain a permanent library site by concerned citizens who saw the need to develop and construct a permanent building.
Monument Park had been purchased by the Women's War Working Circle as the site for their Doughboy statue, erected in 1921 to honor World War I veterans. Because of this interest in the Library, the Women's War Working Circle deeded the park property to the village, provided that the property be used as the site of a library. Village residents' 1949 approval of a $33,000 bond issue paved the way for the construction of Morton Grove's first permanent library building, in Monument Park, Georgiana and Lincoln Avenues.
The Morton Grove Public Library was dedicated and opened in its permanent facility on February 3, 1952. The new building had 1500 square feet (139.4 m²) of floor space and housed a collection of over 4,000 books. By 1954, with Morton Grove growing rapidly in the post-World War II
housing boom, the collection had grown to 5,300 volumes with an annual circulation of 21,000 items.
In June, 1956, the basement level of the new Library was remodeled for use as a Children's Room.
In 1962, after a decade of rapid growth, the residents approved a $277,000 referendum for the construction of a 11500 square feet (1,068.4 m²) addition which included a room for educational and cultural programs and meetings. The building grew to 13000 square feet (1,207.7 m²) and provided seating for 110 patrons and room for a 55,000 volume collection.
In 1965, the Library was one of twenty-two founding member libraries of the North Suburban Library System (NSLS). NSLS enabled member libraries to exchange information, share resources and establish a reciprocal borrowing program, which has led, through the years, to the practice of honoring library cards of residents throughout the state. NSLS also organized a Central Serials Service (CSS) to permit broad public access to articles from numerous periodicals. CSS was housed in the basement of the Library's facility until 1994, when loss of state funding led to its closing.
In 1969, a $240,000 referendum was passed for the remodeling of the lower level of the building into a new Children's Department. An outdoor sunken garden accessible through glass doors brightened the lower level area. The newly remodeled children's room opened on June 15, 1970.
The most recent expansion of the Library's facility was opened in 1980 and included a 160-seat auditorium and additional office space.
In response to the burgeoning interest in the Internet, the Morton Grove Public Library registered the domain name "webrary.org" and the first version of the library's website went public in 1995. The website receives over 7,000 hits per day.
In 1997, the Library became one of ten founding member libraries of NorthStarNet, a community information network and hosting service created by the North Suburban Library System (NSLS) to help libraries develop relationships with their local community groups by aiding those groups in establishing a Web presence. The Morton Grove Community Network] site provided access and contact information on businesses and organizations relevant to the residents of Morton Grove. In 2007, after NSLS ceased hosting the NorthStarNet program, the Library continued to maintain the community site until 2009.
In addition to the website, the Morton Grove Public Library also offers virtual reference
and digital reference services
. The Library was an early participant in AskAway, a consortium of Illinois
and Wisconsin
libraries, but now offers Meebo
instant messaging services when the Library is open. To augment the Library's communication to its community, a number of blogs were begun, each with a specific target audience: adults, teens, pre-teens, and parents of younger children.
Morton Grove, Illinois
Morton Grove is a village in Cook County, Illinois, United States. The population was 22,451 at the 2000 census.The Village President of Morton Grove since April 27, 2009, is Daniel J...
. Morton Grove is located 12 miles (19.3 km) north of downtown Chicago
Chicago
Chicago is the largest city in the US state of Illinois. With nearly 2.7 million residents, it is the most populous city in the Midwestern United States and the third most populous in the US, after New York City and Los Angeles...
. The Library is located at 6140 Lincoln Avenue, Morton Grove, IL 60053 and serves a population of 23,270 residents. The mission of the Morton Grove Public Library is to provide a place offering materials, programs, and services to assist the community in its pursuit of personal growth and lifelong learning.
The library is a member of the Reaching Across Illinois Library System (RAILS), a consortium of 1,500 public, private, academic, and school libraries located throughout northern and western Illinois covering an area of 27,000 square miles and one of three Illinois library systems. The library was formerly a member of North Suburban Library System (NSLS).
History
The Morton Grove Public Library was established in 1938 with federal Works Progress AdministrationWorks Progress Administration
The Works Progress Administration was the largest and most ambitious New Deal agency, employing millions of unskilled workers to carry out public works projects, including the construction of public buildings and roads, and operated large arts, drama, media, and literacy projects...
(WPA) financial assistance supplementing community action and in response to the educational and cultural needs of a growing community of interested and spirited citizens during the Great Depression
Great Depression
The Great Depression was a severe worldwide economic depression in the decade preceding World War II. The timing of the Great Depression varied across nations, but in most countries it started in about 1929 and lasted until the late 1930s or early 1940s...
years. Beginning with a volunteer staff and 300 books collected through donations placed in a barrel at Village Hall, the first Library was opened using floor space in a store at 6100 Lincoln Avenue. The Library
Library
In a traditional sense, a library is a large collection of books, and can refer to the place in which the collection is housed. Today, the term can refer to any collection, including digital sources, resources, and services...
remained at this location for about seven years until the owner of the store needed to expand.
The Library was moved to another store located at 6244 Lincoln Avenue. Volunteers manned the desk and the Library remained at this location for three years when it was forced to find a new location.
The Library made its second move to a temporary home in 1948 when it relocated to the second floor of the old Callie Avenue fire station. The Fire Department's need to reclaim that space spurred efforts to obtain a permanent library site by concerned citizens who saw the need to develop and construct a permanent building.
Monument Park had been purchased by the Women's War Working Circle as the site for their Doughboy statue, erected in 1921 to honor World War I veterans. Because of this interest in the Library, the Women's War Working Circle deeded the park property to the village, provided that the property be used as the site of a library. Village residents' 1949 approval of a $33,000 bond issue paved the way for the construction of Morton Grove's first permanent library building, in Monument Park, Georgiana and Lincoln Avenues.
The Morton Grove Public Library was dedicated and opened in its permanent facility on February 3, 1952. The new building had 1500 square feet (139.4 m²) of floor space and housed a collection of over 4,000 books. By 1954, with Morton Grove growing rapidly in the post-World War II
World War II
World War II, or the Second World War , was a global conflict lasting from 1939 to 1945, involving most of the world's nations—including all of the great powers—eventually forming two opposing military alliances: the Allies and the Axis...
housing boom, the collection had grown to 5,300 volumes with an annual circulation of 21,000 items.
In June, 1956, the basement level of the new Library was remodeled for use as a Children's Room.
In 1962, after a decade of rapid growth, the residents approved a $277,000 referendum for the construction of a 11500 square feet (1,068.4 m²) addition which included a room for educational and cultural programs and meetings. The building grew to 13000 square feet (1,207.7 m²) and provided seating for 110 patrons and room for a 55,000 volume collection.
In 1965, the Library was one of twenty-two founding member libraries of the North Suburban Library System (NSLS). NSLS enabled member libraries to exchange information, share resources and establish a reciprocal borrowing program, which has led, through the years, to the practice of honoring library cards of residents throughout the state. NSLS also organized a Central Serials Service (CSS) to permit broad public access to articles from numerous periodicals. CSS was housed in the basement of the Library's facility until 1994, when loss of state funding led to its closing.
In 1969, a $240,000 referendum was passed for the remodeling of the lower level of the building into a new Children's Department. An outdoor sunken garden accessible through glass doors brightened the lower level area. The newly remodeled children's room opened on June 15, 1970.
The most recent expansion of the Library's facility was opened in 1980 and included a 160-seat auditorium and additional office space.
In response to the burgeoning interest in the Internet, the Morton Grove Public Library registered the domain name "webrary.org" and the first version of the library's website went public in 1995. The website receives over 7,000 hits per day.
In 1997, the Library became one of ten founding member libraries of NorthStarNet, a community information network and hosting service created by the North Suburban Library System (NSLS) to help libraries develop relationships with their local community groups by aiding those groups in establishing a Web presence. The Morton Grove Community Network] site provided access and contact information on businesses and organizations relevant to the residents of Morton Grove. In 2007, after NSLS ceased hosting the NorthStarNet program, the Library continued to maintain the community site until 2009.
In addition to the website, the Morton Grove Public Library also offers virtual reference
Virtual reference
Virtual reference is the remote, computer-mediated delivery of reference information provided by library professionals to users who cannot access or do not want face-to-face communication. Virtual reference service is most often an extension of a library's existing reference service program...
and digital reference services
Digital reference services
Digital reference is a service by which library reference service is conducted online, and the reference transaction is a computer-mediated communication....
. The Library was an early participant in AskAway, a consortium of Illinois
Illinois
Illinois is the fifth-most populous state of the United States of America, and is often noted for being a microcosm of the entire country. With Chicago in the northeast, small industrial cities and great agricultural productivity in central and northern Illinois, and natural resources like coal,...
and Wisconsin
Wisconsin
Wisconsin is a U.S. state located in the north-central United States and is part of the Midwest. It is bordered by Minnesota to the west, Iowa to the southwest, Illinois to the south, Lake Michigan to the east, Michigan to the northeast, and Lake Superior to the north. Wisconsin's capital is...
libraries, but now offers Meebo
Meebo
Meebo is a social platform connecting users with their friends across the web. It began in 2005 as a browser based instant messaging program which supported multiple IM services, including Yahoo! Messenger, Windows Live Messenger, AIM, ICQ, MySpaceIM, Facebook Chat, Google Talk, CafeMom and...
instant messaging services when the Library is open. To augment the Library's communication to its community, a number of blogs were begun, each with a specific target audience: adults, teens, pre-teens, and parents of younger children.
Specialized Services
- Fiction_L - is an electronic mailing list devoted to reader's advisoryReader's advisoryReaders' advisory is a service which involves suggesting fiction and nonfiction titles to a reader through direct or indirect means. This service is a fundamental library service; however, readers' advisory also occurs in commercial contexts such as bookstores...
topics such as book discussions, booktalks, collection development issues, booklists and bibliographies, and a wide variety of other topics of interest to librarians, book discussion leaders, and others with an interest in reader's advisory. Fiction_L was developed for and by librarians dealing with fiction collections and requests; however fiction lovers worldwide are welcome to join the discussion. Among the topics discussed have been: genre study, bibliographies, workshops, audiobooks, reading clubs, and print and electronic resources The discussion is not limited to fiction, but rather covers all aspects of reader's advisory for children, young adults and adults, including non-fiction materials. The Morton Grove Public Library is the owner of Fiction_L and its archives. - MatchBook Plus - is a collection of special services that allow the individual patron to keep up-to-date on what has been added to the collection at the Morton Grove Public Library. There are four components to MatchBookPlus, each focusing on a unique aspect of the collection. MatchBook Classic consists of lists of all new purchases by the Morton Grove Public Library, with some titles having brief annotations. The patron selects from over 80 subjects and/or genres for their profile and then receives a monthly mailed or e-mailed list of new purchases in their selected areas. MatchBook Select consists of a variety of newsletters focusing on selected titles, complete with full annotations, and e-mailed to the patron. MatchBook for Kids is similar to the MatchBook Classic service, but for materials in the Youth Services Department, with over 50 nonfiction, fiction and audiovisual categories selected especially for children (through grade 6) and their parents. MatchBook DIY (Do It Yourself) is a cumulative, searchable database that lets the patron generate their own MatchBook list from the last twelve months' of purchases at the Morton Grove Public Library.
Library Directors
- Myra Aggen 1955 - 1971
- Joan Stewart 1971 - 1985
- Paul Feil 1985 - 1988
- Sharron McCoy 1988 - 2005
- Benjamin H. Schapiro 2005–2011
Awards/Grants
- 1962 - ALA/LAMA John Cotton DanaJohn Cotton DanaJohn Cotton Dana was an American librarian and museum director whose main objective was to make the library relevant to the daily lives of the citizens and to promote the benefits of reading...
Award for building referendum PR campaign - 1992 - Online Ready Reference Service (ORRS) wins Gale/RASD Research Award for Excellence in Reference and Adult Services
- 1997 - MatchBook wins the Library Public Relations Council's 1997 L. PeRCy Award, Division One, for library public relations materials.
- 1997 - Barbara Sclafani named "Best Page in Libraryland" by Will's World, a column in American LibrariesAmerican LibrariesAmerican Libraries is the official news and features magazine of the American Library Association. Published six times per year, along with four additional digital-only supplements, it is distributed to all members of the organization...
magazine. - 1999 - Mini-Grant, Bring In an Expert for marketing/writing a marketing plan from the Illinois State Library
- 2000 - Received $1,000 Adult New Reader Materials Grant from Illinois State Library
- 2001 - Received Collection Connection grant from ISL for expanding and updating the science book collection.
- 2001 - Received Assistive Technology grant from ISL for Aladdin Ambassador Reading Machine.
- 2001 - Estelle Cooperman named NSLS Trustee of the Year 2000
- 2002 - Named NSLS Library of the Year 2001
- 2003 - Best of Show award from LAMA for MGPL bags promoting the Library's Web site
- 2003 - Library Public Relations Council Award for "Share the Wealth Certificate of Merit" for refrigerator magnet, featuring photo of Library with logo text.
- 2005 - MGPL newsletter Books & Beyond awarded the L.PeRcY Public Relations 1st Place Award, Division 1
- 2005 - The L.PeRcY Public Relations 1st Place Award, Division 1, for Web sites
- 2009 - National Network of Libraries of Medicine Greater Midwest Region (NN/LM GMR) Exhibit Award, for the Low Vision Fair 2009, September 26, 2009, in Niles, IL
Resources
The Morton Grove Public Library serves the informational, professional, educational and recreational needs of Morton Grove's diverse, multicultural community. Morton Grove Public Library's building of 31000 square feet (2,880 m²) houses more than 142,000 items with an annual circulation of over 300,000 items. A variety of resources is available including:- Books
- Movies
- CDs
- Audiobooks on CD and MP3
- Playaway Audio Books
- Graphic Novels
- Magazines
- Newspapers
- Video Games
- Downloadable eBooks and Audiobooks
- Free access to subscription databases
Adults
- Art Lectures
- Music Performances
- Cooking Demonstrations
- Theatrical Presentations
- Health Programs
- Feature Films
- Foreign Films
- Travel Programs and Films
- Computer Classes and Tutorials
Children
- Storytime
- Playtime
- Wee Read Lapsit
- Video Gaming
- Drama Club
- Knitting Club
- Moovin' & Groovin'
- Family Chess Club
- Family Films
- Theatical Presentations
External links
- Morton Grove Public Library Web site (http://www.webrary.org)
- Morton Grove Public Library catalog (http://catalog/webrary.org)
- Morton Grove Public Library Board of Trustees (http://www.webrary.org/inside/libraryboard.html)