Island Free Library





   Sun  —   Closed  
  Mon  —   Closed  
  Tues  —   10am-5pm  
Wed  —   10am-5pm
Thurs  —   11am-7pm
  Fri  —   10am-5pm  
  Sat  —   10am-3pm  
  

 

 

 

 
Island Free Library
P.O.Box 1830
Block Island,
RI 02807

Phone:  401.466.3233
 Fax:  401.466.3236

circ@islandfreelibrary.org

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ocean View Foundation

& Island Free Library

present

Winter Pot Lucks: Film & Food

Thursday, Feb.2 at 6 p.m.

Island Free Library

February’s presentation will be

the Disneynature film

O c e a n s

"An Extraordinary Journey

Under The Sea."

Winter Pot Lucks: Film & Food will be

presented on the first-Thursday-of-the-month (Feb.- May) so mark your calendars... For information or to make film suggestions call 401-595-7055

 


Island Free Library
History


The Island Free library was established on March 6, 1875 under the name "The Island Library Association." The members were "interested in obtaining better advantages for intellectual improvement then were then enjoyed on Block Island (Livermore, 1873). Members paid an annual fee: $1 for men, and 50 cents for woman. By the spring of the next year, 1876, the library had been established with Arthur W. Brown as librarian. By now the library had 250 volumes that fit in one bookcase at the town hall, which was located at the bottom of Center Road.
About the Library
In early 1877, after a year's operation, the number of books had reached 500, most of them donated. On Halloween night in 1923 the library was completely destroyed when the town hall burned. After starting over again, the library was located for many years in the back of Star Department store. In 1958, the library moved to Chapel Street with Bea Dodge as Librarian, into the smallest of the three shops facing the street (now part of the Hagopian marketplace).
In 1975, one hundred years after it's beginning the IFL finally moved into a brand new building on Dodge Street with Sandra Madison Gaffett at its helm. That move was the result of the generosity of Lester Dodge. When Lester Dodge died in June 1971, his will left the bulk of his estate, nearly $400,000, to the town to build and maintain a new library on his family homestead on Dodge Street. About the Library
 
The library has twice needed to expand: with a small rear extension in 1992, and with the massive newly finished renovation that has doubled the interior space just completed in 2002.

 

 

 


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