Joliet Public Library

Joliet Public Library
Established 1876
Location Joliet, Illinois
Coordinates 41°31′38″N 88°04′56″W / 41.5271°N 88.0823°W / 41.5271; -88.0823Coordinates: 41°31′38″N 88°04′56″W / 41.5271°N 88.0823°W / 41.5271; -88.0823
Branches 2
Collection
Size est. 300,000
Access and use
Circulation 1 million
Population served 145,803 (2005 census)
Other information
Director Kevin Meadows (as of January 7, 2013)
Staff 100
Website jolietlibrary.org

The Joliet Public Library (JPL) is the public library system serving the city of Joliet, Illinois. The Joliet Public Library was founded on March 7, 1876 with 750 donated books and Charlotte Akin was the first librarian.[1] Today the majority of the 300,000 item collection resides in downtown Joliet at the Main Library, in a historic limestone building designed in by Daniel H. Burnham. On April 19, 1989, the library was firebombed.

Locations

Library Board of Trustees

The Joliet Public Library Board is governed by a Board of Trustees. The trustees are appointed by the Mayor for a two-year term. The Library Board of Trustees is responsible for establishing library policy, authorizing services provided by the library, establishing the library budget, hiring the library director, and requesting the collection of the designated library millage.[2]

Local history collection

The Joliet Public Library's local history section contains a significant amount of information about the history of Joliet and Will County. Among other things the collection contains a nearly complete collection of Joliet newspapers dating back to the 1860s on microfilm, city directories for the city of Joliet dating back to the 1870s, and high school yearbooks for Joliet Township High School dating back to the early 1900s. The collection is often visited by genealogists from around the world who are researching family from Joliet or Will County.

Firebombing

Then-director James Johnson amidst the debris left after the firebombing.

On April 19, 1989, the Joliet Public Library was firebombed, destroying the non-fiction section of the children's area, closing the entire library for 9 days, and closing the children's section for several months.

References

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