Fifty years ago it was hard to find
Signal Hill’s public library. The catacomb library was hidden deep beneath the
city’s City Hall. It was the smallest municipally owned library in Los Angeles
County, and perhaps the entire nation.
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From 1934-1978 Signal Hill City Hall housed the library, initially on the second floor, later the basement |
Head librarian, and only full time employee,
Mrs. Kathleen Brady found the neat cellar library with its 13,500 books a much
better place than when she came to work for the city in 1962. Then the library
occupied a small 800 square foot room which could house about 4,000 books on
the second floor of City Hall. The move to the larger quarters in 1965 not only
increased the number of books the library could hold to 20,000, but also saw an
increase in patronage. In 1967-68 a total of 13,594 books were checked out by
local residents. It also became a place to study with its brightly lit rooms
polished floors and catacomb-like atmosphere.
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The basement entry that once led to the Signal Hill library |
The “new” basement library, however,
wasn’t what the city had hoped for. In January 1964 Mayor William F. Mendenhall
announced plans for a $300,000 circular new library building to be erected on
city property on the west side of Hill Street, west of the fire station. The
newly formed Signal Hill Rotary Club had pledged to collect all the money to
construct the 25,000 book classic style library through public subscription. An architect had prepared preliminary plans
for the 2-story 13,317 square foot library which would be circular and
completely enclosed in glass, with an interior patio. The childrens’ library would
be on the ground floor, along with a vault, audio visual room, bindery and storage
area. A play area for the youngsters would be conveniently located on the first
floor. Plans called for the library to have an entry bridge off Hill Street
leading into the main lobby on the second floor. There one would find the adult
section, an office, book stacks, magazine racks and reading tables. Parking
space was to be at the rear of the property.
This “new” library was not to be. The public library remained in the basement
until December 1978 when it moved into the old city fire station. The obsolete
fire building had been renovated as part of a $1.5 million urban renewal
project that also brought the city a new police station.
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Rendering of the new 2019 library |
Signal
Hill will finally have a new library 93 years after Mary Maude Chandler Trodd convinced
W. E. Hinshaw to give her a room rent free for a library in his new brick
building at Twenty-first and Cherry. With space for a library guaranteed
she managed to cajole the City Council into giving her $30 for shelving. She then
went from door to door collecting magazines and books.
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Floor plan of the new 2019 library |
The library, with its
few shelves of books, opened in March 1926. The
library eventually expanded, placed on the top floor of Signal Hill’s new City
Hall at 2175 Cherry in 1934, later moving to the basement in 1965, and old fire
station in 1978. Mary would be very happy to learn the small steps she had
taken to create the Signal Hill Public Library have paid off. Finally Signal
Hill will have a library in a brand new building, all its own, thanks in no
small part to Mary Maude Chandler Trodd’s dream. (For more on Mary
Trodd and the creation of the Signal Hill Public Library
read my June 2017 blog on Signal Hill history).
The 14000 square foot new library is scheduled to open August 10, 2019, at 1800 E. Hill Street. Festivities begin at 11 a.m. and continue until 4 p.m.
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