Ferndale Public Library
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Ferndale Public Library | |
Ferndale's Classical Revival Carnegie Library | |
| Location | 807 Main Street, Ferndale, California |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 40°34′47″N 124°15′36″W / 40.57972°N 124.26000°W |
| Area | less than one acre |
| Built | 1909 |
| Architect | Warren Skellings |
| Architectural style | Classical Revival |
| MPS | California Carnegie Libraries MPS |
| NRHP reference No. | 90001815[1] |
| Added to NRHP | December 10, 1990 |
The Ferndale Public Library was built in 1909 as a Carnegie Grant Library on donated land and supported by the city of Ferndale, California, until becoming part of the Humboldt County Library system in 1915. It is the only Carnegie Library in northwestern California still functioning as a Public Library.
The first free reading room in Ferndale opened on 3 February 1896 on the ground floor of the Gilt Edge Building with books from the old town library and the Chapin library. The Ferndale Enterprise newspaper reported the hours of operation and added that "Smoking, loud talking, spitting on the floor, etc. will be strictly prohibited by the management," but by 12 February 1897, the reading room closed for lack of support.[2]
On November 30, 1904[3] a free public library reading room was set up in the Paine building at the corner of Main and Washington streets.[4]
Two years later, on 18 April 1906, Ferndale was struck by the Great San Francisco earthquake. The Ferndale Enterprise reported that the Paine building was "twisted and the plate glass windows were demolished." The Gilt Edge building, where the reading room had been, was so completely ruined by the earthquake that it had to be demolished in 1908.[2]