Jonathan Bourne Public Library

Picture of the present Jonathan Bourne Public Library in Bourne, Massachusetts
Bourne Public Library, Massachusetts, in 1899
Portrait of Jonathan Bourne, the library's namesake

The Jonathan Bourne Public Library (est. 1891) is a public library in Bourne, Massachusetts.[1] Prior to 1891, the town lacked a public library,[2] as it was a part of the town of Sandwich. The town of Bourne was incorporated on April 2, 1884.[3] The Bourne library was named in honor of Jonathan Bourne (1811-1889), who was a New Bedford alderman, major investor in the whaling business,[4] member of executive councils of Massachusetts governors George D. Robinson and Oliver Ames, and namesake of the town of Bourne.[5] Bourne's daughter, Emily Howland Bourne, donated the library's original building in 1897.[6][7]

The 1897 building, located at 30 Keene Street, served as the library until 1985. During those years, space was on a number of occasions an issue, and the building was repeatedly modified to make room for more books and services. In April 1985, the library was moved to the former Frances Stowell Grammar School at 19 Sandwich Road. The old building has been repurposed as the Jonathan Bourne Historical Center, housing town archives and the local historic society. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2013.[8]

  1. ^ "Library Directory - MBLC". mblc.state.ma.us. Retrieved 2010-05-18.
  2. ^ "There is no library in the town of Bourne." Cf. First Report of the Free Public Library Commission of Massachusetts. 1891; p.30.
  3. ^ First Annual Report of the Town Officers of the Town of Bourne from the time of its incorporation April 2, 1884, until January 1, 1885
  4. ^ John Clark Rand. One of a thousand: a series of biographical sketches of one thousand representative men resident in the commonwealth of Massachusetts, A.D. 1888-'89. First national publishing company, 1890; p.66-67
  5. ^ Elias Nason, George Jones Varney. A gazetteer of the state of Massachusetts, rev. ed. B.B. Russell, 1890; p.190.
  6. ^ His son, Jonathan Bourne, Jr. was a senator in Oregon in the early 20th century
  7. ^ Report of the Free Public Library Commission of Massachusetts. 1899.
  8. ^ "NRHP nomination for Jonathan Bourne Public Library". Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Retrieved 2014-02-24.