Kendall-Whittier
Library - 1931 |

Kendall-Whittier
Library- Today
|
History
of the East Second/Kendall-Whittier Library
Marilou
Marlar, branch manager 1994-present
On a hot summer
day in 1931, opening ceremonies were held for the largest
of the four original library branches built in Tulsa.
The East Second
Library, located at 2537 E. Second St., stood on a lot donated
by R.T. Daniel. It
was a colonial |
revival red brick building with large windows and a vaulted
ceiling. Virginia Allen Baird was the librarian in those early
years. A current library customer fondly remembers riding
his bicycle to the library during the 1930s. He recalls that
Whittier Square was a thriving little business district with
new homes springing up in the fields around the library.
In 1962, while Violet Williamson was the librarian, the East
Second Library became part of the Tulsa City-County Library
system. In the 1970s, the East Second Promoters, now known
as the Kendall-Whittier Library Promoters, a library friends
group, became very active. They had festivals on the lawn
and book sales in the basement. The library was an integral
part of the neighborhood.
The library served in its location on Second Street for more
than 60 years. Many Tulsans fondly remember the old East Second
Library. In spite of its charm, the old building wasn’t
highly visible, wasn’t accessible, wasn’t technology
compatible, and had other physical problems. Finally, in 1996,
due to severe structural problems, the building was torn down.
A very small temporary facility was leased at First and Lewis
streets while a site and funding were sought to build a new
library. Even though the temporary building was only a couple
of blocks from the site of the old building, it was out on
a main street. The library staff started seeing new users
who had never noticed the library back in the neighborhood.
The staff especially noticed that more of the fast-growing
Hispanic community started coming to the library.
A site across the street from the temporary facility was obtained
from the Tulsa Development Authority in 1998 for the new building.
With the passage of the 1998 library bond issue, money was
allocated for a new building. The library hired the Tulsa
architectural firm Fritz-Baily Inc. to design the building.
Input was sought from the community. A Library Design Citizen
Review Committee was formed. The committee wanted a building
that would reflect the historical flavor of the Kendall-Whittier
neighborhood. A design was chosen that included a red brick
exterior, large windows, a vaulted ceiling, and architectural
features that blended well with the historic buildings of
the area.
On March 10, 2000, at 2 p.m. hundreds of people gathered as
the doors were opened to the new Kendall-Whittier Library.
The new 5,450-square-foot building, costing $775,000, houses
32,370 volumes. The R.T. Daniel meeting room, which seats
50, houses artist Shan Goshorn’s hand-painted historical
photographs of the Kendall-Whittier area. The cupola from
the original East Second Library graces the reading area.
The community immediately flocked in record numbers to the
new facility. In the new building, the staff has continued
to build partnerships in the community, especially targeting
the growing Hispanic population. To meet the needs of this
population, the library added bilingual staff. Besides traditional
library programming, the staff works with the community on
events such as the Lights On at Whittier Square for the holidays
and the Fourth of July parade. The library hosts two large
multicultural, multigenerational family programs every year.
The fiesta celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month is now a community
tradition. Kite Day in the spring brings whole families to
the library to make and fly kites.
We entered a new millennium to see a community rebuilding
and the old East Second Library reborn as the new, very much
alive, Kendall-Whittier Library.
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