College View Public Library
College View Public Library
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College View Public Library

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College View Public Library

The College View Public Library is a historic building in the College View neighborhood of Lincoln, Nebraska, United States. It was built in 1916 as a Carnegie library with a $7,500 grant from the Carnegie Corporation. The design is Classical Revival, with "a symmetrical front facade, simple brick corner pilasters, a water table and wall cornice, and a pedimented entrance enframed by Roman Ionic columns in antis". It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since June 28, 1984.

The building functioned as a library from 1916 to 1971. It was the fourth public library for College View, the first two having burned down, and was built on land supplied by adjacent Union College. College View was annexed by Lincoln in 1930; the city assumed control of the College View library and made it a branch of the Lincoln public library system. However, it was increasingly outdated and unsuited for the residential growth experienced by the area in the 1950s and 1960s.

In 1971, the College View branch was replaced by the Charles H. Gere Branch Library as part of a modernization program funded by voters two years prior. Ownership of the building reverted to adjacent Union College, which relocated campus radio station KUCV into the building. KUCV continued to operate from the library until it was sold to the Nebraska Educational Telecommunications Commission in 1988. The building currently houses offices for Union College.

The community of College View first established a library in June 1900, when a petition circulated by local school principal M. E. Kern led to the village council establishing a subscription and a property tax. The small collection of books was originally housed in part of a new two-story building on the northeast corner of 48th and Prescott streets owned by dentist Zaimon Nicola; the library opened on March 22, 1901, only to burn down the same day.

Nicola rebuilt the structure, while Kern acquired books from Chicago to restock. The new, steel-clad building was destroyed by fire in October 1903; a new library was built using the remaining six books and insurance proceeds.

With 658 books, in 1908, a request was sent to Andrew Carnegie for funds to build a more suitable permanent library structure. A $7,500 grant was received. In 1912, Union College provided land on the northeast corner of 48th and Prescott for a new library on condition that the land would revert to the college if the library ever closed. Excavation began in 1915, and the new library was opened in January 1916. By June 30, 1916, the library had a collection of 2,584 volumes. In part based on book donation events, the collection had more than doubled to some 6,000 volumes by 1928, with the library receiving some 17,000 visitors in a year.

College View was annexed into the city of Lincoln in January 1930, and the city library board absorbed the College View library as a branch of the Lincoln public library system. By 1953, it was the only Lincoln public library to maintain Sunday hours; the Lincoln Sunday Journal and Star noted that it "had patrons from many parts of Lincoln, even sections quite a distance from the library".

In 1963, Union College began desiring the land on which the College View library sat for expansion of the science building. The Carnegie library had become inadequate for the growing population and needs of the surrounding areas, and its replacement had come to be viewed as eventually necessary. In 1965, Union College presented a 10-year building program that included the demolition of the library for a second addition to the nearby science building.

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