This is one Mean Old Lady!

This is one Mean Old Lady!
Self-portrait: 'Quilter on Fire'
Showing posts with label eureka springs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eureka springs. Show all posts

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Andrew Carnegie and the Libraries

The Carnegie Library in Eureka Springs has been celebrating its centennial this year with special events.

This picture does not show the stairway up from the street, which makes the stone building more imposing. (
Though not very accessible in its original design, the library now has an elevator from the street level that bypasses the steep stairway. )

Andrew Carnegie's philanthropy led to the construction of 1,689 libraries in The United States; a town receiving such a grant had to provide the site, submit its design for approval, and agree to support the library with funding. (Other countries also received library grants.)

From Wikipedia:
Books and libraries were an important part of Carnegie's life, beginning with his childhood in Scotland. There he listened to readings and discussions of books from the Tradesman's Subscription Library, which his father helped create. Later, in the United States, while working for the local telegraph company in Allegheny, PA, Carnegie borrowed books from the personal library of Colonel James Anderson, who opened the collection to his workers every Saturday. In his autobiography, Carnegie credited Anderson with providing an opportunity for "working boys"to acquire the knowledge to improve themselves.


I wish I had more pictures of the interior of the Eureka Springs library, which features wood paneling and has a cozy charm. A person entering the door faces this fireplace with a portrait of Carnegie.


Is it a little strange to visit a city and check out the library? Maybe so! The words 'Carnegie Library' still evoke, for me, the sense of richness and delight that struck me the first time I entered the sunny Children's Room of The Carnegie Library in Ft. Smith, with its gleaming wood floors and huge windows.



Friday, June 25, 2010

The Springs

Eureka Springs is named, not too surprisingly, for actual fresh-water springs that emerge from the rocky cliffs. We visited only a handful (those most accessible) and found each one unique.


Grotto Spring is in a small cave below ground level.



Sweet Spring reminds one of the "Flower in the Crannied Wall." If you have forgotten your English Literature, you can look it up. (It's short.)




Speaking of reading: the city's Carnegie Library was celebrating its centennial.






One of my fondest memories of my family's four years ('54 to '58) in Fort Smith (on Arkansas' western border) was the stately, sun-lit library (also a gift of Andrew Carnegie's generosity.) We went inside the Eureka Springs building, which does not disappoint; it's everything a library should be.














Nearby is Crescent Spring, with its gazebo and another riot of blooming shrubs and flowers to delight the eye.

Rose 'Crepuscular'

Asparagus bed--post harvest

Lake Conway Mutti und Kinder