Cherry Street Library, Evansville, Indiana (1914-1955)

November 17, 2019 
/ Contributed By: Matthew Griffis

Interior of the Cherry Street Library

Interior of the Cherry Street Library

Courtesy Wisconsin Historical Society (74504)

The Cherry Street Library was a segregated branch of the Evansville Public Library (now Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library) located at 515 Cherry Street in Evansville, Indiana. It was the first free public library built north of the Ohio River exclusively for African Americans and one of twelve segregated public libraries funded by philanthropist Andrew Carnegie (the remaining eleven located in the South). The Cherry Street Library opened in November 1914 and closed in July 1955.

The Cherry Street Libraryโ€™s story began in 1911, when the Evansville Public Library accepted a $50,000 grant from Andrew Carnegie for two libraries, the West and East branches, both completed in 1912. These libraries did not provide service to African Americans. In late 1912, Chief librarian Ethel Farquhar McCollough convinced the Evansville Public Libraryโ€™s board of trustees to approach Carnegie about a separate branch library for the cityโ€™s African Americans. Carnegie donated $10,000 towards the branch in May 1913.

Local firm Clifford Shopbell & Co. designed the building with a light yellow brick and Belford stone exterior. Its main floor included reading rooms for adults and children and in its basement an auditorium contained seating for eighty. But unlike other segregated public libraries of the period, the Cherry Street Library was not managed by a separate, African American board; it was the domain of the local (white) library board.

Evansvilleโ€™s population at the time was almost 60,000, only about 6,200 of which were black. But the libraryโ€™s location on the corner of Cherry and Church streets placed it at the center of Baptist Town, Evansvilleโ€™s โ€œnegro districtโ€ at the time. The finished library opened in November 1914.

For over four decades, the Cherry Street Library provided an intellectual center for Evansvilleโ€™s African-Americans. It loaned nearly 2,000 books in its first month and by 1917 circulation had increased to over 15,000 loans a year. The library was equally successful as a community center, offering literary clubs for adults and children, hosting story hours and gardening contests, and organizing holiday parties and clothing drives for the disadvantaged. Its meeting rooms served countless community organizations and groups including the local branch of the NAACP, the Red Cross, local unions and music clubs; and its auditorium was the stage for many public lectures and musical performances.

Cherry Streetโ€™s first Branch Librarian was Fannie C. Porter; Lillian Childress Hall took over in 1915. Later librarians included Martha Roney, Minnie Slade, Thelma Rochelle and Bernice Hendricks. One of the branchโ€™s Assistant Librarians, Anna Cowen Bucker, was the wife of Dr. George W. Buckner, a physician, teacher, and former U.S. Diplomat to Liberia.

Despite its popularity, use of the Cherry Street Library began to decline in the 1940s. By 1952, the year Evansville desegregated its library facilities, much of the cityโ€™s African American population had migrated away from Baptist Town and closer to the Lincoln Gardens neighborhood. The Cherry Street library closed in July 1955 and was later sold to a local Boy Scout troop. The building remained an architectural landmark until 1971, when it was razed to make room for an expanding hospital facility.

About the Author

Author Profile

Dr. Matthew Griffis is an Assistant Professor in the School of Library and Information Science at the University of Southern Mississippi. He studies public libraries as community spaces, library buildings as social architecture, and the history of libraries in North America. In 2016, he began a three-year project funded by the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) about the twelve, Carnegie-funded segregated public libraries that opened across the American south ca. 1908-1924.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Griffis, M. (2019, November 17). Cherry Street Library, Evansville, Indiana (1914-1955). BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/cherry-street-library-evansville-indiana-1914-1955/

Source of the Author's Information:

Michele T. Fenton, โ€œWay Down Yonder at the Cherry Street Branch: A Short History of Evansvilleโ€™s Negro Library,โ€ Indiana Libraries 30:2 (2011); Michele T. Fenton, โ€œStepping Out on Faith: Lillian Childress Hall, Pioneer Black Librarian,โ€ Indiana Libraries 33:1 (2014); Herbert Goldhor, The First Fifty Years: The Evansville Public Library and the Vanderburgh County Public Library (Evansville, IN: No publisher identified, 1962).

Further Reading