Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
At this time, the Phoenix Public Library was established, with 1350 volumes. [2] Since 1899 the Library Association had been unsuccessfully attempting to secure a grant from Andrew Carnegie, and in December 1901 the Phoenix Woman's Club joined the campaign. Some progress was made in March 1902 when the city agreed to put up the required 10% of ...
Phoenix: Phoenix: Apr 26, 1902: $25,000 1101 W Washington St. Closed after serving as the Phoenix Public Library from 1908 to 1953. Now the Carnegie Center, a multi-service center which includes the Arizona State Library. [1] 2: Prescott
P. Paradise Valley Mall; Park Central Mall; Phoenix Arizona Temple; Phoenix Biomedical Campus; Phoenix Carnegie Library and Library Park; Phoenix Convention Center
Norton founded the Sunnyslope subdivision of Phoenix and designed the Carnegie Library, the city's first library, and the Gila County Courthouse in Globe, Arizona. William Osborn, one of Phoenix's first homesteaders. Judge Charles A. Tweed. Judge Tweed was appointed an Associate Justice to the Arizona Territorial Supreme Court.
The Carnegie Library in Middletown received $25,000 in funding from Carnegie in the early 1900s, according to the National Park Service, which has designated many of the old libraries national ...
Phoenix Carnegie Library and Library Park; Phoenix Public Library; Prescott Public Library This page was last edited on 29 December 2013, at 09:21 (UTC). ...
The Carnegie Library at 236 Third St. SW was built by Canton architect Guy Tilden and partly funded by steel magnate Andrew Carnegie. It opened to the public as the Canton Public Library in 1905 ...
The Carnegie Public Library in Boise was built for $25,000 in 1905. It was paid for by philanthropist Andrew Carnegie. The city and the Columbian Club, a women’s group, added $5,000 for furnishings.