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The Concord Free Public Library was founded by Concord native William Munroe, son of the famed pencil-maker. Munroe worked with other prominent members of Concord to form a board of trustees that would provide financial backing for the library. Building plans were commissioned by Boston firm Snell & Gregerson. The land was purchased in 1869 ...
Harrisburg Kannapolis Mt. Pleasant Conceptual Image of Midland. The Cabarrus County Library has locations in Concord, Harrisburg, Kannapolis, Midland and Mt. Pleasant.. Records show that more than one out of three citizens of the county are registered users who have access to over two hundred and fifty thousand books, magazines, audio and video materials as well as digital collections that ...
Report of the Free Public Library Commission of Massachusetts. v.1-8 (1891–1898); v.9 (1899); v.10-18 (1900–1908); v.19-24 (1909–1914); v.25-27 (1915–1917); v.28-51 (1918–1940). Massachusetts Board of Free Public Library Commissioners. Free public library buildings of Massachusetts: a roll of honor, 1918. Wright & Potter printing co ...
Italian director Lucio Fulci's 1981 horror film The House by the Cemetery was partly filmed in Concord - notably the Holy Family Church, a Main Street realty and the Concord Free Public Library. [73] The Mother-Daughter Book Club series of children's novels is set in Concord. [74]
Concord Free Public Library; Converse Memorial Library; Cotuit Library; D. Dalton Free Public Library; Dartmouth Public Libraries (Massachusetts) Dedham Public Library;
The Minuteman Library Network (MLN), [1] founded in 1984, is a consortium of 41 public and academic libraries in the MetroWest and Middlesex County areas of eastern Massachusetts, US that share resources, patrons and services.
Concord Free Public Library; Concord Lyceum; Concord station (Massachusetts) Concord-Carlisle High School; Concord's Colonial Inn; D. Damon Mill; E. Emerson Hospital; H.
The New Hampshire State Library is a library in Concord, New Hampshire, and also a state agency, overseen since 2017 by the New Hampshire Department of Natural and Cultural Resources (DNCR). [2] The physical building is located across the street from the New Hampshire State House .