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Item Name
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East Branch Library
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Lede
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The fourth of Carnegie's reform-era libraries in Nashville
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Story-Subject
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By 1919, the Edgefield/East Nashville suburb has grown large enough to justify Andrew Carnegie partially funding a public library here. In order to secure his funding, Carnegie libraries had to fit a formula of public support, an openness to provide a free service to all, and a proven need. The first Carnegie library in Nashville in 1904 on Polk Street.
The East Branch was designed by the New York architect Albert R. Ross who designed many of the Carnegie libraries in a characteristic Classical Revival style to convey Carnegie's conception of public libraries as temples of learning. The library opened on May 8, 1919 with grand, patriotic festivities.
This library was initially segregated and there was another Carnegie library on Hynes and 12th Avenue North called the "Negro Carnegie Library" that was meant to serve the African-American population of Nashville.
This building has withstood had a major renovation in 1999 to return
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Subtitle
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Classical-Revival gem
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Subject
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Architecture
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Classical Revival
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East Nashville
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Suburbs
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Library
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Source
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File #89: "East Nashville Library Opens"
Description Newspaper report on opening festivities
Creator The Tennessean (Nashville, TN)
Source "East Nashville Library Opens." The Tennessean, May 9, 1919. Accessed December 6, 2018. https://www.newspapers.com/image/119499322/?terms=carnegie%2Beast%2Bnashville
Date May 9, 1919
File #90: “Mrs. Lillian D. Fleming, librarian, is shown helping youngters locate books at the East Nashville branch Carnegie Library"
Description Photo inside East Branch Carnegie Library in 1932.
Creator Nashville Banner
Source 'Photomontage of libraries, the Calvary Cemetery entrance, composing staff of The Banner newspaper, and a group of football players with a church group. Nashville Banner, 1932 November 13." Nashville Banner, November 13, 1932. Accessed online December 6, 2018. http://digital.library.nashville.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/p15769coll19/id/245/rec/5
Date 1932
File #91: "Andrew Carnegie's philanthropy as golden shower."
Description Puck magazine cartoon by Louis Dalrymple, 1903
Creator Louis Dalrymple
Source https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnegie_library#/media/File:Carnegie-1903.jpg
Date 1903
Rights Distributed under a CC-BY 2.0 license.
File #92: "Nashville Public Library East Branch"
Creator Nashville Public Library
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Related Resources
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Linda Wynn. "The Negro Branch of the Carnegie Library: Nashville' First African-American Public Antenaeum 1916-1949." Leaders of African-American Nashville. Nashville: Tennessee State University College of Arts and Sciences, 1997. http://www.tnstate.edu/library/documents/carnegie.pdf. Accessed December 6, 2018.
Photomontage of libraries, the Calvary Cemetery entrance, composing staff of The Banner newspaper, and a group of football players with a church group. Nashville Banner, 1932 November 13. Nashville Public Library Digital Collections. http://digital.library.nashville.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/p15769coll19/id/245/rec/5. Accessed December 6, 2018.
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Bibliographic Citation
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“East Branch Library,” Bygone Nashville, accessed September 15, 2025, https://bygone-nashville.mtsu.edu/admin/items/show/35.
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Title/Location
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East Branch Library
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Address
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206 Gallatin Ave, Nashville, TN 37206