Toronto Star

Toronto Public Library opens its 100th branch

Newest addition to system continues a rich history dating back to early 1800s

- LAUREN PELLEY STAFF REPORTER

At the grand opening of Toronto’s newest library on Wednesday — the city’s 100th branch — a wide-eyed Pericles toddled over to his mom, clutching the classic children’s book The Wheels on the Bus.

With a big grin, the 1-year-old climbed onto Katy Haralampid­is’ lap in the children’s area of the new Scarboroug­h Civic Centre location. Haralampid­is said she brings her son to a library three to four times a week for story-time programs and reading sessions without the purchasing pressure of a bookstore and is thrilled to now have a branch around the corner. “The library is our saviour,” she said.

It seems many Torontonia­ns agree. More than 75 per cent use the public library in one way or another, according to Ron Carinci, chair of the Toronto Public Library Board.

But Toronto’s modern libraries are a far cry from what they were two centuries ago. Since the early 1800s, they have changed from a private assortment of lending libraries to the public system we know today, where more than 32 million items are borrowed every year. The early years

Once upon a time, a library was born in the old Town of York. The year was 1810. Upper Canada, the predecesso­r to Ontario, was a region of British Loyalists, settlers and farmers from the south. Amid that different world, the private Toronto Library was founded at a home on Simcoe St. and King St. W. in the town that would one day bear its name.

War was on the horizon, and soon enough the little library was looted during York’s American occupation in April 1813. The affair ended on a bitterswee­t note: That November, the commander of the U.S. fleet — a fellow by the name of Isaac Chauncey — brought back two cases of the library’s books, and an apology note.

It was the first chapter of Toronto’s rich library history: A story of war, growth and constant evolution.

In 1834, the Town of York became the City of Toronto, but changes to the area’s expanding collection of lending libraries and reading rooms didn’t follow until a half-century later. The Ontario Legislatur­e passed the Free Libraries Act in 1882, and a similar bylaw in Toronto was approved the following year.

The Toronto Public Library (TPL) officially opened its doors on March 6, 1884, and opened its first two branches the same year. Decades of growth

In the decades following, the TPL expanded its branch network across the city. Meanwhile, the entire preamalgam­ation region was growing, with 24 new libraries opened in Metropolit­an Toronto in the 1960s alone.

Then, in 1998 following the city’s amalgamati­on, the seven separate boards across Metropolit­an Toronto were merged into one library called the TPL. The late ’90s also marked a shift toward digital offerings. The TPL launched a Virtual Reference Library in 1999, for instance, while a new online catalogue offered the public access to nine million books, CDs and other materials. The modern library

When the city’s 100th branch opened to the public Wednesday, it featured all the trappings of a modern library, including free Wi-Fi and a Digital Innovation Hub with technology classes and an on-site 3D printer.

“I think the library is a lot more than a book depository,” said Ron Carinci, chair of the Toronto Public Library Board. “It’s like the new living room. It’s a community hub. We offer more than books. . . . It’s really a home away from home.”

“We’re not just about books anymore — although that’s still the heart and soul of libraries — but it’s also about creating content,” agreed city librarian Vickery Bowles. “That’s a really important part of what the public library does.” Source: TorontoPub­licLibrary.ca

 ??  ?? City librarian Vickery Bowles says public libraries are about “creating content.”
City librarian Vickery Bowles says public libraries are about “creating content.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada