Tag Archives: Westport Public Library

Do Know Much About History

If you’ve stayed up nights wondering when the 1st telephone came to Westport — or the 1st white folks, or anyone for that matter — your insomnia is over.

Westporters.com — the original Staples alumni site, which over the past decade morphed into much more — has unveiled an interactive database.  It’s the gold standard for Westport history.

And trivia.

Westport Historical Society, eat your heart out.

It starts just where you’d expect:  19,000 BCE (“Glacial ice melts, creating the spillway that formed the Saugatuck River”).

The next 13,000 years were pretty dull — kind of like the 1970s — but in 6000 BCE there was “evidence of prehistoric human activity in the Green’s Farms and Old Hill areas of Westport.”  (They probably were not yet called by those names).

An early Westport family amuses themselves. Back in the day there was no beach, no Black Duck, no Netflix -- amazing!

By 1000, Native Americans began growing corn, beans, pumpkins, squash and tobacco — in other words, everything sold at today’s Farmer’s Market, except for the devil’s weed.

The Pequot Indians prospered until 1637, when they were defeated by colonial troops in the Great Swamp War (near what is now the Southport line).

In 1648, the 5 “Bankside Farmers” acquired land from the Indians of Machamux in the area around present-day Beachside Avenue and Sherwood Island.  Westporters.com does not mention whether the Bankside Farmers promptly established 5 banks on the site.  I’m betting yes.

In 1654 Mary Staples  was accused by Roger Ludlowe of being a witch.  Her husband, Thomas Staples, sued for defamation, winning 10 pounds.  That established both the Westport sport of lawsuit-filing, and the Staples-Ludlowe rivalry that lives on in high school sports today.

The timeline picks up steam in the 1800s.  In 1846 Westporters vigorously 0pposed a railroad line.  After a bitter battle, the town failed to block construction of the tracks.  It’s a good thing no one fights anything in Westport today!

The 1st telephone was installed here in 1882, at Osborn’s general store downtown.  Just in case you were wondering.

Well, at least you could see what was around you when you pulled out of parking spots.

It was followed, in 1899, by the 1st automobiles.  Local blacksmith J. Nelson Bulkley proudly displayed his Stanley Steamer.  Interestingly, there was a blacksmith here through the 1960s — far after steam-powered buggies disappeared.

In 1902, Daniel Bradley challenged the ownership and public use of Compo Beach in Bridgeport court.  He lost, but ended up with a street named after him.  At the beach.

The Board of Finance was created in 1917, after the town “unexpectedly ran out of money.”  Look for something similar to happen on a national scale sometime this summer.

Also in 1917, Westport voters defeated a proposed local alcohol prohibition ordinance, 355-256.  Two years later, the national 18th Amendment passed.  From Saugatuck to the Penguin, and throughout the rest of town, no one heard the news.

The 1st traffic signals were installed here in 1929.  As with Prohibition, no one noticed — then or now.

A 1943 “Art Attack on the Axis” exhibition at the library raised $151,000.  In today’s money, that’s enough to fill your tank with gas for an entire 15 weeks.

Westporters.com notes various other events — our 1st condos in 1977, on the site of the old Rippe’s Farm; the new library, which opened in 1986 on the site of the old dump; the May 20, 2011 purchase of the post office building — but the historical dates tabs are only part of the database.

Click on “Businesses,” and you’ll find everything from the 1st general store in Saugatuck (opened in 1798), through Allen’s Clam and Lobster House (1890), Embalmers’ Supply Company (1891) and Remarkable Book Shop (1962) to the demolition of the Main Street Mobil gas station in 1986 (think Vineyard Vines).

The much-loved Remarkable Book Shop. Or, as we call it today, Talbots. (Photo/Westporters.com)

The “Churches & Temples” tab covers includes famous events like the moving of the Saugatuck Congregational building across and down the Post Road in 1950, to less well-known moments (the 1st record of Catholic services here was 1853 — “a small gathering at the Universalist Church”).

Are disasters your thing?  We’ve had our share, from the British torching of 15 homes and 11 barns in 1779, to the 1895 destruction by fire of the Tidal Mill (sounds like an Onion headline), and more.

The “People” tab includes famous names like Jesup, Nash, Coley, Sherwood and Winslow.  “Organizations” covers everything from the PTA (established 1897) and the Fairfield County Hunt Club (1923), through Little League (1952 — actually 1951, according to LL officials) and the World Affairs Center (1961).  It’s an eclectic list, befitting our town.

There are databases for politics, population, publications and schools as well.

It’s all searchable — and you can also access it through an all-encompassing PDF file.

“06880” welcomes the Westporters.com history file.  Use it often, and well.

Though I don’t think it will stop people from emailing me questions like, “Do you remember the names of all the restaurants across from the place that used to be Toys R Us?…”

Patti Smith To Be Booked In Westport

Westport may be the only place in the world where Tom Brokaw, Calvin Trillin, Wendy Wasserstein, Pete Hamill, Martin Scorsese, Doris Kearns Goodwin, David Halberstam and Will Shortz could all appear in the same sentence.

That’s because all have been named “Booked for the Evening” honorees by the Westport Library.  Poet/punk rocker Patti Smith joins that diverse, talented list this year.  She’ll be honored May 19, at the 13th annual event.

Patti Smith (Photo: Edward Mapplethorpe)

Every honoree is different — but Patti Smith is waaay different.  Leaving a factory job in 1967, she fled to New York.  There she worked in bookstores, wrote poetry, and hung out with photographer Robert Mapplethorpe and playwright Sam Shepard.

Influenced by icons like the Stones, Hendrix, Jim Morrison and Lou Reed, she merged poetry and music.  Her debut album, “Horses,” was named the 44th greatest album of all time by Rolling Stone magazine.

She recorded 11 more albums, and in 2007 was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Her art has been shown at the Andy Warhol Museum, and the French Ministry of Culture gave her its highest honor.

Her books include Just Kids, which won the National Book Award in 2010.

Patti Smith is not a presidential historian.  She’s not a movie director, playwright or news anchor.

But she has “nurtured a love of learning, and enhanced our understanding of the world.”   That’s the criteria for a “Booked for the Evening” honor.

Will Patti Smith read poetry on May 19 — or rock the house?  Book a ticket now, and see.

(For ticket or sponsorship information, click here.)

One Less Job For The Cops

Earlier this month, “06880” wondered why the Westport Library was advising patrons to call the police department if the drop box was full.

Well, they no longer do.

New signs now suggest patrons take a calmer approach:

It reads:  “Please use the upper level return when full or during closed hours.  Please report problems with this book return to staff.”

Of course, the drop box has always said “When full, please use upper level returns.”

Maybe some library users just don’t read.

Like, The Library

People use Facebook’s “like” button for many reasons.

They like status updates.  They like comments, photos, videos.  They like to like stuff.

Tomorrow (Wednesday, April 13), everyone should like the Westport Public Library.  It’s “Snapshot Day” — a statewide event — and libraries are taking “snapshots” of the impact they have on their communities on a typical day.

This is Westport’s way of showing the rest of Connecticut that you support our library.  Clicking the “like” button tells the world that the Westport Library is important to you.

And — by liking the library — you’ll get $2 off at the Library Cafe.

What’s not to like about that?

(To find the correct page to like, search for “Westport Public Library” on Facebook.)

Remarkable Graffiti

Sometime last night, this graffiti appeared on the side of the Talbots Petites store by the Parker Harding entrance:

But it was hardly vandalism.  In Westport, graffiti is elegant — and historic.

Featuring a replica of the dude who appeared on the logo of the Remarkable Book Shop, it honors Esther Kramer — the founder and longtime owner of the long-cherished store.  She died earlier this month, at 93.

From 1962 to 1994, the Remarkable Book Shop occupied a former private home at the corner of Main Street and Parker Harding.

Painted pink, it was certainly distinctive.  Even more remarkable was what was inside.  Books on every topic imaginable — including cutting-edge topics like women’s rights — filled uneven shelves.  Overstuffed chairs invited browsers to sit, read and linger, long before Barnes & Noble turned that concept into corporate policy.

A cat curled in the corner.

The Remarkable Book Shop, back in the day. Note the dude on the logo next to the large window.

The floor was wooden, and uneven — something Esther and her staff never were.  They knew every customer — from Paul Newman and hotshot writers down to 3rd graders — by name.  Esther and her staff knew everyone’s tastes, and never hesitated to recommend a good read.

They knew what a local bookstore could — and should — be:  A community gathering place.  Warm, friendly, funky.  Something remarkable, which no one seemed to remark upon until it was gone.

Last night, someone remembered.  And made his or her mark in a way Esther no doubt would have loved.

(Fun fact:  “Remarkable” included Esther’s last name, Kramer, spelled backward.  A commemoration of her life will be held Saturday, May 7, at 2 p.m. at the Westport Library.)

A Non-Sleazy Way Around The Times Paywall

A recent “06880” posting about the New York Times’ new fee schedule for online access drew — as expected — plenty of comments.

In Westport — and the nation — a variety of people proposed a variety of ways to scale (or sneak past) the “paywall.”  From using Twitter to cutting-and-pasting URLs to subscribing to the Book Review only, even folks who never read the paper were playing games to game the system.

Just as quickly, the other side countered.  Would you steal a paper from your neighbor’s lawn — or swipe a copy from a newsstand without paying?

If you’re in the middle — you don’t want (or can’t afford) to pay, but you don’t want to feel like a thief –I’ve got 2 words:  Westport Library.

No one’s ever felt guilty about reading the Times in the library, right?

Well, you can also access specific articles and topics directly from the library’s website.  For free.

You don’t even have to leave home to do it.

In fact, you can start right now.  Just click here for the library’s website.  Go to the research page; select “research databases.” Times articles can be found through both the LexisNexis database (under “business, financial and legal”) and the “Newspaper” database.

Stumped?  Click “ask us a question” on the library’s website.

And with the money you save, consider making a donation.  Just click the “support wpl” button on the library’s website.

Also from the comfort of your home.

Friday In The Library With George

For 23 years he’s been an “amazingly steady, careful, considerate” — and friendly — face at the Westport Library.

Now, George Wagner is retiring.

George Wagner

The assistant director heads south — to Asheville, North Carolina — leaving behind one building, and thousands of library users.  He served both with tremendous devotion.

As staff liaison to building projects, George helped open the “new” library, then saw it through a renovation.

As a technology person he assisted with website designs and  renovation, and a transformation of the catalog.

In many ways, says director Maxine Bleiweis, George helped the staff make the move from a 20th century library, into the 21st.

Always, she notes, he made everyone — colleagues and clients — “feel very, very comfortable.”

Maxine is only 1 of George’s countless fans.  A staff member says that during the annual Book Sale, he does “everything from stringing hundreds of feet of phone wire across Jesup Green for the credit card machines, to making multiple trips to the bank to be sure there is plenty of change available.”

That’s one small part of George’s greatness.  The staffer continues:

He’s always the last one to leave an event liked Booked for the Evening to get the Library back in shape for the next day.  Sometimes he works late into the night, waiting for trucks to come and pick up the rented chairs and tables, or moving the piano back down to the McManus Room.

He fixes telephones, websites, email problems, book drop boxes, invoice issues, vendor problems, and budgets!

And the best thing about George is he doesn’t complain.   He must have a special place where he goes to let off steam, but we never see it.  He is steady at the helm, imparting confidence in the rest of us.

The library is not letting George go without a celebration.  This Friday (Jan. 21, 6-8 p.m.), there’s a reception in the McManus Room.

That’s very fitting.  The event will be the 1st in the renovated space — it’s got new paint, new carpets, and the black-and-white drawings by Westport artists have been re-hung.  The project is the last George supervised at the library.

The renovation was underwritten by the Friends of the Library.  That’s fitting too, Maxine notes:  George oversaw all the Friends’ book sales.

The public is invited to say “goodbye” to George on Friday.

And, of course, a very heartfelt “thanks.”

Library’s Hot Spot Gets Healthy

Just a few years ago, the Westport Library’s decision to open a tiny cafe was controversial.

Too Starbucks-y! some cried.

Too noisy! others complained.

This is a library, for god’s sake! a few harrumphed.

Library Cafe manager Sarah Tunney, hard and happily at work.

Today, of course, the Library Café is one of the most important hubs in a building that has become a true community gathering place.  It’s a spot where business meetings, study sessions, writing, socializing — and sandwich-nibbling and coffee-drinking — take place.  Often all at the same time.

Now it’s time for an upgrade.

The Café is serving healthy, organic — and local — food.

The whole grain muffins and scones are baked daily in Westport (without preservatives).

Sandwiches — available 7 days a week — come from right around the corner (well, Oscar’s and the Organic Market).

Even the soft drinks are locally bottled — and sweetened with cane sugar, not yucky ol’ corn syrup.

Café manager Sarah Tunney — who, in typical Westport Library fashion has a Ph.D., and taught at NYU — has added a few other wrinkles.

For example, a “Word of the Day” challenges patrons.

And a “Pay It Forward” option allows anyone to buy a drink for anyone else — even if she’s not there at the moment.  It’s another small piece of community-building, library director Maxine Bleiweis says.

Next week — during Staples’ mid-term exams — the cafe will stay open later than usual.  “Brain food and drink” will include free samples of “Jaina Chai,” named for teen librarian Jaina Lewis.  (It’s all local too — the black tea and spices, even the honey.)

There are also extended hours during WestportREADS events, with the added attraction of desserts and sweets from local bakeries (and sandwiches, for those who missed dinner).

The best part of the Library Cafe:  You don’t hear that annoying, just-a-bit-too-loud music Starbucks is so fond of.

Then again, what do you expect?  This is a library, for god’s sake!

Westport Welcomes A New Library

For nearly 100 years, the Westport Library got along without a logo.

But as part of her effort to make the library fresh and modern, director Maxine Bleiweis introduced one.

That was a dozen years ago.  It served its purpose — for a while.  Now it’s time to freshen up and modernize the logo.  But this is not just change for change’s sake.

“Where you put things today is totally different,” Maxine says.  With so many people accessing so many small devices — smartphones, iPads, laptops and the like — a small symbol comes in handy.

Voilà — the new Westport Library logo!

“We wanted to keep some elements, though,” Maxine says.  The old “dots” between the syllables of “library” have been replaced by…one large dot.

The “wave” — a subliminal signal that our library sits on a river — remains.  It’s even more pronounced now.

But — because the Westport Public Library is no longer a typical “library” — the logo now reads “wpl.”  It’s the modern way of communicating that all the old stuff is gone.  (Kinda like Kentucky Fried Chicken becoming KFC.)

The logo is very flexible.  The circle can be tweaked.  If, say, the library wants to promote its reference staff’s ability to answer questions more personally than Google, it can use the dot as a question mark.

“It will be fun,” Maxine promises.  Of course, that’s in the future — once the logo becomes well known on its own.

The logo wasn’t all that needed updating.  Like most organizations, its website was built when sites were static.  As pages and functions were added, and it was asked to do more — photos, video clips, commenting — the foundation could no longer support its own weight.

A new website is coming — next Tuesday or Wednesday, Maxine promises.  Here’s a preview:

The site is built on a state-of-the-art open source platform.  A robust commenting section, and greater highlights of upcoming programs, are two key features.  Plus, of course, the new logo.

If you’re the type who needs help navigating a new website — or you just enjoy going to library events — then circle Monday (Jan. 10).  From noon to 1 in the McManus Room, you’ll get a guided tour.

No, it’s not as simplistic as it sounds.  The website features exciting new options, like downloading music.  Sony catalog’s 400,000 items are online — with more to come.

Library users can download three songs a week — to an iPod, computer, probably even a Victrola.  You can create a “wish list.”  And all items are yours, forever (or until a newer, better technology comes along).

The website is also a portal to language education.  You can access at-your-own-speed instruction in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hindi, Japanese, Korean, Spanish — even American Sign Language.  (In video format, smart alec.)

Next month, the website adds a downloadable book service.  Users can “borrow” books on a variety of electronic reading devices.  There is a time limit (to be determined — probably 3-4 weeks), with an option to renew.

So there you have it:  a logo.  A website.  Downloadable music.  Downloadable books.

It’s not your father’s Westport Public Library anymore.

Not even 2010’s.

A Lot Of Hot Air?

Last Wednesday, the New York Times published a long story on global warming.

In scary, yet very scientific, terms, it examined the ongoing controversy over the seemingly irrefutable fact that every day, the world pours more carbon dioxide into the air.

Next Wednesday– at 7:30 p.m. on January 5 — Dr. James Hansen will speak at the Westport Library.

Dr. James Hansen

He’s the man who brought global warming to the world’s attention in the 1980s, in testimony before Congress.  With a background in both space and earth sciences, he has a broad perspective on the status and prospects of our little planet.

Hansen is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, an adjunct professor at Columbia, and director of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies.

His library appearance is part of WestportREADS month.  The 2011 book is Zeitoun — Dave Eggers’ account of a devout Muslim’s life during and after Hurricane Katrina.

The tie-in with that horrible hurricane is important:  global warming may be implicated in rising sea levels, and a rise in fierce hurricanes.

Every Westporter should put James Hansen’s library appearance on their calendars.  We’re a shoreline community — and global warming may have a major impact on our shore.  Some believe it already has.

Sure, the talk will be on a mid-winter night.  But it’s worth venturing out to.  Just bundle up.

Or not.

Compo Beach, a few years from now?