DPL History
In June 1889, City Librarian John Cotton Dana established
Denver's first public library in a wing of Denver High School. He referred
to it as a "center of public happiness." In 1910, the city opened
a Central Library building of its own, an elegant Greek temple design funded
by philanthropist Andrew Carnegie and located in downtown's Civic Center
Park. Between 1913 and 1920, Carnegie also underwrote construction of the
city's first eight branch libraries. They would serve a growing city that
had previously relied on traveling trunks of books.
The "Old Main" library in Civic Center Park served downtown Denver
for 45 years, until the City commissioned the firm of Fisher and Fisher/Burnham
Hoyt to design a new Central Library at the corner of Broadway and 14th
Avenue. Opened in 1956, the new structure provided more than twice the space
of the Carnegie building, but was expected to meet Denver Public Library's
needs for only a decade. Denver experienced explosive growth between the
1950s and the 1970s. A string of new branch libraries opened to serve sprawling
neighborhoods to the southeast and southwest. Among them were the four Ross
branches, funded by the estate of Denver real estate investor Frederick
Ross.
By the late 1980s, Library collections had outgrown the Central Library
and most branch libraries. Three-quarters of Central Library materials were
stored in basements and warehouses. Moreover, aging buildings weren't adaptable
to the flowering technology of the Information Age. In 1990, an overwhelming
75 percent of the city's voters approved a $91.6 million bond issue to build
a new Central Library and renovate, expand or build new branch library buildings.
A 540,000 square-foot Central Library, the awesome design of world-renowned
Michael Graves and the Denver firm of Klipp Colussy Jenks DuBois, opened
in 1995. Branch improvements were also complete by 1995.
Denver Public Library Online ©
Updated: November 06, 2007
