Literary Landmark: The Hamilton Lane Library - Robert McCloskey
91´«Ã½
Hamilton, Ohio
Dedicated May 9, 2015
Partners: Heritage Hall/ McCloskey Museum, The Lane Libraries, Ohio Educational Library Media Association, and Penguin Young Readers (Viking)
During Children’s Book Week, 2015, The Hamilton Lane Library dedicated a Literary Landmark in honor of author Robert McCloskey. Visiting Author Peter Roop read Lentil to a gathering of children and their parents. Copies of Lentil were distributed after the dedication. Valerie Elliott, manager of Smith Library of Regional History; Curt Ellison, president of the Butler County Historical Society; Nancy Follmer, president of Heritage Hall/McCloskey Museum; and Brandon Soale, curator were present, as were board members Dave Belew, Janet Sohngen, Susan Meyers, Dick Haid, Sam Ashworth, and Carol Bowling, the manager of the Hamilton Lane Library.
The following remarks were made by Gratia Banta, youth services manager of The Lane Libraries, 91´«Ã½/United for Libraries member, and Heritage Hall board member:
Our Landmark celebrates The Hamilton Lane Library -- one of the first free libraries west of the Allegheny Mountains, where two-time Caldecott Award winner Robert McCloskey walked through these doors many times as a child. This is the building that McCloskey referenced for the Alto Library in Lentil. And this is the street corner where he drew a young boy playing a harmonica. McCloskey was born in Hamilton in 1914 and his first book Lentil, featured several Hamilton scenes including this Library. Published by Viking in 1940, Lentil told the story of a boy much like McCloskey who played the harmonica. Now in its 149th year, the Hamilton Lane Library retains many links with its founder Clark Lane. Standing in front of the Library today, one can view a facade remarkably similar to how it was first described in 1866. As quoted by James E. Schwartz, Ph.D. author of Lane Public Library: Commemorating the Years 1866-1997, “The visitor who strolls up Third Street cannot fail to notice on the East side of that street, standing inside a neat iron fence a beautiful octagon structure. Its walls of brick with window and door casings of dressed stone, and a roof of variegated slate is surmounted by a cupola with stained glass windows. Also of note, please observe the weather vane on top: a book transfixed by a quill. If you look across the street you will see the house of its designer and builder, Mr. Clark Lane.”
Resources: