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Tag Archives: Great Depression

The Library Express ~ When bookmobiles had hooves

01 Saturday Jul 2017

Posted by Elizabeth Fais in Books, Reading

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bookmobile, Elizabeth Fais, England, Fairfax County, Great Depression, Kentucky, librarians, library, Library Express, mobile library, New Deal, Pack Horse Librarians, Pack Horse Plan, Pony Express, Virginia, Warrington, Work Progress Administration, WPA

We might think of the bus-like bookmobiles as modern inventions, but they were not the first mobile libraries…not by a long shot. The first bookmobiles were little more than carts powered by hooves. There has even been a Pony Express style book delivery program known as the Pack Horse Librarians.Pony express rider

Horse-drawn libraries

The first documented mobile libraries were carts filled with books drawn by horses. Preambulating library Warrington England 1859The perambulating libraries operated in rural England as early as 1857. Warrington, England introduced a horse-drawn van in 1858 that was operated by the Warrington Mechanics’ Institute, to increase the lending of its books. [PC: Wikipedia]

In 1890, Fairfax County, Virginia got on the mobile library wagon (literally) in the northwestern part of their county. But one of the most memorable mobile libraries was a product of the Great Depression.

The library express

Pack Horse LibrarianThe Great Depression threw the entire nation into poverty, and the already poor rural areas suffered the worst. Kentucky was one of the states hardest hit by the paralyzed economy.

We humans seem to show our best when things are at their worst. Such was the case with the first Pack Horse Library, formed by the Work Progress Administration (WPA) in Leslie county, Kentucky. This new project brought reading materials to those who lived in the remote rural areas of Eastern Kentucky, an area with little electricity and fewer roads.

Unlike most New Deal programs, the Pack Horse Plan was fueled by the support ofPack Horse Librarian local communities. The only way to get books to the people living in the remote mountain areas was on horseback, and the Kentucky women didn’t shy away from the challenge. The Pack Horse Librarians mounted mules and horses with panniers filled with books and headed out into the hills.

Each Librarian made deliveries at least twice a month, covering over 100 miles a week on horseback. The Librarians took their jobs as seriously as the mail carriers, riding miles through inclement weather, across backwoods wilderness terrain.

I could go on and on about the great work done by the Pack Horse Librarians, but you’ll enjoy watching the following mini (approx. 3 min.) documentary much more.

Pack Horse Librarians


Lost History: A Glitzy Central Park Speakeasy, Turned Children’s Playground

12 Thursday Sep 2013

Posted by Elizabeth Fais in Amazing but true!, Central Park, Lost History, New York City

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Calvert Vaux, Casino, Central Park, Central Park Conservacy, Elizabeth Fais, Fiorello La Guardia, Frederick George Richard Roth, Great Depression, Ladies Refreshment Salon, Mary Harriman Rumsey, Mayor James Walker, Mother Goose Sculpture, New York City, Prohibition, Robert Moses, Rumsey Playfield, Rumsey Playground, speakeasy, SummerStage

“Lost History” Blog Series

Calendar/ClockI did a lot of  research in an around New York City’s Central Park for my young adult (YA) novel, and was amazed by the history. The stories I uncovered were all but lost, so I decided to do a blog series on them. They’re not connected to my YA novel, but they’re rich in character and deserve to be remembered. [image: morguefile.com]

The All But Forgotten “Casino”

You’ve got to wonder … not only about the children’s playground that was once the site of an exclusive speakeasy, but also the name given to the glitzy nightclub. You see, the Casino was never a gambling establishment. Go figure. [1920’s postcard]

Central Park "Casino" 1920s

But I’m getting ahead of myself, and history…

The Ladies Refreshment Salon

Ladies Refreshment Salon, Central Park, NYCThe first structure to grace the area near 71 Street and 5th Avenue was a Ladies Refreshment Salon. The two room stone cottage was designed by Calvert Vaux—co-designer of Central Park—in 1864, as a place where women could retire and partake of modestly priced food without a male escort. Those were the times when women didn’t out by themselves, unless it was an establishment specifically for ladies. The following is a sketch of the Ladies Refreshment Salon from the Annual Report of the Board of Commissioners of The Central Park, 1864 [copyright expired].

The Ladies Refreshment Salon eventually became popular with men as well as women. Over the decades the structure was expanded to accommodate the increase of customers, and modestly priced food became a thing of the past.

The Casino ~ an Elite Nightclub ~ was Born

In 1928 the Ladies Refreshment Salon was transformed into a high-pricedThe Casino at night restaurant, that turned into the see-and-be-seen night spot of Mayor James Walker and his friends.

This “new” establishment catered to the rich and famous. Guests dined on elegant French cuisine, and despite Prohibition drank their fill of bootleg liquor, as they danced the night away in a fantastic black-glass ballroom.

This photo shows rows of shiny automobiles are parked outside the glittering Casino, while their owners dance the night away. [photo nycparksgov.org]

Casino waitresses pose in the following photo from the Library of Congress.

Waitresses at the Casino

You’d think that the stock market crash of 1929 would have put an end to the Casino’s nightly revelry. But no. The parties raged on. It wasn’t until the early 1930’s, as the Depression deepened, that the public outcry at the audacious self-indulgence of the privileged few was finally heard.

Fiorello La Guardia, a political reformer, was the man who stepped up to denounce the Casino as a woopee joint. When he was elected in 1933, the tide had turned against the Casino’s blatant ostentatiousness. Unfortunately, the Casino was torn down in 1935 at the command of Parks Commissioner Robert Moses, and an architectural treasure that was an integral part of Olmsted and Vaux’s original design for Central Park was lost.

Next… A Children’s Playground and SummerStage

How do you redeem a site that catered to the wealthiest adult clientele in New York City while most of the country starved? Turn it into a children’s playground, of course!

After the demolition of the Casino, the site was developed into a playground for children and named after Mary Harriman Mother Goose StatueRumsey.  The Mother Goose sculpture, created by Frederick George Richard Roth, was installed in 1938 at the entrance to the Mary Harriman Rumsey Playground. [Image by moi]

The 60-inch granite sculpture consists of the central figure of Mother Goose astride a goose, surrounded by Humpty Dumpty, Old King Cole, Little Jack Horner, Mother Hubbard, and Mary and her little lamb. You can read more about the sculpture and the artist who created it here.

In later years, the children’s “playground” became a popular site for puppet shows. The stage area soon caught on for all manner of performances, for all age groups.

Today, this area is also referred to as the SummerStage. Music and theater performances are held in this venue throughout the summer months, and many of the concerts are free. To roll with the times and include the extended uses of the space, the Rumsey Playground is now called the Rumsey Playfield.

Rumsey Playfield map

More Lost History…

In case you missed these posts in my Lost History blog series:

  • The Revolutionary War in New York’s Central Park
  • Central Park’s First Tavern, That Became a Convent, Then a Hotel

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