| 1897 |
Founding
of the Westmount Public Library in commemoration of Queen Victoria's
Diamond Jubilee. Bylaw 82 states that the "Free Public Library
and Reading Room
shall be forever free to the use of the inhabitants
and ratepayers of the Town." |
| 1898-1899 |
Construction
of the library designed by architect Robert Findlay. The cost for
the 1899 building, furniture and books is $16,375. |
| 1898 |
Miss Beatrice
Glen Moore hired as Librarian for $520 per year. |
| 1898 |
June 20, Gala
opening of the Library. Records show 694 borrowers and a collection
of 1992 books. |
| 1900 |
Ms. Mary Solace
Saxe is hired as Librarian. |
| 1911 |
Opening of
the Children's Department. Robert Findlay designs the extension to
include a workroom and a receiving room in the basement. Ms Saxe attends
a meeting of the British Library Association in Liverpool. |
| 1914 |
More than
500 books are sent to England for rebinding. McGill binder repairs
90 volumes. Story hours are held on Saturday mornings. A separate
Reference Desk service is opened. |
| 1917 |
The Library
stacks are opened to the public. |
| 1925 |
An
addition to the library is designed by Robert Findlay and his son
Frank. This addition includes more stack space, an additional reading
room and a new librarian's office. The windows are inserted with the
names of Canadian authors. The new wing contains the music section,
the art section, reference books and a mezzanine floor. First recorded
cooperative efforts with the local schools. |
| 1929 |
The picture
file is created. |
| 1930 |
Librarian
Mary Saxe retires. Kathleen Jenkins is hired as Chief Librarian. |
| 1936 |
Remodelling
and modernising of the Library building are completed. This includes
a new workroom, new concrete floors, air conditioning, new counters
for borrowers. The turnstile to the stacks is removed. |
| 1940 |
Summer loan
of library materials for vacations from 3 - 8 weeks permitted. The
one novel only rule is relaxed. Borrowers can have one new book and
any two others. Services of the Library and Reading room are made
available to all ranks of the Active Service garrisoned in Westmount.
The Library acts as a receiving station for donations of books and
magazines on behalf of the Armed Forces. |
| 1943 |
The
number of books purchased drops sharply due to poor paper and binding.
The Library has considerable difficulties acquiring new titles, especially
children's. The Library is appointed Curator of all material collected
by the newly formed Westmount Historical Association. A Music Appreciation
Group is formed and gives fortnightly concerts in the Library. |
| 1943-1949 |
Recataloguing
and reclassification of the Library's book stock; the Dewey Decimal
System replaces the alphabet system. |
| 1946 |
Poliomyelitis
epidemic closes the Children's Department for 5 weeks. |
| 1947 |
Sharp price
increases for books; 40% - 60% for novels. |
| 1948 |
The Library
celebrates its 50th anniversary with 200 invited guests. A pamphlet
describing library services is distributed to all Westmount householders.
The Library loan period is changed from 14 - 28 days. |
| 1951 |
Membership
is extended to those living beyond the municipal boundaries for an
annual fee of $5. Paid memberships are limited to 400. Teenager section
is set up adjacent to the adult circulation desk. The Children's Department
is renovated. |
| 1954 |
New fluorescent
lights and the painting of the walls and ceilings in the Adult Department
improves lighting 6 to 8 times. Parking spaces are added. |
| 1957 |
The Carnegie
Corporation of New York donates 350 books chosen to interpret "contemporary
American civilization and its origins". |
| 1959 |
New
addition to the Library includes steel stacks for almost 100,000 volumes,
new shipping area, and new Children's Department including a separate
story room. The old Children's Department is converted into offices;
the staff workroom is doubled in size and the Reference Department
is enclosed. |
| 1961
|
First year
for provincial grants to libraries. Students of private schools in
Westmount are not charged membership fees. Paperbacks introduced especially
to fill the need in mystery section. |
| 1962
|
Mrs. Norah
Bryant becomes Chief Librarian. |
| 1963 |
The provincial
grant is used for the installation of a book depository for books
returned after hours. |
| 1964 |
A librarian
is hired specifically for the French language collection. |
| 1965 |
Student membership
is introduced. |
| 1966 |
Sight-saving
books are added to the collection. A sprinkler system is installed
in the main library building. |
| 1967 |
The
Centennial Reference Room is opened. Carpeting throughout the Library
helps to keep down noise. A filmstrip projector and 80 storytelling
film strips made from the books' original illustrations are acquired. |
| 1968 |
The Children's
Department opens in the morning during the summer. |
| 1972 |
New display
facilities are designed by Harry Mayerovitch. The Library collection
grows beyond the 100,000 mark. |
| 1973 |
Library Service
to Shut-Ins is started. |
| 1974 |
Reciprocal
memberships with LaSalle Public Library and the Town of Mount Royal
Library are approved. There is co-operative buying and exchange of
large print books with these libraries. |
| 1975 |
A cassette
collection is started. Games are provided in the Children's Library. |
| 1978 |
The first
library book sale collects $2,400 and 400 books for the collection. |
| 1979 |
An interlibrary
loan network is established between 15 Montreal public libraries. |
| 1980 |
The Children's
Library opens in the morning. English and French non-fiction are integrated
in the library collection. |
| 1981 |
An elevator
and a handicapped washroom are installed. |
| 1982 |
Rosemary
Lydon becomes Chief Librarian. The reserve stack area, including a
Government Documents area is completed. The University of Toronto
Library Automation Services produce sets of cards for the public catalogue.
Elizabeth Cleaver prints are unveiled in the Children's Department. |
| 1983 |
RECON project
(retrospective conversion of existing records to machine-readable
format) is started. |
| 1984 |
85th birthday
reception. The Library acquires its first microcomputer; an IBM personal
computer is installed to upgrade the automated cataloguing system.
The collection of Westmount materials is set up in a separate area
of the reserve stack. |
| 1985 |
A videocassette
collection is introduced. |
| 1988 |
Sorecom poll
of the Library services. By-law 82 is revised. The Trustees will be
appointed by Council and all residents as well as property owners
are eligible for appointment. The Children's Historical Collection
is catalogued. |
| 1989 |
90th anniversary
celebrations. Development Plan and Facility Study by Mr. A.W. Bowron
makes recommendations both about future operations and building expansion. |
| 1990 |
By-law
1047 deals with administrative fees and costs. 6 new staff positions
are added. An Audiovisual Desk is opened. Hours are extended on weekends.
The Building Committee compiles a comprehensive building programme
for the use of architect Peter Rose for the renovation and extension
of the Library. The Automation Committee prepares a mandate for the
Automation Consultant. |
| 1991 |
Building poll.
The citizens approve a plan to renew and enlarge the library building. |
| 1992 |
A CD-Rom workstation
is added in Reference. New higher shelving means Library art exhibits
are suspended. |
| 1993 |
A security
system is installed. GEAC Advance integrated library system is selected.
Caroline Thibodeau is hired as Director of Library and Cultural Services. |
| 1994 |
During the
renovations of the Library the adult and reference collections are
moved to 4225 Ste. Catherine St. W. The Children's Department, Audiovisual,
Technical Services and Administration move to Victoria Hall. A second
CDRom workstation is acquired. The Westmount Public Library becomes
the first public library in Quebec to connect to the Internet. |
| 1995 |
The Library
renovation and new addition are completed. On November 9 - 11, everyone
is invited to celebrate and tour the new facilities. The Library catalogue
is automated. |
| 1996 |
The Library's
WebPage is launched. The self-check system is installed. The Novell
network is installed. |
| 1997 |
Non-resident
fees are increased to $90. Opening hours are extended to 9 p.m. on
Fridays and 10 a.m. on Sundays. Re-positioning of professional staff
to support public services. Author readings and programming are greatly
expanded. The Library Mission Statement is adopted. "The mission
of the Westmount Public Library is to enrich the community by providing
a welcoming environment in which to read, learn and discover."
The CDRom network is installed. |
| 1998 |
The Library
is open during most of the ice storm but materials are not circulated.
. Library Book Clubs, French, English and Children's are formed. Non-resident
fees are increased to $125. |
| 1999 |
Centenary
celebrations are marked with special activities all year. A Victorian
Teddy Bear Party for Children and a Centennial Author Gala are held
on the Library's 100th birthday, on June 20. The Library computer
systems are upgraded to make them Y2K compliant. The Library network
is integrated with the city's email and messaging system. The Library
bylaw is revised and the role and function of the Library Committee
and of the Library are determined. |
| 2000 |
Ann Moffat
is appointed Director of Library Services. A Friends of the Library
Group is formed. Healthy Cities Committee raises $8000 for 2 Health
Databases in the Reference Department. |
| 2001 |
Friends of
the Library first booksale nets $2 400 in one day sale from donated
books.
Email offered on library reference computers.
Metcalfe house dollhouse restored for the children's department |
| 2002 |
With the Montreal
merger, all citizens of the Island of Montreal are able to have Westmount
Public Library memberships at no cost. Membership increases 60% to
14,181, circulation increases 30% to 425, 218. |
| 2003 |
Circulation
exceeds 450,000, an average of 38 per member. |
| 2004 |
The library's
Canadian Government documents collection added to the library database.
Printed library promotional flyer sent to all Westmount households
detailing services.
Library programmes and events included in Westmount's Culture, Sports
and Recreation Activities Guide.
Wireless access to the Internet available in the Library. |
| 2005 |
Library loans
DVDs
FastReads collection, a changing collection of current and popular
books is developed to deal with waiting lists.
McEntyre Writing Competition attracts over 1000 entries. |
| 2006 |
Library implements
new web-based library management system GEAC's Vubis. |