Cobb County Public Library System
{{Short description|Public library system in Georgia, USA}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2025}}
{{Infobox library
| image = 280px
| library_name = Cobb County Public Library System
| library_logo = 300 px
| caption = Charles D. Switzer Library
| location = Cobb County, Georgia
| coordinates = {{coord|33|57|0.3672|N|84|32|38.2992|W|display=inline,title}}
| established = 1969
| num_branches = 15
| collection_size = 1,252,626 (2020)
| annual_circulation = 2,851,855 (2020)
| members = 447,378 (2020){{cite web |title=A Current Look at Georgia Public Libraries and GPLS 2020 |url=https://georgialibraries.org/statistics_files/Current_Look_FY20.pdf |publisher=GPLS |access-date=21 October 2023}}
| budget = $11.3 million (2014)
| website = http://www.cobbcat.org/
}}
The Cobb County Public Library System (CCPLS) is a system of 15 public libraries in Cobb County, Georgia, United States, excluding its second-largest city of Smyrna, which runs its own Smyrna Public Library. CobbCat.org is the online database of all CCPLS holdings.
The CCPLS uses an interlibrary loan system among all 15 branches, and allows for loan requests from other counties and areas through WorldCat. Those with a valid library card in the Cobb Country Library system can reserve materials online and pick them up in their local library. Books may be returned at any library in the system.{{cite web|title=ILL|url=http://www.cobbcat.org/using-the-library/interlibrary-loan/|website=cobbcat|accessdate=20 February 2017}}
History
=Initial libraries=
Cobb County's first library was the Marietta Young Men's Debating and Library Association, which debuted in 1874. For eight years this was the sole library of the county, until the opening of the Franklin Lending Library in 1882. With two libraries now present in the county the Marietta Library Association was founded in 1883. The first library building opened on Church Street, Marietta, and was named the Sarah Freeman Clarke Library in honor of the woman who housed the initial Franklin Lending Library collection in her home.{{cite book|last1=Scott|first1=Thomas Allan|title=Cobb County, Georgia and the Origins of the Suburban South. A Twentieth Century History|date=2003|publisher=Cobb Landmarks and Historical Society, Inc.|location=Marietta, Georgia|isbn=0-9743646-0-6|pages=412–417|edition=First}} Following the opening of the Marietta Library Association, Acworth opened its first library, the Carrie Dyer Reading Club, in 1889.{{cite book|last1=Paden|first1=Rebecca Nash|last2=McTyre|first2=Joe|title=Images of America: Cobb County|date=2005|publisher=Arcadia Publishing|isbn=0-7385-4164-8|page=49}} Austell opened its first library through the Austell Woman's Club near the end of the 1920s, and the Smyrna Public Library was founded in this decade as well.{{cite news|title=Austell Club Lays Cornerstone|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/10642904/austell_library_cobb/|accessdate=30 April 2017|volume=LIV|issue=287|publisher=The Atlanta Constitution|date=March 26, 1922}}
=Cobb County-Marietta Public Library Board=
In 1948 the Cobb County Board of Education established the Cobb County Library, taking advantage of state matching funds in order to secure monies for books to support a future county library system. During this time, and into the early 1950s, J. Dennis Kemp became concerned about the lack of library resources in unincorporated areas of Cobb County, and went to the county commissioner to see if library outreach could be afforded to these communities. A county-appointed study committee created in 1956 began to explore the possibilities of joining the Cobb County library collection with the existing Clarke Library. The next year the committee finalized a merger, creating the Cobb County-Marietta Public Library Board, and two years later in 1959 they combined and brought the Clarke and Fort Hill libraries to the system. Prior to this acquisition the Fort Hill branch was, for many decades, the only library black people could utilize.{{cite news|last1=Howard|first1=Susan|title=Fort Hill heralds liberation|publisher=Cobb Extra|date=December 29, 1983|quote=For decades, the Fort Hill library at 350 Lemon Street was the only public library in Cobb County where blacks could go.}} At its inception this county library system consisted of 25,000 books with a budget of $10,500 split into thirds by the city school system, county school system, and the county government.
With the library outreach committee continuing to explore areas of Cobb County to branch into, plans were made to grow the library system. In the late 1950s the Clarke Library moved to a larger building, the old U.S. Post Office, and had two bookmobiles serving the more rural regions. Seeing the success of the library system, the library board decided to construct branch libraries in growing towns with sufficient population densities. Thus, an onslaught of new libraries joined the system.
=Rapid growth for the system=
In 1961 two branches in East Marietta and Powder Springs were added, and in 1962 South Cobb's previously private branch joined the system alongside the Oakdale (now Lewis A. Ray) Branch. In 1963 the Acworth Library joined, a new branch was established in Kennesaw, and Central Library moved into the building previously occupied by the old Marietta Post Office (currently the Marietta/Cobb Museum of Art).{{cite web|title=Museum History|url=http://www.mariettacobbartmuseum.org/about-the-museum.html|website=Marietta/Cobb Museum of Art|accessdate=30 May 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170903053536/http://www.mariettacobbartmuseum.org/about-the-museum.html|archive-date=3 September 2017|url-status=dead}} In 1964 and 1965 the Gritters and Sweetwater Valley branches respectively joined the system.
File:Veterans Park at Powder Springs.jpg
With a rapidly growing number of branches, a 1965 voters' referendum authorized $985,000 of library bonds to be divided into library construction, land purchases, books, supplies, and equipment for the system.{{cite book|last1=Davis|first1=Mary A. Elizabeth|title=How School-Delivered, Non-Instructional Services Become Formalized:One School System's History|date=May 12, 2016|publisher=Georgia State University|page=59|url=http://scholarworks.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1168&context=eps_diss|accessdate=30 April 2017|format=Dissertation}} Due to this bond, from 1966 to 1969 seven new libraries were added: Kennesaw, East Marietta, Acworth, South Cobb, Sibley, Lewis A. Ray, and Powder Springs.{{cite book|title=City of Kennesaw Comprehensive Plan 2006-2026|date=August 2006|publisher=MACTEC Engineering and Consulting, Inc.|location=Kennesaw, Georgia|page=53|url=http://www.dca.state.ga.us/development/planningqualitygrowth/programs/downloads/plans/KennesawAssessmentSuppData.pdf|accessdate=30 April 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151008151729/http://www.dca.state.ga.us/development/PlanningQualityGrowth/programs/downloads/plans/KennesawAssessmentSuppData.pdf|archive-date=8 October 2015|url-status=dead}} All seven opened on the same day in 1967, and were met with public approval.{{cite news|title=Library Board, Staff Earn Praise|publisher=Marietta Daily Journal|date=March 7, 1967|quote=No Cobb Countian could have attended Sunday afternoon's library dedication ceremony or open houses without feeling a swell of pride and confidence in his community.}}
With such a large number of libraries representing much more than just Marietta, the system changed its name to the present-day Cobb County Public Library System in 1969.{{cite book|title=The Political Librarian|date=December 2016|page=44|edition=Volume 2, Issue 2|url=http://openscholarship.wustl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1024&context=pollib|accessdate=30 April 2017}} The Stratton branch was added in 1974, and the Merchant's Walk branch was added in 1979. In 1978 taxpayers overwhelmingly approved a $7.16 million library issue to renovate and expand the Switzer (then Central) library to 64,000 square feet, and construct the Kemp Memorial Library, Mountain View Library, and Vinings Library. The money was also used to renovate the Kennesaw and Powder Springs branches.{{cite news|title=Central Library Among Four Additions to System|publisher=Take Stock in Cobb|date=October 1989|page=2}} By the early 1980s the system had grown to fourteen libraries with an annual budget of $1.5 million and passed one million materials circulated annually.{{cite news|title=1980 Milestone Year For County Public Library|publisher=The Marietta Day Journal|date=February 1, 1981}} The Fort Hill library was rededicated as the Hattie G. Wilson library in memory of the late librarian's 33 years of service. The final two libraries added to the sixteen-branch system were the Mountain View and Vinings libraries, constructed in 1989 and 1990 respectively.
During the 1990s the population of Cobb County began to grow rapidly. The speed of the system's growth was unable to meet the needs of the growing population, and the amount of books in the collection dropped below one book per citizen. In July 1991 the Friends of the Library and the CCPLS urged the passage of a new $7.06 million bond referendum in order to provide enough books to meet the success of neighboring library systems.{{cite news|last1=Kirby|first1=Joe|title=Library officials urge passage of $7 million bond, cite rise in use|publisher=Marietta Daily Journal|date=July 5, 1992|pages=1, 10B}} Ultimately this bond referendum did not pass by 814 out of 60,000 votes.{{cite news|last1=Clelend-Pero|first1=Cathy|title=Libraries check out ways readers can help|agency=AJC|publisher=Cobb Xtra|date=January 28, 1993}}
=Modern years=
File:East Marietta Branch Library.jpg
The Cobb County Library System has continued to see growth into the 21st century. In 2002 a library in West Cobb opened, and in 2005 the South Cobb Regional Library opened. In 2007 a new building was secured in Powder Springs, and their town library moved to its new location on Atlanta Road.
In 2010 the East Cobb Library replaced the previously built Merchant's Walk Library and doubled the amount of floor space for books and technological improvements.{{cite web|title=History|url=http://www.cobbcat.org/about-us/history-2/|accessdate=20 February 2017}} While interest in libraries in this area of Cobb County was high, the Hattie G. Wilson (formerly Fort Hill) library began to show signs of disuse. Citing a 50% loss of circulation, the Wilson Library was unanimously voted to shut down in 2013.{{cite news|last1=Gillooly|first1=Jon|title=Unanimous vote closes Hattie G. Wilson Library|publisher=Marietta Daily Journal|date=January 9, 2013|quote=The Cobb Board of Commissioners closed the Hattie G. Wilson Library off Lemon Street in a 5-0 vote on Tuesday.}}
Another renovation was approved in 2016 when the East Marietta Library was chosen for a new location and new building. This new facility, the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center, opened on December 4, 2017 at a cost of $10.6 million.{{cite web|title=East Marietta Construction|url=http://www.cobbcat.org/news-updates/east-marietta-construction/|website=cobbcat|accessdate=20 February 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170221044009/http://www.cobbcat.org/news-updates/east-marietta-construction/|archive-date=21 February 2017|url-status=dead}} It was built in conjunction with the Cobb County Parks Department, and, in addition to a large collection of books, also has a black box theater, open-air amphitheater, art galleries and classrooms, and many individual and group conference rooms.{{cite news|last1=Cunningham|first1=Carolyn|title=Cobb plans $10.6 million library, cultural center|url=http://www.ajc.com/news/local/cobb-plans-million-library-cultural-center/74kXq7BYWkAyWsEjUSPeQM/|accessdate=30 April 2017|agency=Cox Media Group|publisher=AJC.com|date=April 8, 2016}}
In 2023, Cobb County Public Library was selected as the Georgia Library of the Year.{{cite news |last1=Croft |first1=Taylor |title=Cobb County wins award for Georgia’s 2023 ‘Library of the Year’ |url=https://www.ajc.com/news/atlanta-news/cobb-county-wins-award-for-georgias-2023-library-of-the-year/N7AWZIVJ3NBTLKXP43KA6Z4MTM/ |access-date=20 December 2024 |work=The Atlanta Journal-Constitution |language=English}}{{cite news |last1=Adgie |first1=Joe |title=Cobb Celebrates 'Library of the Year' Award |url=https://www.mdjonline.com/news/local/cobb-celebrates-library-of-the-year-award/article_b131f1be-f838-11ee-875f-bbae280bf789.html |work=Marietta Daily Journal |date=11 April 2024 |language=en}}{{cite web |url= https://georgialibraries.org/gpla/|title= Georgia Public Library Awards|author=|date= 24 January 2024 |website= GPLS|publisher= Georgia Public Library Service|access-date= 2 July 2024|quote=}}
Public libraries
Library systems in neighboring counties
- Bartow County Library System to the northwest
- Sequoyah Regional Library System to the north
- Fulton County Library System to the south and east
- West Georgia Regional Library System to the south and west
References
{{reflist|2}}
External links
- [http://www.cobbcat.org/ CCPLS official website and catalog]
{{authority control}}
Category:Buildings and structures in Cobb County, Georgia