Middleport Public Library

{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2025}}

{{Infobox NRHP

| name = Middleport Public Library

| nrhp_type =

| image = Middleport Public Library.jpg

| caption = Front and southern side

| location = 178 S. Third St., Middleport, Ohio

| coordinates = {{coord|39|0|2|N|82|2|59|W|display=inline,title}}

| locmapin = Ohio#USA

| built = 1912

| architect = Charles P. Kircher

| added = January 6, 1986

| area = Less than {{convert|1|acre}}

| refnum = 86000033{{NRISref|version=2010a}}

}}

The Middleport Public Library is a historic Carnegie library in the Ohio River village of Middleport, Ohio, United States. Built in the early twentieth century, it has been named a historic site.

Middleport was founded as "Sheffield" during the 1820s, a time of great prosperity and rapidly increasing commerce in Meigs County. Among its earliest industries was a cotton mill, built despite the lack of cotton production in the vicinity.Larkin, Stillman Carter. [https://books.google.com/books?id=_jgVAAAAYAAJ The Pioneer History of Meigs County]. Columbus: Berlin, 1908, 6-7. Local residents formed the village's first public library in 1908, but its initial location on the second floor of a commercial building soon proved unsatisfactory. One year later, the library's board contacted Andrew Carnegie's Carnegie Corporation in order to begin participating in its library construction program. Negotiations ultimately resulted in the foundation agreeing to provide the village with construction money, and the building was completed in 1912 under the direction of Athens contractor Charles Kirchner.Owen, Lorrie K., ed. Dictionary of Ohio Historic Places. Vol. 2. St. Clair Shores: Somerset, 1999, 987.

The Middleport library is a brick building with a tiled roof and a brick foundation.{{OHC NRHP|86000033|Middleport Public Library}}, Ohio Historical Society, 2007. Accessed 2012-12-06. Its architecture is generally simple, although some details of the facade display a Georgian Revival architectural flavor; some of the more ornate examples are the pediment above the portico, the quoins, and the dentils underneath the pediment and the cornice. In January 1986, the library was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It qualified for inclusion under two different criteria: its architecture, which makes the library Middleport's most distinctive public building, and for its place in local history — besides its status as an example of small-town Carnegie libraries, it remained an icon of Middleport's early twentieth-century community activities. The library is one of three Middleport locations on the National Register, along with the John Downing Jr. House and the William H. Grant House.

The Middleport library currently is operated as a branch of Meigs County District Public Library system.{{cite web | url=https://www.meigslibrary.org/hrsloc | title=Hours and Locations | publisher=Meigs County District Public Library | accessdate=1 March 2018}}

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