1893
In response to the Massachusetts Library Act of 1890, the town accepted
$100 worth of books and temporarily established the "Workers Circulating
Library" with 1,827 volumes on the second floor of the old Wellfleet Savings
Bank. This elegant building with its distinctive mansard roof still stands
at the corner of Bank and Commercial Streets. Later that year, the library
was moved to a building on Main Street ownded by Capt. John Swett. In
1909 this building, with its entire collection of 2,500 books, was destroyed
by fire.
1910
New quarters were rented on the second floor of the dry-goods store on
Main Street owned by Mrs. Payne W. Higgins. Friends of the library who
were raising funds for a new library rallied public support and soon replaced
the books and persuaded the town to acquire the building, now the Wellfleet
Historical Society.
1919-1950
The Second Congregational Church in South Wellfleet, known as "Colonial
Hall," was moved in 1919 to the center of Wellfleet to be used as Memorial
Hall. In 1940, this now derelict building was rescued from condemnation
and demolition by the summer colony and the year-round residents of Wellfleet
and restored to serve as town offices. In 1950, the upper floor of Town
Hall was made available for the Library according to a long anticipated
plan.
1960
During a severe blizzard, the Hall with the Library burned to the ground.
The building was reconstructed by 1961 and the lost library restored once
again with appeals for the contributions of books. Patrons of the library
fondly remember those pleasant, carmped quarters where books overflowed
to piles on the floor and in the corners. Volunteer committees worked
for twelve years to find a larger central location. They finally settled
on a former curtain factory built in 1931 on West Main Stree which had
been converted into a candle factory.
1989
On one fall day more than 100 volunteers moved 25,000 books from the cramped
2000 square feet of Town Hall to the beautifully renovated 10,000 square
feet of the new building. The new public space permitted a dramatic expansion
and focus of the Town's cultural and civic life.
1996
In step with the burst in information technology, the library went on
line with CLAMS, an electronic catalogue of Wellfleet's holdings as well
as those of the other public libraries on the Cape and Islands. The staff,
with the help of dozens of volunteers, brought the library's capabilities
into the 21st century.
With
its hospitable atmosphere and wide range of services and activities, the
libary is the acknowledged treasure of Wellfleet.