|
Library |
Locality |
Image |
Date granted[15] |
Grant amount[15][16] |
Location |
Notes |
1 |
Allegheny |
Allegheny County—North Side of Pittsburgh, formerly known as Allegheny City |
 |
1886 |
$481,012 |
6 Allegheny Square East |
The first Carnegie Library in the US to be commissioned and the second to open. Dedicated by Carnegie and U.S. President Benjamin Harrison on February 20, 1890. Also houses the first Carnegie Hall in the US, which is now used by the New Hazlett Theater. And starting in 2017, the library space is being renovated and being turned into the Museum Lab, which is a part of the Children's Museum across the street, and will open in April 2019. |
2 |
Beaver Falls |
Beaver Falls, Beaver County |
 |
Aug 15, 1899 |
$50,000 |
1301 7th Ave. |
The 20th Carnegie Library in the U.S. to be commissioned. |
3 |
Braddock |
Allegheny County -- Braddock |
 |
1887 |
$357,782 |
419 Library St. 40°24′07″N 79°51′56″W |
The first Carnegie Library in the US to open and the second to be commissioned. Dedicated by Carnegie and U.S. President Benjamin Harrison on March 30, 1889. Originally, it was not a publicly supported library but was fully funded by the Carnegie Steel Co. and governed by its officials. The first of four such libraries in the US to be fully endowed. An 1893 expansion doubled the size of the building and includes the third Carnegie Music Hall in the US, a Gymnasium, and a swimming pool (currently out of use). |
4 |
Bradford |
Bradford, McKean County |
 |
Jan 19, 1900 |
$40,000 |
27 Congress St. |
Library moved to a new building in 1991. Now a restaurant, Beefeaters at the Historic Carnegie Library.[17][18] |
5 |
Butler |
Butler, Butler County |
|
May 3, 1917 |
$37,000 |
218 N. McKean St. |
The last library commissioned by Carnegie in Pennsylvania and among the last in the entire country. Opened 1921; renovated 1966 and 2003 |
6 |
Carnegie |
Allegheny County -- Carnegie |
 |
Apr 26, 1898 |
$310,000 |
300 Beechwood Ave. |
The seventh Carnegie Library in the USA commissioned and the third to be fully endowed. Opened May 1, 1901. Official name: Andrew Carnegie Free Library. Of the 2,509 libraries built by Andrew Carnegie, it was the only public library granted permission to use both his first and last names. In addition to the library, it includes a 788-seat Music Hall, 140-seat Lecture Hall, Civil War Museum, and a small in-town park.[19] |
7 |
Connellsville |
Connellsville, Fayette County |
 |
Apr 22, 1899 |
$75,000 |
299 S. Pittsburgh St. |
The 13th library in the US to receive a grant. |
8 |
Corry |
Corry, Erie County |
 |
Nov 9, 1916 |
$15,000 |
203 N. Center St. |
Now a restaurant |
9 |
Duquesne |
Allegheny County -- Duquesne |
|
Jan 23, 1901 |
$310,000 |
|
The fourth and final library to be fully endowed. Carnegie had a Steel Mill here. Demolished in June 1968 |
10 |
Easton |
Easton, Northampton County |
 |
Jul 4, 1901 |
$57,500 |
515 Church St. |
|
11 |
Edgewood |
Allegheny County -- Edgewood |
|
May 8, 1914 |
$12,500 |
1 Pennwood Ave. |
C.C. Mellor Memorial Library, opened September 1, 1916. Named for Charles C. Mellor, one of the original trustees, appointed by Andrew Carnegie, of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh. |
12 |
Hamburg |
Hamburg, Berks County |
 |
Feb 20, 1903 |
$10,000 |
35 N. 3rd St. |
|
13 |
Homestead |
Allegheny County -- Munhall |
 |
Nov 27, 1896 |
$322,067 |
510 E. 10th Ave. |
The sixth Carnegie Library in the US to be commissioned and the second to be fully endowed. Opened November 5, 1898. It was the 7th to open—the Lawrenceville branch of Pittsburgh, commissioned at the same time as its main branch, opened 6 months earlier. Also contains a Carnegie Music Hall, a lecture hall, a gymnasium, a swimming pool, and a bowling alley. |
14 |
Johnstown |
Johnstown, Cambria County |
 |
Mar 9, 1890 |
$55,332 |
304 Washington St. |
The fourth Carnegie Library commissioned in the US and the first outside of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. Now the Johnstown Flood Museum. |
15 |
Mansfield |
Mansfield, Tioga County |
|
Mar 29, 1911 |
$5,000 |
71 N. Main St. |
|
16 |
McKeesport |
Allegheny County -- McKeesport |
 |
Apr 2, 1899 |
$50,000 |
1507 Library Ave. |
The 12th library in the US to receive a grant from Carnegie. Opened July 15, 1902. |
17 |
Midland |
Midland, Beaver County |
 |
May 8, 1914 |
$20,000 |
61 9th St. |
|
18 |
North Bessemer |
Allegheny County -- Penn Hills |
|
May 1, 1901 |
$20,600 |
|
Demolished in the 1950s |
19 |
Oakmont |
Allegheny County -- Oakmont |
 |
Jan 24, 1899 |
$25,000 |
700 Allegheny River Blvd. |
The tenth library in the US to receive a grant. Opened 1901. |
20 |
Oil City |
Oil City, Venango County |
 |
Apr 12, 1900 |
$44,000 |
2 Central Ave. |
|
21 |
Phoenixville |
Phoenixville, Chester County |
|
Mar 9, 1901 |
$20,000 |
183 2nd Ave. |
|
22 |
Pittsburgh Main |
Allegheny County -- Pittsburgh |
 |
Feb 6, 1890 |
$1,160,614[20] |
4400 Forbes Ave. |
The third Carnegie Library commissioned in the US and the first to have multiple branches. Main library dedicated November 5, 1895, at which time Carnegie announced an additional gift to enlarge the building. The mammoth structure in the Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh contains the Main Library, Carnegie Music Hall (the fourth to open in the USA), Carnegie Museum of Natural History, and Carnegie Museum of Art. |
23 |
Pittsburgh East Liberty |
Pittsburgh |
|
Feb 6, 1890 |
— |
|
Opened 1905, demolished in the 1960s. In 1967 a new Carnegie library opened at a different location in East Liberty. That structure was renovated in 2010 by Edge Studio. |
24 |
Pittsburgh Hazelwood |
Pittsburgh |
 |
Feb 6, 1890 |
— |
4748 Monongahela St. |
Opened August 15, 1900. The eleventh Carnegie funded library to open in America. Relocated to Second Avenue in 2004. |
25 |
Pittsburgh Homewood |
Pittsburgh |
 |
? |
$160,500 [21] |
7101 Hamilton Ave. |
Opened 1910, it was not part of Carnegie's original grant to Pittsburgh but part of a later gift. It's the last library Carnegie built in the city of Pittsburgh and is much bigger than a typical branch building. It's the library featured in episodes of the PBS show Mr. Rogers Neighborhood. Includes 300-seat auditorium. Renovated 2004. |
26 |
Pittsburgh Lawrenceville |
Pittsburgh |
 |
Feb 6, 1890 |
— |
279 Fisk St. |
Opened May 10, 1898. The 6th Carnegie Library to open in the US, it was the first 'self-service' library using an open-stacks policy. It was planned so one librarian could oversee the entire operation with a circulation desk flanked by turnstiles that admitted readers to the open stacks one at a time. Also the first library to have a room for children. The reading rooms were separated by walls that became glass partitions above waist level—under the watchful eye of the librarian.[1][22] |
27 |
Pittsburgh Mount Washington |
Pittsburgh |
 |
Feb 6, 1890 |
— |
315 Grandview Ave. |
Opened May 31, 1900; the tenth Carnegie funded library to open in America |
28 |
Pittsburgh South Side |
Pittsburgh |
 |
Feb 6, 1890 |
— |
2205 E. Carson St. |
Opened January 30, 1908, the last of those which were financed from Mr. Carnegie's original gift to the city. |
29 |
Pittsburgh West End |
Pittsburgh |
 |
Feb 6, 1890 |
— |
47 Wabash St. |
Opened January 31, 1899. The eighth Carnegie funded library to open in America. It was Carnegie's second library (after Lawrenceville branch) to have open shelves for patrons and second neighborhood branch—which he scaled down considerably from the huge structures built as central libraries and cultural centers such as Braddock, Allegheny, Homestead, and Pittsburgh Main Branch. |
30 |
Pittsburgh Wylie Avenue |
Pittsburgh |
|
Feb 6, 1890 |
— |
1911 Wylie Ave. |
Opened June 1, 1899. The ninth Carnegie funded library to open in America. Branch relocated in 1982. Original building now a mosque |
31 |
Pottsville |
Pottsville, Schuylkill County |
|
Jan 28, 1916 |
$45,000 |
215 W. Market St. |
|
32 |
Reading |
Reading, Berks County |
|
Apr 16, 1910 |
$111,180 |
100 S. 5th St. |
Dedicated May 15, 1913 |
33 |
Ridley Park |
Ridley Park, Delaware County |
 |
Jun 24, 1911 |
$10,000 |
107 E. Ward St. |
Dedicated July 4, 1912 |
34 |
Swissvale |
Allegheny County -- Swissvale |
 |
Nov 17, 1914 |
$25,000 |
1800 Monongahela Ave. |
Opened February 4, 1918. The last Library built by Carnegie in his adopted home of Allegheny County. |