Spotlight On Designated
Heritage Properties
Feature by Robert B. Hulley
Originally published in The Brampton Heritage Times
Heritage Properties
Feature by Robert B. Hulley
Originally published in The Brampton Heritage Times

The presence of a Carnegie Library was always a special feature of the towns and cities wherever they were built. As T. W. H. Leavitt the Inspector of Public Libraries for the Ontario Department of Education wrote in his 1906 report, “In more than one locality the Carnegie Library is gradually becoming the natural local centre of the community. Citizens are proud of their building and its surroundings. It rapidly makes for itself a place in the affections of the community and becomes the centre of local interests; as the fountain of intellectual life and agent of a common culture it fills many wants felt by the old and young, gradually its power for good is recognized and citizens willingly cooperate in its improvement”.

While the exterior of every Carnegie library differed, the interior functions remained very much the same. Brampton’s library was no different; it consisted of two large well lit reading rooms, a reception desk, with book stacks being easily accessible to the librarian and her assistants. The basement contained a lecture hall as well as a number of rooms for educational purposes.

All is not lost for the old Brampton Carnegie Library building but its new use would probably cause Andrew Carnegie to smile and be proud of his accomplishments. You see, it is now serves to house Brampton’s Information Technology Department which puts it in the very forefront of what Peter Newman calls “a fast pace technological world gone global.”
*For a list of existing Carnegie Library buildings in Ontario see “The Best Gift, a record of the Carnegie Libraries in Ontario” by Margaret Beckman, Stephen Langmead and John Black.
Mr. Hulley is a Building Historian and Photographer as well as being a member of the Brampton Heritage Board.
November 30, 2007