Ndepụta nke ọbá akwụkwọ Carnegie na Arizona
isi ndị na-esonụ nke ụlọ akwụkwọ Carnegie dị na Arizona na-enye zuru ezu na ụlọ akwụkwọ United States Carnegie na Arizona, ebe e wuru ụlọ akwụkwọ 4 site na nri 4 (ngụkọta $ 64,000) nke Carnegie Corporation nke New York nyere site na 189 ruo 1917.
Igodo
dezie
Ụlọ akwụkwọ Carnegie
dezieLibrary | City or town |
Image | Date granted |
Grant amount |
Location | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Templeeti:Carnegie library color |Phoenix | Phoenix | Templeeti:Dts | $25,000 | 1101 W Washington St. |
Closed after serving as the Phoenix Public Library from 1908 to 1953. Now the Carnegie Center, a multi-service center which includes the Arizona State Library.[1] | |
2 | Templeeti:Carnegie library former color |Prescott | Prescott | Templeeti:Dts | $4,000 | 125 E Gurley St. |
Open from November 24, 1903, until 1975. The building is now home to several private businesses.[2] | |
3 | Templeeti:Carnegie library former color |Tucson | Tucson | Templeeti:Dts | $25,000 | 200 S 6th Ave. |
Served as the Tucson Public Library from 1901 to 1991. In 1991, it became the Tucson Children's Museum.[3] | |
4 | Templeeti:Carnegie library color |Yuma | Yuma | Templeeti:Dts | $10,000 | 350 S 3rd Ave. |
Opened February 24, 1921. Although heavily renovated in the 1950s and again in 2008, the original Carnegie library still stands as a branch library for the Yuma County Library District.[4] |
Ihe ndetu
dezie- ↑ Carnegie Center. Archived from the original on 2006-06-15. Retrieved on 2009-06-21.
- ↑ Barks. "Those were the days", The Daily Courier, October 27, 2002. Retrieved on 2009-06-21.
- ↑ Downtown Tucson Partnership > Culture > History. Retrieved on 2009-06-21.
- ↑ Library History. Yuma County Library District. Archived from the original on 2009-06-15. Retrieved on 2009-06-21.