Thursday, May 27, 2010
Library Brochure, 1961
This 1961 promotional brochure produced by Rhode Island-based cloth book binding company Arkwright-Interlaken shows the new Bertram Woods branch and profiles librarian Virginia Robinson.
Halloween, 1994
A Wild Irish Afternoon, 1991
Meet the Author in Bertram Woods Reading Garden, 1994
Pictured: Bertram Woods Branch Manager Sara Schiller (standing, left), Glen Krassen (standing, center), author Gini Hartzmark (seated, center), and Library Director Fran Buckley (seated, right).
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Woods Branch Community Room Was Named for David Dietz
Awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1937 (the same year Shaker Library was founded), Dietz was the first American journalist to be given the title "Science Editor." His accurate, easy-to-read stories about science and medicine were his trademark. Dietz often remarked that the library was special to him, and he gave hours of time in its service. Dedicated to scholarship, books, and reading, he was the author of many books and articles, including several for the Encyclopedia Britannica, and he encouraged staff to set high standards for the Library's collection.
Best Before Bedtime Stories at the Branch
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
J. Everett Prewitt visits Bertram Woods Library, 2005
Prewitt is a Glenville High School graduate who attended Ohio University and Lincoln University in Pennsylvania. A real estate appraiser and consultant, Everett has worked for fair housing in Cleveland and served as the first black president of the Cleveland Area Board of Realtors. Committed to improving the urban environment, he has encouraged local realtors to become involved with their communities. Snake Walkers is Prewitt’s first book.
Thursday, May 20, 2010
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Fond Memories of Summer Reading
I attended Shaker schools from K-12 and moved back after college. A lot has changed since the time I was in the summer reading program. Back then you had to write a short report on each book you read (I’d love to see that reinstituted.) and you moved your piece across the board based on how many books you read. I eagerly read the books and wrote the reports so I could reach the end of the board.
This past year I cleaned out some boxes and found a few years worth of the reports and even the little plastic numbered piece with the sticky glue/gum on the back that held my piece up. Clearly these items were great memories for me or else I wouldn’t have held onto them for so long. I took the reports, booklet and my marker piece to Bertram Woods and gave it to the librarians in the children’s section for them to share.
The summer reading program was a crucial part of my summer and I’ve made sure to follow this tradition with my daughter, Alyssa.
Thanks - Karen L. Jackson
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Saturday, May 8, 2010
Dedication of Bertram Woods Branch Library, June 1, 1960
Top photo (from left to right):Margaret Campbell, Bertram Woods branch librarian; David Dietz, Library Board president, and Virginia Robinson, Shaker Library Director, pose at the dedication.
Bottom photo left to right: Charles Leonard Woods, grand nephew of Bertram Woods, son of Leonard Woods, and grandson of Charles Woods; Charles Woods, brother of Bertram Woods, and Mrs. Charles Leonard Woods (Helen Lindow Woods.)
Children, Children Everywhere Quilt in the Children's Room
Did you know the quilt hanging on the soffit in the children's room is the result of a Friends of the Shaker Library intergenerational quilting project?
The children's room had been expanded and the soffit over the window was a wide open expanse of white. Friends President Susan Gall decided that a colorful quilt would enhance the space and that a quilting project would be a fitting activity during the month of August (1992) since most of the reading groups and children's activities were on hiatus. She enlisted the help of Shaker quilt artist, Ruta Marino, who decided to have children create drawings from poetry that could be translated to fabric. Coincidentally, Beaumont High School student Meghan Keefe contacted the library to offer her volunteer services. The two were a wonderful team with Meghan serving as Ruta’s organizational arm, enabling her to focus on the creative aspect of the project.
The quilt was inspired by the poem Children, Children, Everywhere by Jack Prelutsky.
Ruta read the poem and instructed children and adults to draw something that would depict the poem. Children and adults had fun coming up with an assortment of creative drawings. Some children chose a sports theme based on the everyone a winner line in the poem. One creative child used a variety of different shapes to depict the line children of all shapes and sizes.
The drawings were transferred to cloth, and children chose from bags of colorful fabric to create their fabric block. Ruta collected the squares and basted them together, and machine quilted the central block of paper doll silhouettes encircling the globe to depict children, children, everywhere.
The quilt, measuring 48 by 120 inches, was hung on the soffit and unveiled at an Artists’ Reception and Quilt Hanging on November 6, 1992. It is a treasure and a testament to a wonderful community of volunteers that crosses all generations.
Thursday, May 6, 2010
Who was Bertram Woods?
In an article in Library Journal, December 1, 1960 (p. 4282), Virginia Robinson, Librarian of the Shaker Heights Public Library, wrote:
"...the decision that expansion should come as a branch library, to be located in the fast-growing eastern section of the city. This general location also had a sentimental appeal, for it was near the birthplace of a library benefactor, Bertram Woods. Woods was a one-time railroad engineer and long-time resident of the area, who directed in his will (1949) that "at the death of my wife all that remains of my estate go to the establishment or maintenance of a public library." Eventually, to get a little ahead of the story, his bequest was used in the construction of the branch, and the building named for him."
The part of the story that Virginia Robinson skipped was that the Bertram Woods library isn't built exactly where Woods had grown up, in Warrensville Center. Warrensville Center was a community at Warrensville Center Road and Fairmount Boulevard, at the present-day Fairmount Circle (Bertram Woods' father, Henry Woods, had land on the north-east side of this intersection, now part of John Carroll University). Warrensville Center was eventually merged into the surrounding communities (Shaker Heights and University Heights).
Bertram Woods (1862-1948) was born and grew up on this farm. His will had to go to probate, because it explicitly stated it was to provide for "a public library at Warrensville Center."
However, the probate judge decreed that, as there was no longer any place known as Warrensville Center, "I think it is clear that Bertram Woods wished the people in this immediate vicinity, where he grew up as a boy, to enjoy the facilities of a library.... I believe that this bequest should not fail simply because there is no present library exactly at the old site which used to be known as Warrensville Center. It is not necessary to build a new library at that exact spot. I believe a substantial compliance of the will would result if this estate were given to the Trustees of the Library located at the northwest corner of Kinsman and Lee." That is, the Shaker Heights Public Library, formerly on Lee at Kinsman (now Chagrin Boulevard), and now located in the former Moreland Elementary School building next door. The judge's decision is quoted by promotional materials developed by the Shaker Heights Public Library in the 1960s.
These sources are both housed in our Local History Collection in the Shaker Heights Public Library (which is in the Main Library, not in the Bertram Woods branch!).