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Stop 3 van 13

Tulsa City County Library

On your right, look for the low, red-brick building with teal-framed windows and a big white sign that reads “Tulsa City-County Library,” sitting above a neat bed of bright flowers.

This is Tulsa City-County Library-Tulsans usually just say “the library,” the way you might say “the lake” if you live near one. And while the building in front of you feels calm and practical, the story behind the system is a classic Tulsa mix: civic ambition, oil-boom growth, and a steady belief that free information is a public utility, like water or roads… just quieter.

Public library service here started in the early 1900s, and the first setup was as no-frills as it gets: books in the basement of the Tulsa County courthouse. From there, Tulsa did what a lot of fast-growing American cities did-aimed for a Carnegie grant. In 1904, that grant was $12,500, which is roughly around half a million dollars today. Over the next decade it grew-up to $42,500 in 1913 and $55,000 by 1915, or about $1.4 million in today’s money. That original Carnegie library served downtown for decades, until it was demolished in 1965-because mid-century America had a real talent for knocking down beloved buildings and calling it progress.

The modern Tulsa City-County Library system-the one that ties the county together-took shape in the early 1960s. In 1961, voters were asked to approve $3.8 million for a new Central Library and three branches, plus a 1.9 mill annual levy to keep the whole thing running. That $3.8 million was serious money at the time-think roughly $39 million in today’s dollars-so this wasn’t just “let’s buy some more books.” It was Tulsa County deciding, out loud and on a ballot, that a shared library system mattered. The new countywide setup officially kicked in July 1, 1962, when the levy went live, and the system began folding in existing local libraries-places founded by community clubs, city efforts, and even WPA-era projects. In other words: people built libraries however they could, and then the county finally tied the knot.

Today, the scale is big: 24 branches across Tulsa County, serving people who live, work, go to school, own land, or even pay property taxes here. The collection tops 1.7 million items-books, audiobooks, magazines, movies, music, e-books, the whole buffet. And it’s not just shelves: every branch has public computers and Wi‑Fi, and the system runs a bookmobile that moves materials among branches on request-basically a behind-the-scenes delivery network for your next great read. There’s also homebound delivery, literacy support for adults, meeting rooms, and reference help by phone, email, chat, text, and social media. If you have a question at 10 p.m. and type it into a message, the library won’t judge you. It’s trained not to.

Some branches carry specialized resource centers-African American, American Indian, Hispanic, genealogy-because a library isn’t just about finding information; it’s about deciding what a community is worth preserving. And the system gets noticed: Library Journal named Tulsa a “5 Star Library” in 2009 and again in 2022, and the Central Library earned a major “New Landmark Library” designation in 2019. Not bad for an institution that mostly deals in paper cuts and overdue reminders.

When you’re ready, our next stop is the Pythian Building-just walk northeast for about 4 minutes.

arrow_back Terug naar Tulsa Audiotour: Art Deco Ritmes in de Downtown Canyon
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Dit was een prima manier om Brighton te leren kennen zonder je als toerist te voelen. De vertelling had diepgang en context, maar overdreef het niet.
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