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620 Engle Street
610-494-3454
The J. Lewis Crozer Library has the distinction of being the third
library founded in the state of Pennsylvania. In 1769, a group of
citizens felt the need for a library and set up a book collection on
the second floor of a market in what was then the center of commerce in
the small borough of Chester. They named it the Lyceum. From that point
on interest peaked and waned until, in 1871, the collection was "laid
away" in a building on 4th Street in Chester.
In 1830 an act of the Legislature formed a charter changing the name
to the Chester Library Company. The library languished for about 40
years while it was situated first in the offices of a local business
then in a building also used by the community and a local church. In
1873, Laura Hand, the daughter of the pastor of the church conceived of
the idea for using the collection of books in a place where "...working
men and females might assemble in evenings for conversations and
reading." She named it the "Mechanic Reading Room" and in 1876 the
library was incorporated as the Chester Free Library.
In 1976, a new building was constructed at 620 Engle Street to serve
as a branch for the Southern and Western sections of the city. In 1978,
a board decision was made to vacate the rented quarters in the center
of the city and merge the collection into the branch building, now the
main library in the city. The board purchased the new building outright
in 1984: the West End Branch became the main library facility in
Chester.Today the library continues its work to provide Chester citizens
with the access to the information they need. A quality collection
greets the patrons, with the ability for them to request items that
their library does not currently have on the shelf. Internet access and
word processing software, and classes in their use, are provided for
all patrons. Children can use a friendly computer with games promoting
early literacy and scholastic success. The Crozer Library continues to
serve its population as the very nature of information expands and
evolves in the twenty-first century.
J. Lewis Crozer Library is not affiliated with AmericanTowns Media