
400 South State Street
312-747-4999
Information Center: 312- 747-4300
Beyond Words Cafe: 312- 747-4680
Web Site: http://www.chipublib.org
The Harold Washington Library Center is the world's largest
public library building. Its 756,640 square feet house nearly nine million
books, microforms, serials, and government documents on over 70 miles
of shelving. The library also houses special collections, including the
Chicago Blues Archive, the Chicago Theater Collection, the Civil War
Collection, and the Harold Washington Archive. It also has major collections in
business, science, technology, general information services, literature
and language, social services, special collections & preservation, visual
and performing arts; a video/film center; government publications department;
Teacher Resource Center; a Talking Book Center for people with visual or
physical
disabilities; a computer-assisted reference center; and the
Thomas Hughes Children's Library.
The children's library, designed for children from pre-school
age through the eighth grade, was named for Thomas Hughes, a member of the
British Parliament, who waged a campaign in England after much of
Chicago was destroyed by the great Chicago fire to gather donations of books
for the city. More than 8,000 volumes made their way to Chicago, which
formed the basis for the Chicago Public Library.
The library center also offers free public programs and events,
including dance and music performances, author talks, children's programs,
and computer workshops.
In addition to the library facilities, the center has a
restaurant, coffee
shop, library store, and second-hand bookstore. The library
store sells a wide selection of unusual gifts, many with a literary-theme such
as bookends, stationery and greeting cards, as well as hand-crafted
jewelry by Chicago artisans, and child-oriented items.
The second-hand bookstore, Secondhand Prose, serves as a
clearinghouse for books, record albums, foreign and domestic magazines, videos,
and audio cassettes that the library no longer needs in its collection.
Prices range from 25 cents to $2.00. Profits from both the library store and
Secondhand Prose directly benefit the public library.
Beyond Words Cafe, located on the ninth floor, offers breakfast,
lunch, and afternoon tea, all set to the backdrop of Chicago's south loop
skyline.
The library center, which opened on October 7, 1991, was named
for the man who determined that Chicago should construct an entirely new
building for its central library. Harold Washington, the city's first
African-American mayor, also was a great lover of books. Since the library
center's 1991 opening, it has averaged 6,000 visitors a day.
Free public tours of the library center are conducted daily at
noon and 2 pm. For further information, call 312-747-4136.
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