Kettering, Library And Sheep Street c.1965
Photo ref:
K13108

More about this scene
A public library had been opened in 1896 in the Corn Exchange in the Market Place. It then moved to Silver Street, and finally came to rest here in 1904. The low brick building, with Ketton stone facings, cost £8,000. This was given by the philanthropist Andrew Carnegie (1835-1919), who donated part of his American fortune to building libraries in the United Kingdom in memory of what he had learnt in his Scottish youth. The building is surprisingly unpompous for the period and looks more like an affluent private house, or a village school, than a civic building.
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A Selection of Memories from Kettering
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