42.208°N -83.615°WThe Ypsilanti District Library is a library in Washtenaw County, Michigan, serving Ypsilanti, Ypsilanti Township, and Superior Township. The library has been in operation since 1868, and today provides services with three branches and a bookmobile.[1]
In 1868, a small group of women started a reading group that created a library, which originally included 175 volumes. They housed the library on the second floor of the Arcade Building on North Huron. In 1886, the Arcade Building became inadequate for the purpose and the library moved to the second floor on the Union Block on Michigan Avenue.[1] In 1890, Mrs. Starkweather donated her home to the 'Ladies' Library' on Huron Street as well as new furniture and a large stained glass window.[1] The city of Ypsilanti took over the Ladies' Library in 1949, changing the name to the Ypsilanti Public Library. In 1963, the library moved into a 1915 Beaux-Arts building that had previously housed the Ypsilanti post office at 229 West Michigan Avenue.[2] The library began serving residents of nearby Ypsilanti Township in 1968, under an arrangement where the township paid the library $5 per library patron per year.[3]
In 1983, the library faced challenges with its funding, and was closed from March 25 through June 1. A ballot proposal to create an independent library district passed on April 4, separating the Ypsilanti Public Library from the city of Ypsilanti, and creating the Ypsilanti District Library. The YDL opened its first branch in 1985, the Peters Branch, located in the former Ypsilanti Township Hall on Ecorse Road.
The newly formed District Library gained a new measure of self-governance in 1990, with the election of its first Board of Trustees, and permanent funding from a 0.65 mill property tax.
The library expanded in 1992, opening the Roundtree branch at Ellsworth and Hewitt Roads, and expanding the Peters branch. A strategic plan adopted in 1995 called for a new, larger library building, which was approved by voters in 1998. The 1998 proposal approved the funding for a new library in Ypsilanti Township, along with a major renovation of the Michigan Avenue branch, and the purchase of a new bookmobile.
The new Ypsilanti Township library, located on Whittaker Road, broke ground in 2000, and opened in 2002. At 60,000 square feet, it remains the largest branch in the system, housing the library administration and the local history collection.[4]
The Ypsilanti District Library received the John Cotton Dana Library Public Relations Award for its second annual Ypsilanti Songwriting Festival in 2009.[5]
Superior Township joined the library district in 2006, expanding the library's service area to three municipalities. A temporary Superior Branch opened in 2007 in a former fire station on MacArthur Road, less than 2000 square feet in size. The temporary branch was replaced by a larger branch, which received funding in 2018,[6] and opened in 2022.[7] [8]
The library is governed by a seven-member Board of Trustees. Trustees are elected residents of the library district, serving four-year terms.[9]
Collections | Number of Items | Number of Circs | |
---|---|---|---|
Adult Books | 139,507 | 238,240 | |
Adult Books on CD | 2,894 | 19,256 | |
Adult Books on Tape | 1,171 | 3,139 | |
Adult Playaways | 237 | 1,265 | |
Adult CDs | 9,482 | 54,296 | |
Adult DVDs | 8,849 | 115,768 | |
Adult Videos | 3,898 | 12,577 | |
Language Tapes/CDs | 501 | 2,936 | |
Literacy Material | 1,287 | 805 | |
Magazines | 16,768 | 12,383 | |
Adult and Youth Reference | 10,063 | 154 | |
Interlibrary Loan | 2,936 | ||
Pamphlets/Maps | 28 | ||
Young Adult Books | 11,172 | 27,897 | |
Young Adult Books on CD | 162 | 476 | |
Young Adult Books on Tape | 121 | 134 | |
Youth Books | 93,837 | 225,461 | |
Youth Books & Cassette | 674 | 1,596 | |
Youth Books & CD | 319 | 757 | |
Youth Books on CD | 863 | 4,074 | |
Youth Books on Tape | 541 | 1,514 | |
Youth Playaways | 184 | 596 | |
Youth CDs | 1,263 | 5,976 | |
Youth Videos | 1,289 | 10,911 | |
Youth DVDs | 4,203 | 43,592 | |
Youth CD ROMS | 69 | 225 |
The library provides many services including a bookmobile, inter-library loans, tax forms, photocopies, lively arts programs, community rooms and internet access. The library currently offers the ability to check out free passes to area museums including the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History, the Arab American National Museum, Cranbrook Educational Community, and the Ypsilanti Historical Museum. The library also offers online book clubs, teen literacy activities, computer classes, and group book discussion.[10]