Category: Uncategorized
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Gering Public Library Foundation
Yesterday, some folks asked me about the drawings we have displayed on the wall in the library. What are they? Is the plan okay with the City Council? When might it happen? The answers were, an architectural rendering of what an expansion to the library might look like, yes, if the Gering Library Foundation can…
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Resolutions
I have been working my way through one of the self-help areas of the library, weeding or removing books from the shelves that are dated or worn out. I came across a lot of books about “stuff.” How should you organize it? What should you keep? What should you do when you have too much?…
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My books from 2025
This is the time of year for reflection. Looking through the 81 books I read last year, I wanted to share some of my favorites. I hit the Revolutionary War era pretty hard. So far, Rick Atkinson has published two books in his trilogy on the Revolutionary War. I read the first, “The British Are…
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Organizing Books
Librarians like to organize things. Because our library is organized, we can easily find the one book you want in our collection of some 32,000 items. If a book is misshelved, it’s difficult to find it among the other 31,999 items. While we are careful to put books back where they belong, they don’t always…
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Shirley Weihing
An alert reader gave me several column ideas, even hinting that she herself would be a good topic for one of my columns. The Gering Library recently acquired some podcasting equipment, so I set it up at home and interviewed my neighbor, Shirley Weihing. Last week, Shirley celebrated her 102nd birthday. She was born in…
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Thomas Jefferson’s Contributions to The Library of Congress
In 1783, James Madison suggested the idea of developing a congressional library at the new capital Washington City. Before that, the capital was located in Philadelphia and New York City. Congress was able to access libraries in these cities. The new location at Washington, D.C. did not have access to an existing college or any…
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Access
written by Sherry Preston, Adult Engagement Librarian My stepdad Bill had a stroke in 2012 that left him partially paralyzed and in a wheelchair. My mother, who was in her 70s, was his sole caregiver. She lifted a 180 pound man out of bed and hoisted him and his wheelchair into the van for six…
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Indigenous Peoples Day
On October 14th, the United States celebrates Indigenous Peoples Day (held on the same day as Columbus Day). Indigenous Peoples Day was first celebrated in 1992 in the city of Berkeley, California. It spread to other cities in California and then beyond. President Joe Biden commemorated the holiday with a proclamation in 2021, 2022, and…
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History of US Public Libraries III
Here is where the title of “oldest public library in the US” starts getting into semantics. One library claims the title of oldest building, and another claims oldest building constructed to be a library, and so on. Some libraries started out as subscription libraries while others were open to the public from the beginning. Another…
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History of US Public Libraries II
When you search online for “First public library in the United States” you learn that three libraries claim this distinction. Last week I wrote about Benjamin’s Library Company. This week’s column is about Peterborough, New Hampshire, home of the first tax-supported library in the U.S.