海角大神

In Kentucky, the oldest Black independent library is still making history

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Jingnan Peng/海角大神
On a tour of Louisville's Western Library, librarian Natalie Woods (right) shows a 1911 diploma of Louisville's Central High School. Its former principal, Albert Meyzeek, helped create the oldest Black public library in the U.S. still independently run today.

Thirty minutes into the library tour, Louisa Sarpee wants to work there.

History is so close to her. One block away from her high school, the small library she had never set foot in laid the foundation of African American librarianship. What is more, the library was created by a former principal of her own school. Its archives even house a diploma of her school from the time the word 鈥渃olored鈥 was still in the school鈥檚 name.

鈥淚s there any way to volunteer at the library?鈥 the ninth grader asks Natalie Woods, the librarian giving the tour. 鈥淚鈥檓 obsessed with everything here.鈥

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

At the Monitor, we love a good library story. And Western Library in Louisville, Kentucky, has a great one to tell.

鈥淪ay no more, girlfriend,鈥 Ms. Woods replies, beaming. 鈥淲e鈥檙e gonna talk.鈥

For Ms. Woods, the manager of Louisville鈥檚 , the gasps coming from the group of 18 students learning about its history is no surprise. She meets Louisvillians every day who know nothing about Western. The library under her care is the in the United States independently run by and for African Americans. It was also the earliest training ground of Black librarians from around the South. It is a legacy that has changed Ms. Woods鈥 life, and preserving it has become her vocation.

鈥淭here is so much history right here,鈥 she tells the group. 鈥淚t is now your assignment to make sure it鈥檚 not forgotten.鈥

Training ground for South鈥檚 Black librarians

The 鈥淲estern Colored Branch鈥 of the Louisville Free Public Library system opened in 1905, in an era when Black communities across the South were building institutions in the wake of emancipation, says historian Tracy K鈥橫eyer at the University of Louisville. (The name later became Western Library.)

The segregated library was considered an experiment, says Ms. Woods. Its first manager, the Rev. Thomas Fountain Blue, had in library science 鈥 because there were no library schools open to Black people.聽聽

Courtesy of Louisville Free Public Library
The first staff of Western Library, including its pioneering manager, the Rev. Thomas Fountain Blue (center), stand in front of the library. Rachel Harris (second from left, in front) worked with Blue to start a training program for Black librarians at Western.

Blue not only ran a successful library, which led to the creation of a second 鈥渃olored鈥 branch in Louisville. He also started for Black library workers. The course became the prototype for the for African Americans, which opened in 1925 at Hampton Institute in Virginia.聽

In 2003, the American Library Association in 鈥渓aying the foundation for the continued presence of African American libraries, library students, and library employees in all types of libraries within the United States and abroad.鈥

Ms. Woods remembers Blue鈥檚 cursive handwriting. The first time she held his papers, they changed her life.

She never learned about Western鈥檚 history when she grew up in Louisville. The child of a Black father and a white mother, she became a page at Louisville鈥檚 Shawnee Library. There, she would hear mentions of Western鈥檚 history.

In 2008, while working as a library clerk and attending college at night, Ms. Woods lost the vision in her left eye due to complications from surgery. She couldn鈥檛 perceive distance properly and had to relearn basic activities, such as picking up a pencil, by repetition. It was a struggle to finish college, she says, and she gave up the idea of pursuing a master鈥檚 degree in library science.

Then, one day, a supervisor brought Ms. Woods a folder of documents to transcribe. They were the papers of Thomas Fountain Blue.聽

On lined sheets, the cursive hand discussed circulation methods, library cards, and a library鈥檚 role in educating the public.聽

鈥淚 knew of him, but I didn鈥檛 know how deep and intentional he was in everything he did,鈥 Ms. Woods says. 鈥淎nd it just gave me a new love and desire to go to library school.鈥

She obtained her library degree at Florida State University. She became Western鈥檚 manager on March 6, 2016: Blue鈥檚 150th birthday.

鈥淲here everyone may feel at home鈥

When Ms. Woods started at Western, she found that many people living near Western did not even know the library exists.

The library鈥檚 archive, which includes Blue鈥檚 papers and a wealth of material on Black Louisville history, was disorganized. There was no indexing, and the room was not even locked down, Ms. Woods says.

So she started giving tours of the library, which she still offers about once a week. In 2018, she obtained a $70,000 grant to index and digitize Western鈥檚 archive.聽

It is an important archive that sheds light on 鈥渉ow Black librarians, in real time, were trying to imagine what a library to serve a Black community should look like,鈥 says David Anderson, a professor of English at University of Louisville.

Blue was 鈥渋ncredibly proactive and inventive in placing library collections where they would be used: ... public schools, barbershops, businesses, places with foot traffic,鈥 says Professor Anderson. He was 鈥渂ringing people into the branch, and taking the branch out to the people.鈥

Aside from cultivating a varied collection 鈥 from W.E.B. Dubois to Henrik Ibsen to Charles Darwin 鈥 Blue also made Western a community center 鈥渨here everyone may feel at home and share equal privileges,鈥 Blue wrote in on Louisville鈥檚 鈥渃olored鈥 libraries in 1927.聽

鈥淒uring a single month ninety-three meetings for educational and social uplift have been held in the buildings,鈥 he wrote.

Jingnan Peng/海角大神
Librarian Natalie Woods shows Thomas Fountain Blue鈥檚 handwritten notes discussing libraries. One entry says, 鈥淭his is an age of reading.鈥

A child of formerly enslaved parents, Blue attended college and seminary in Virginia and ran a Louisville YMCA before starting at Western. He died in 1935, after being denied medical care for a treatable infection, says Annette Blue, his granddaughter.聽

鈥淗e died from Jim Crow laws,鈥 she says in a Zoom interview from her home in California.

In the early 1960s, Black protesters staged in various cities to challenge library segregation, which became outlawed nationally by the Civil Rights Act. Meanwhile, Blue lay in an unmarked grave in Louisville鈥檚 Eastern Cemetery until 2022, when Ms. Woods had a headstone installed.

鈥淵ou are their legacy鈥

鈥淗ow many of you sit and talk to your parents and grandparents about how they grew up?鈥 Ms. Woods asks Louisa and her schoolmates. A few raise their hands.聽

鈥淵ou should. That鈥檚 your history,鈥 Ms. Woods says. 鈥淵ou are their legacy.鈥

Ms. Woods says she does her work in honor of Blue and her parents. She tries to embody Blue鈥檚 commitment to 鈥渢he betterment of his people.鈥 Her parents, who faced much opposition to their relationship as an interracial couple, taught her to 鈥渢reat people the way you want to be treated.鈥澛

Western sits in a low-income neighborhood. Every day, patrons come in for the free Wi-Fi and to use the library鈥檚 computers to look for jobs. Ms. Woods and her staff offer patrons one-on-one tutoring in basic computer skills and reading.聽

鈥淪he will see you through to the end of what you need,鈥 says Maggie Bailey, a resident who has received computer training at Western over the past two years.

Sometimes, Ms. Woods says, patrons talk down to her because she is a woman, or say nasty things about her race. But Ms. Woods lets it 鈥渞oll off [her] back.鈥

鈥淚 think about Reverend Blue,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 imagine he faced all those kinds of things back at that time, too. So I just keep my head up.鈥

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