Much of the structure is new and shiny, with glass walls and computer terminals everywhere. But the building incorporates the classical wood and plasterwork of the oldest part of the original (parts shown here), making an appropriate home for Watertown's excellent local history collection.
The town's own colonial and Revolutionary records are unusually thorough and have been published in several volumes. The library owns histories on many other Massachusetts localities. And this collection contains what I've come to think of as the big three historical journals for research in pre-Revolutionary Boston:
- Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society
- The New England Historical & Genealogical Register
- The Colonial Society of Massachusetts Transactions/Publications series
One addition to the Watertown library building is a small cafe. I first saw that feature of modern library architecture at the Princeton, New Jersey, library, which has a store as well. (I head to Princeton later this week, and will probably post some items from the terminals there.) A coffee shop seems to have become de rigueur for larger public libraries in the last ten years. The award-winning Newton, Massachusetts, library opened without one before that time, and lately has struggled to adapt a small conference room for that use. It appears that Barnes & Noble and Starbucks have each in their way made it impossible to read without drinking coffee, or drink coffee without reading.
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