Hampden Memories Fill Branch #7

by Gregg Wilhelm

For all the time I spent at the Hampden Branch as a kid, I never truly noticed the great marble plaque that recorded the building’s date of construction and the benefactor who made it possible. Philanthropist Robert Poole funded the project at the turn of last century; the iron works he owned by the Jones Falls manufactured four cast iron columns that grace the library’s Greek revival facade.

The library opened in the summer of 1900, and one-hundred-and-seven-teen years later, the plaque was the perfect backdrop to a late-July evening reminiscing about Hampden history.

Presented by the Greater Hampden Heritage Alliance and hosted by photographer Denny Lynch, nearly 50 people showed up (old-timers and newcomers) to hear from guest speakers. My father, Fred Wilhelm, spoke about a picture he once possessed, but has since lost, of the Ku Klux Klan marching up Roland Avenue protesting the presence of Catholics in the neighborhood (ironic given colonial Maryland’s Catholic roots). He found a copy on the Internet to show us.

Fred grew up in Love Point on Kent Island with his mother and stepfather. During summers, he took the ferry to Baltimore and visited his paternal grandparents. His grandfather worked at several barbershops, the one I recall was attached to his and my great-grandmother’s house on Roland Avenue across from Engine 51 firehouse. That’s where my father met my mother, Joan, Hampden born and raised.

Joan remains a voracious reader, and there is no doubt that I inherited her love of books. We would venture to Branch #7 weekly, and almost daily during summer breaks. Hampden’s reputation as insular and homogenous is no doubt mostly deserved. Not many black people crossed our paths, but the library was one of the first places I encountered different people and learned from them. I remember Mrs. Essie Williams, an African American desk supervisor who worked at the Hampden Branch for over 20 years. She would recommend a book, help me check it out, and then I leapt from the library’s stone porch and tore up 37th Street to tear into another new world she introduced me to.

So many memories from Denny, my father, Debbie Falkenhan (Falkenhan Hardware), Alice Ann Finnerty (The Turnover Shop), the current owner of Dr. Albert Shelley’s distinctive concrete house built shortly after the great fire of 1904 (3849 Roland Avenue, adjacent to Shelley’s Alley), Guy Holliday (Stone Hill historian), and many in the audience, were shared Thursday evening. Perhaps my favorite moment of the evening was Sun photographer Amy Davis giving us a sneak peak at her new book about bygone Baltimore movie theaters, which features both The Ideal and The Hampden that once graced The Avenue. Alas, the debate over which theater was home to the “gold fish pond” was not settled (my father and I agree it was The Hampden).

When the librarian kindly kicked us out at 8pm, conversations and recollections continued on that same porch I leapt from so many times as a kid. Thanks, Pratt Library, for reminding us that the branches–the stories they hold and the stories they allow others to tell–are mortar holding together a neighborhood’s people.

Gregg Wilhelm grew up on Keswick Road, went to School 55, and marched in the Hampden Small Fry parade better than he played first base. He’s been publishing books since 1992, and in 2004 he founded CityLit Project.

Fox 45 Teen Summer Reads

by Ny’ilah Whitaker, Young Adult Librarian

You saw our suggestions for hot titles for young adults this morning on Fox 45.  Now, you can reserve your copy at the Pratt Library. Just click on the cover!

 

Shadowshaper by Daniel Jose Older

Shadowshaper is an action-packed urban fantasy featuring Sierra Santiago, who mistakenly discovers a supernatural order after a zombie crashes a party.

 

 

 

 

Dimension W by Yuji Iwahara  

In AD 2072, Kyoouma Mabuchi crosses paths with a mysterious girl  that unlocks secrets about the powers of the world.

 

 

 

Cardboard by Doug TenNaple

When cardboard creatures come magically to life, a boy must save his town from disaster.

 

 

 

 

The Great Greene Heist by Varian Johnson

Jackson Greene is saving his school… one con at a time.  This time he’s getting involved in the school election.

 

Libraries Help in the Fight Against Opioid Epidemic

In 2016 alone, Maryland saw 2089 deaths from drug and alcohol-related intoxication.  According to the State Health Department, that’s nearly double the number the state saw the year before.  The primary killer:  opioids. It’s a deadly trend being seen across the country.  Now, libraries are stepping up to help those addicted to opioids and their loved ones.

A special list of books has been compiled to help those battling addiction.  Using the Pratt Library’s OverDrive service, you can download these books for free from the privacy of your own home on an E-Reader.  You’ll find books with information on overcoming addiction, the history of the opioid crisis, and how to help a loved one who is fighting this terrible disease.

The books are available for both adults and teens, in different languages.  Check out the reading list here. 

 

Got Questions?

Are you trying to fix your car? Having trouble finding a job? Do you want help managing your money or applying for a grant? Did you know the Pratt Library has databases that can help you solve all of those problems for free?

The Library databases are so much more than just webpages.  They get their information for experts in the field.  They are driven by facts. Our databases are updated frequently to give you the most current answer to an y question you might have. And you may not even have to leave your home to access the information.  Check out the Library databases here and take advantage of all the Pratt has to offer.

Five Rave Reviews from 2017 Adult Summer Challenge Participants

Check out five reading recommendations from our 2017 Adult Summer Challenge participants.

Gregory B. (Central Library) on The Pale King by David Foster Wallace: The unfinished, and perhaps unfinishable, novel of the great master of late-20th-century fiction. Taking as its subjects the themes of boredom and dread, this selection of posthumously arranged chapters recount the experiences of a set of characters employed in a fictionalized IRS office in the mid-1980’s, in which the rise of computerized mechanization threatens the established order. Combining the meta-fictional commentary of 18th-century English novels with the minutely observed realism of 19th-century Russian fiction, Wallace creates a deeply imagined world of entwined narratives that gesture toward a grand plot without ever fully coalescing.

Pearl K. (Forest Park Branch) on White Rage: The Unspoken Truth of Our Racial Divide by Carol Anderson: This book is an eye-opener on the historical tension between blacks and whites from slavery to current day. The painful truth stirs many emotions. The author captures and highlights the many obstacles that African Americans have fought and overcome to rise to their current level.  It is a book to be read by all. Dr. Anderson provides well-researched documentation on the historical policies and laws that propagated the divide. Her insight causes her to wonder what could have been, had justice been handled differently by courts and the laws that caused many restrictions.

Laurel B. (Govans Branch)  on Commonwealth by Ann Patchett: The need for love and family and the repulsion from the realities of day-to-day family life are at the heart of the tragedy of Commonwealth. Two families, brought together by an affair, divorce and remarriage, must take on new identities and carry the burdens of old pain. Through the life stories of parents and children, the hybrid question of “who must change/who can change?” is posed and posed again as the common wealth of their experiences threatens to overwhelm at every turn. When a famous author discovers the family’s story and takes more than his share of it, the people who lived through it must examine it with fresh eyes. A tale of many times and many places, Commonwealth leads you on a journey that surprises even as it feels like home.

Cornelia B. (Light Street Branch) on We Are Never Meeting In Real Life by Samantha Irby: This hysterical and poignant essay collection is the most entertaining book I’ve read all year. Put on your stretch pants, pop a multivitamin, and enjoy Irby’s book about living in Chicago, premature aging, and her mischievous cat.

Michael T. (Roland Park Branch) on Jesus’ Son by Denis Johnson: Wow is this a good book. It violates so many “rules” of writing that I’ve learned and flaunts them delightfully. I never knew which way a story was going or why it went that way and I couldn’t have been happier. I’m going to have to avoid copying the style in my own writing, at least for a while.

For a chance to win fabulous prizes, submit an entry to the Adult Summer Challenge here.