South Albany High School fire, suspect arrested
Albany celebrates 150 years
Downtown Carnegie Library celebrates 100 years
Andrew Carnegie, a steel magnate, was a philanthropist who began building libraries in the United States in the early 1900s. In 1911, he offered the City of Albany $12,500.00 to build a free public library provided they match his donation and staff the new building. The final building cost came to $20,000.
As early as 1907, Sarah Adams, then president of the Modern Travelers Club, initiated the idea of a public library by creating a committee to gather a collection of books and naming a board of directors. A single-room brick building near Second and Ferry was selected to house the collection. They were open to the public on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Over the next few years, the club gathered 1,163 volumes.
The library became a tax-supported service in December 1910 when the City of Albany assumed the operation of this library. The response from the Andrew Carnegie Foundation grant came from Carnegie’s secretary in the form of a simple pencil written letter. This original letter is on display today.
Mr. and Mrs. S.E. Young donated the land on the corner of Third Avenue and Ferry Street. Ground was broken for the building on June 5, 1913. Mr. Willard F. Tobey was chosen as the architect. Mrs. Young herself carried in the first book, a Bible, three days prior to the building’s dedication on June 26, 1914. A community of volunteers carried the collection, then totaling 3,200 volumes, into the new facility.
The Downtown Carnegie Library has been in continuous use as a library since the dedication in 1914. It currently houses nearly 23,000 titles for public use, provides public Internet access, a reference workstation, a special Historic Preservation book collection, and a newly relocated Children’s Room in the lower level. It is included as a landmark contributing property in the Monteith National Register Historic District of Albany.
Talking Water Gardens opens
The Talking Water Gardens project, an engineered treatment wetlands, is open to the public seven days a week, sunrise to sunset. Talking Water Gardens is a public works project that cools treated wastewater before entering the Willamette River. Wetland cells are connected by soft-surface walking trails. Many trails are elevated to give visitors a beautiful view of the natural system at work including the plants and wildlife that have found this place as a new home.
Willamette Community Garden opens
The garden began as a joint effort between members of the Salem / Harrison Neighborhood Watch group and the City of Albany, with initial funding from the Central Albany Revitalization Area.
Albany-Millersburg Water Reclamation Facility
The Water Reclamation Facility (WRF) is the second major cooperative venture between the cities of Albany and Millersburg. The WRF project cost approximately $78 million and provides state-of-the-art wastewater treatment for both communities. The plant can process up to 68 million gallons of water per day.
First female mayor
Sharon Konopa elected first female mayor. A native Oregonian and a resident of Albany since she was a young child, Sharon graduated from South Albany High School in 1975.