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Thursday, August 28th
New Member Reception
Saturday, August 30th - Monday, September 1st
Closed for Labor Day Weekend.
Thursday, September 18th
Michael D. Livingston Lecture: "An American Tolkien: Robert Jordan and the Roots of Fantasy"
Thursday, October 30th
Halloween Party and Ghost Tours
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The Charleston Library Society is the South's oldest cultural institution and the third oldest library in the United States. For more than 250 years it has collected, preserved, and made available cultural materials for the use of its members and researchers from around
the world. Today, it is a circulating library
and a repository of rare books, periodicals, manuscripts, clippings, maps, directories, almanacs, and visual materials.
Established in 1748 by seventeen young
gentlemen of various trades and professions wishing to avail themselves of the latest
publications from Great Britain, the Charleston Library Society paved the way for the founding of the College of Charleston
in 1770 and provided the core collection of
natural history artifacts for the founding of the Charleston Museum – America’s first – in 1773. Elected librarians safeguarded the Library's materials in their homes until 1792, when the collection was transferred to the upper floor of the Statehouse. From 1835 until its 1914 move to the current King Street location, the Charleston Library Society occupied a building at the corner of Church and Broad Streets
that was purchased with the aid of "brick" memberships, several of which are still in use generations later by Charleston families.
During the war years of 1861 - 1865, part of the Library's archives was sent to the state capitol for safekeeping. The reunion of the collections at the end of the war also marked the merging of the Apprentice's Library with the Charleston Library Society, resulting in the long-standing practice of providing each adult member a free membership to gift to a minor twenty-one years of age or under.
The Charleston Library Society's building at 164 King Street is fronted by two of the city's largest ginkgo trees. This species represents memory and long life, and for many years the ginkgo leaf has served as the symbol of the Charleston Library Society.
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