365 Days of Danvers: 9

Peabody Institute Library
Danvers, MA
In December 1856, the American banker, philanthropist, and Danvers native George Peabody gave $10,000 for the establishment of a Danvers “branch” of the Peabody Institute Library of South Danvers (now Peabody, MA). This branch library was originally set up at Danvers Town Hall; but in 1857, Joshua Silvester, Simeon Putnam, and John R. Langley sold to the Town for $4,000 a four and one half acre plot of land on Sylvan St. (near to the Town Hall) for use as a site for the library. 


In 1866, George Peabody, realizing the difficulty of a single institution serving two separate communities, allowed the branch to become independent and gave the new Peabody Institute Library of Danvers an additional $40,000. A Gothic style library was built at Peabody Park in 1869; the purpose of the new library was (in the founder's language) “the promotion of knowledge and morality in the Town of Danvers.” The governing body of the Institute was vested in a board of nine trustees who were appointed for life by Peabody; thereafter, vacancies in the Board were filled by the legal voters of Danvers. 

On July 2, 1890, a spectacular fire destroyed the library building. Insurance covered $23,622 in losses. The trustees, mirroring George Peabody's sentiment “Education - A debt due from present to future generations,” voted on September 28, 1891 to appropriate money for the erection of a new building. A building committee was appointed and the Boston architectural firm of Little, Brown and Moore was chosen; local architect Lester S. Crouch did the bulk of the design for the building which was his first major project. J.T.Wilson of Nahant was the contractor for the 62' x 92' Georgian Revival structure. The total cost for the project was $34,218. 



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