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Sumter South Carolina Walking Tour
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The old Carnegie Public Library was the city's first and only public library in Sumter from 1917, when it was built, to 1968 when a new library opened. Though relatively small and apparently vacant as of mid-2021, it remains an important landmark in Sumter. It was one of the thousands of libraries built around the county using funds donated from philanthropist and steel magnate Andrew Carnegie. Local architects Herbert Johnson and N. Gaillard Walker designed the building in the Beaux-Arts style. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1994 and served as the headquarters of the Sumter County Library and the local genealogical society for many years.


The Carnegie Public Library was built in 1917. It was Sumter's first and only public library until 1968..

Plant, Cloud, Building, Sky

Interest in library services in Sumter date back to 1809 when the Sumterville Circulating Library Society was established. The Sumter Civic League also provided a book-lending service (exactly when is unclear). Beginning in 1890, the state Superintendent of Public Schools, Dr. Samuel Edmunds, began calling for a library to be built in Sumter. It was suggested in 1902 that a request be made to Carnegie but this was not done until 1915. It should be noted that Carnegie agreed to send money as long as communities promised to meet certain conditions, such as agreeing to provide a yearly sum to keep the library in operation. In Sumter, the Sumter City Council promised to provide $1,000 per year and the Civic League supplied the books. Carnegie provided $10,000 for the project.

By the 1930s, it was clear that the Carnegie Library was too small. However, it took a long for the project to move forward.

A bond referendum for a new library in 1955 was voted down. Finally, in the 1960s the state received funds from the federal government through the Library Services and Construction Act to help build the new library, which opened in 1968. The Carnegie Library was underutilized until the Sumter County Museum bought it in 1989. The museum renovated the structure to house the museum archives, a genealogical and historical research center, and the Sumter County Genealogical Society. The Society is now located in the basement of the Williams-Brice House (the Sumter County Museum). The Carnegie Library building appears unused today.

"Library History." Sumter County Library. Accessed June 3, 2021. https://www.sumtercountylibrary.org/library-history.

Richardson, Katherine H. "Carnegie Library." National Park Service - National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form. August 5, 1994. https://npgallery.nps.gov/GetAsset/7552d4f7-50b5-4163-8c38-645def7c012a.

Image Sources(Click to expand)

Wikimedia Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Carnegie_Public_Library_Sumter,_SC.jpg