{"id":2358,"date":"2015-10-08T14:02:12","date_gmt":"2015-10-08T19:02:12","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/historyapolis.com\/?p=2358"},"modified":"2024-01-10T13:43:32","modified_gmt":"2024-01-10T19:43:32","slug":"it-was-our-university-sumner-library-and-the-old-sixth-avenue-north","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/mvt.rpw.mybluehost.me\/.website_3d6664ec\/2015\/10\/08\/it-was-our-university-sumner-library-and-the-old-sixth-avenue-north\/","title":{"rendered":"“It was our university”: Sumner Library and the old Sixth Avenue North"},"content":{"rendered":"
Published October 8, 2015 by Kirsten Delegard<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n \n Sumner Library is celebrating its centennial this Saturday.<\/p>\n You may shrug. But this really is a cause for jubilation. And a moment to contemplate the diverse history of one of Minnesota’s most interesting neighborhoods.<\/p>\n This lovely little library on the city’s north side–built with funds provided by Andrew Carnegie in 1915–has served as a critical institution in one of the state’s most diverse neighborhoods for 100 years. “It was our university,” one patron remembered at the 50th anniversary of the library.<\/a>\u00a0 It was here that generations of new arrivals “learned to be American,” declared Harrison Salisbury, Pulitzer prize winning journalist who grew up in a dilapidated Victorian mansion nearby in the early twentieth century.<\/p>\n A native son of the near north side, Salisbury was an anomaly. The grandson of a prominent Minneapolis physician, he was one of the only children in his neighborhood whose families had been in the city for any length of time.<\/p>\n