News: Neillsville Public Library (Over 100 Years – 2012)
Contact: Dolores (Mohr) Kenyon
E-mail:
dolores@wiclarkcountyhistory.org
Surnames: Gustavson
----Source: Clark County Press (Neillsville, Clark Co., WI) 4/11/2012
Neillsville Public Library (Served City for Over 100 Years – 2012)
Jo Ann Gustavson, library director for the Neillsville Public Library, is still
just as pleased with her job as she was the day she started work. During
National Library Week, she plans on having fun remembering her many fulfilling
past years serving the people of Neillsville and Clark County. The library
currently employs five other people at the library desk and two custodians. Tony
Opelt/Clark County Press
By Tony Opelt
The Neillsville Public Library is over 100 years old and continues to serve the
community well. This week, April 8-14, is National Library Week, and while the
library does not have any scheduled events to celebrate, the people of
Neillsville should celebrate the staff’s contributions to the city of
Neillsville.
The library was founded in 1893. It was originally located in an attorney’s
office, and after moving several different times throughout its history, the
library came to reside in its current location in the early 1930s. The original
yearly fee was $1, while a lifetime membership cost $10, and a yearly membership
for schools was 25 cents. From those humble beginnings, the library now houses
over 24,000 books, nearly 600 audiobooks and over 3,200 videos, along with over
100 reels of the Clark County Press on microfilm.
Jo Ann Gustavson has been the library director for several years, and she is
incredibly happy with her job. Saying it is her “dream job,” she first worked
nine years as a library aide in Greenwood, and six months as an aide in Granton
before getting a degree from the University of Wisconsin-Superior through their
correspondence school and later a master’s degree from the University of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Her first day of work at Neillsville Public Library was
March 1, 2001.
“I’m a people person,” Gustavson said. “When I had surgery, I still popped in a
few times a week to see how the library was doing without me.”
Most recently, the library switched its systems to a more modern method of
keeping track of its books and members. While the transition has not been
without bugs and problems, it is helping the library tremendously and will
continue to be a worthwhile shift for years to come.
“People used to have to wait at least a week for an ordered book to come in,”
Gustavson said. “Now, it’s a matter of days. People are always amazed at how
fast the books arrive.”
The new system has ensured the library is staying up to date technologically,
with reassurances from Gustavson other libraries are switching to the same
system Neillsville is currently using. The Neillsville Public Library is ahead
of the curve in that aspect, which bodes well for its future. While the library
could always use more space with its ever-growing collection of titles, the
staff is content with everything about the library.
As far as memories from her nine years serving the people of Neillsville and
Clark County, Gustavson says her favorite memories are, “Calling people when a
book comes in. I can always hear how happy they are.”
The Neillsville Public Library, which will be 119 years old this year, had over
62,000 items checked out in 2011, and over 7,100 people used their public access
computers.
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