Mont Vernon receives $655,000 grant for new library

An artist’s rendering of the new building. Submitted image.

MONT VERNON, N.H. โ€“ On Thursday, the Mont Vernon Library Charitable Foundation announced that it has been awarded a matching infrastructure and challenge grant worth up to $655,000 from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

The grant will support building a modern, accessible 7,600 sq. ft. library for the town of Mont Vernon.

Currently the town is served by the Daland Memorial Library, a 1,200 sq. ft. building built in 1909.

A capital reserve fund to replace the 1909 building was started in 1988, with a tract of land near Carleton Pond purchased as the site for the new building in 1997.

Winning this grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities is a great step forward in our effort to build a library for Mont Vernonโ€™s next one hundred years,โ€ said Mont Vernon Board of Selectmen Chair John Quinlan. ย โ€œThe new library will be the centerpiece of our ongoing efforts to revitalize our village center.โ€

โ€œThis award is a significant boost to our ongoing library capital campaign and will allow us to make the dream of a new Daland Memorial Library a reality sooner,โ€ said Mont Vernon Library Charitable Foundation President Cindy Raspiller.

The grant was one of 245 humanities grants awarded across the country, totalling $33.17. Mont Vernonโ€™s grant was one of three in New Hampshire, with the other two coming as $6,000 stipends for programs at the University of New Hampshire Library.


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