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01.27.2012 • 3:30pm
Calling all Kids!! Come join us for a festival of fun on January 27th at 3:30 p.m. where performer Bob Conrad will entertain the children with storytelling through puppets, ventriloquism and balloon sculpture. Children ages 3 and up welcome. Please call to reserve a spot.

02.06.2012 • 7:30pm
February 6th at 7:30 p.m. Come join us and meet the Hockey Maven Stan Fischler.

02.13.2012 • 3:30PM
Come join us for Valentine stories and to decorate a sweet treat. Chidren ages 4 and up. Must be registered.


03.12.2012 • 7:30pm
Best selling Author Mary Jane Clark will be here to talk about her new book. The Look of Love: A Piper Donovan Mystery.

03.26.2012
Commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Sinking of the Titanic with this reinactment of the tragic events.


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The mission of the Spring Lake Public Library is to provide the community with a caring, welcoming and lively cultural connection to reading, lifelong learning and personal and professional enrichment for people of all ages. 

The Library maintains an open, unbiased environment and upholds the public's right to access information. It provides individualized assistance, community outreach, professional expertise and current technologies for equal access to facilities quality services and materials in a variety of formats.

THE BUILDING HISTORY

 

Oliver H. Brown, born in Farmingdale, Monmouth County in 1852, led a life of devoted service to Spring Lake – and New Jersey – throughout his life. Elected in 1896 as a member of the New Jersey State House of Assembly, he was selected to be one of only 20 delegates to the 1900 Republican National Convention that nominated William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt for the Republican presidential ticket. His dedication to Spring Lake is best demonstrated by his simultaneous holding of the offices of Mayor of Spring Lake, and a member of the New Jersey State Senate. Oliver Brown’s service to Spring Lake was not limited to his political career. 

His early career began in the retail industry. After a trip to Europe, he returned to New Jersey to begin his own retail establishment in 1882. He "wanted to cater to people of refinement and culture" (Spring Lake Gazette, July 6, 1923) and purchased three lots on Third Avenue for his own store, O.H. Brown’s Furniture. He later served as President of Spring Lake’s First National Bank, founded in 1901.

But one of his greatest legacies – the dedication of the Spring Lake Community House in 1923 – was also one of his last. He died in North Spring Lake in 1924, after a full lifetime of service and dedication to Spring Lake.