Public libraries in Winchester: A history of growth, expansion, and movement

From a col­lege cam­pus to the cour­t­house, and then from a rail­road car to a for­mer church, the Winchester/Clark County Public Library has had a long and sto­ried his­to­ry. The cur­rent facil­i­ty, opened in 1998, is a sprawl­ing 27,000-square-foot build­ing that boasts ameni­ties such as a children’s wing and sev­er­al meet­ing rooms. 
Winchester Library in a retired railroad car (1954)

Latest stories

Students celebrating graduation
Your Voice

Donations sought for Project Graduation

Project Graduation is a nation­wide pro­gram designed to pre­vent need­less tragedy that occurs annu­al­ly in our com­mu­ni­ties. Traditionally, the hours fol­low­ing grad­u­a­tion find our young peo­ple vul­ner­a­ble to drug and alco­hol abuse as they cel­e­brate their tran­si­tion into adult life. Unfortunately, the past has proven that many young peo­ple will die or become dis­abled as a result of the evening’s celebrations. 
Noah before God
Fiction

Why there are no unicorns around anymore

We can’t vouch for the verac­i­ty of Chuck Witt’s retelling of the sto­ry of Noah’s Ark (pret­ty sure Chuck was not around then), but it cer­tain­ly is an inter­est­ing read. And it pos­si­bly answers the age-old ques­tion: Where have all the uni­corns gone? 
The fourth and current Clark County Courthouse
News

County accepting opioid settlement proposals through April 30

The Clark County Fiscal Court has announced the open­ing of a Request for Proposals (RFP) process for orga­ni­za­tions seek­ing fund­ing through the County’s opi­oid set­tle­ment allo­ca­tion. The fund­ing is intend­ed to sup­port pro­grams that pre­vent and address the ongo­ing impacts of opi­oid addic­tion and drug over­dose across Clark County. The goal of the fund­ing oppor­tu­ni­ty is to serve res­i­dents of Clark County through the devel­op­ment, imple­men­ta­tion, enhance­ment, or expan­sion of evi­dence-based strate­gies and promis­ing prac­tices that... 

Editorial picks

Oestre and the Vernal Equinox

Long before cal­en­dars were inked and before clocks began telling humans when to wake, there was a hush that came each year, a long exhale of frost and dark­ness. The rivers stiff­ened. The seeds slept. Even hope seemed to curl in on itself. And in that still­ness walked Oestre, the Dawn-Bringer of the North. 
Group Of Happy Kind Adult Multiracial People Standing In Sunny

Yes, you can ‘do you.’ But why not be kind?

Social media is filled with mean com­ments and hurt­ful posts. People seem to feel empow­ered to behave in the most awful ways when sit­ting behind a phone, tablet, or com­put­er screen. A harm­less or well-inten­tioned post or news sto­ry is met with long strings of real­ly antag­o­nis­tic, cru­el com­ments. These com­ments usu­al­ly don’t add any­thing to the con­ver­sa­tion, or, when they do con­tribute to the con­ver­sa­tion, do so in a way that just hurts feel­ings and caus­es pain. When chal­lenged on this unkind­ness, the most com­mon respons­es seem to be in defense of “doing what I want” and “keep­ing it... 

Podcasts

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