Kirkland Public Library

Kirkland Public Library Public Library for the Village of Kirkland, Illinois

The Book Boat Women of the Mississippi — 1904In 1904, when river towns along the Mississippi had little access to school...
11/09/2025

The Book Boat Women of the Mississippi — 1904
In 1904, when river towns along the Mississippi had little access to schools or libraries, a small group of women brought knowledge to the water. They were known as the Book Boat Women — educators, widows, and dreamers who turned old barges into floating libraries that drifted from town to town, delivering books, newspapers, and hope to riverside families.
One of them, Eleanor Finch, a former schoolteacher from Iowa, spent her savings on a decommissioned cargo barge. She and two friends painted it white, filled it with donated books, and christened it The Knowledge Belle. They loaded it with shelves, kerosene lamps, and a hand-cranked printing press that produced small pamphlets of local poetry and news.
As the Book Boat drifted downstream, children would run to the shore, shouting, “The library’s here!” Farmers traded apples, quilts, or cornmeal for borrowed books. In a time when literacy was rare in rural America, the women taught reading lessons right on deck — often by lantern light as river fog curled around the hull.
During one harsh winter, when the river froze, Eleanor refused to stop. She walked miles across icy banks carrying sacks of books on her back, ensuring no child missed their reading. “The river,” she said, “only sleeps. The stories do not.”
By the 1910s, their floating library inspired copycat boats in Minnesota and Illinois, spreading learning through the heartland. The Book Boat Women proved that education could travel — even on restless waters.

The Book Boat Women of the Mississippi — 1904

In 1904, when river towns along the Mississippi had little access to schools or libraries, a small group of women brought knowledge to the water. They were known as the Book Boat Women — educators, widows, and dreamers who turned old barges into floating libraries that drifted from town to town, delivering books, newspapers, and hope to riverside families.

One of them, Eleanor Finch, a former schoolteacher from Iowa, spent her savings on a decommissioned cargo barge. She and two friends painted it white, filled it with donated books, and christened it The Knowledge Belle. They loaded it with shelves, kerosene lamps, and a hand-cranked printing press that produced small pamphlets of local poetry and news.

As the Book Boat drifted downstream, children would run to the shore, shouting, “The library’s here!” Farmers traded apples, quilts, or cornmeal for borrowed books. In a time when literacy was rare in rural America, the women taught reading lessons right on deck — often by lantern light as river fog curled around the hull.

During one harsh winter, when the river froze, Eleanor refused to stop. She walked miles across icy banks carrying sacks of books on her back, ensuring no child missed their reading. “The river,” she said, “only sleeps. The stories do not.”

By the 1910s, their floating library inspired copycat boats in Minnesota and Illinois, spreading learning through the heartland. The Book Boat Women proved that education could travel — even on restless waters.

For all of our Boundless users:The Boundless app will be discontinued and stop functioning on Monday, November 17. It wi...
11/04/2025

For all of our Boundless users:

The Boundless app will be discontinued and stop functioning on Monday, November 17. It will be fully retired on this day. Checkouts have already ceased on Sunday, November 2.

However, all of the eRead Illinois content will begin transitioning to the Palace Project app, which will be available for download on Tuesday, December 2. This app will host all the content that was available on Boundless.

More information will be available in the coming weeks. We appreciate your patience and understanding during this transition.

Baker & Taylor, a major supplier of print materials for libraries, will be ceasing operations by the end of 2025. This c...
10/21/2025

Baker & Taylor, a major supplier of print materials for libraries, will be ceasing operations by the end of 2025. This company also provided Boundless, an eBook and digital audiobook platform, which the RAILS website utilized to provide the eRead Illinois collection for our library, as well as others across Illinois.

What does this mean for our library? Our print materials will not be affected as we currently utilize other means to add new books to our collection. However, access to Boundless will eventually no longer be an option as RAILS seeks to find an alternative platform. We will keep you updated when we find out more about the transition.

Thank you for your understanding.

RAILS is aware that Baker & Taylor has begun the process of winding down operations with the intent of closing by the end of the year. We are sorry about the far-reaching loss of a library industry leader and wish our colleagues at Baker & Taylor all the best.  We recognize the impact that this wil...

10/17/2025

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October 14 is widely celebrated as Winnie-the-Pooh's birthday, in honor of the publication date of A. A. Milne's first b...
10/14/2025

October 14 is widely celebrated as Winnie-the-Pooh's birthday, in honor of the publication date of A. A. Milne's first book, Winnie-the-Pooh, on October 14, 1926.

09/20/2025
09/01/2025

***REMINDER***

The library is closed today due to the Labor Day holiday. The drop box will also remain closed and locked. We will reopen tomorrow, Tuesday 9/2, at 10am.

Thank you!

-Chris

08/27/2025

***REMINDER***

The library will be closed on Monday 9/1 for Labor Day. The drop box will also be closed and locked during this time.

We will remain open on Saturday 9/30 from 9am - 3pm.

Thank you for your understanding. Enjoy the holiday, and we will see you on Tuesday 9/2!

-Chris

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Address

513 W Main Street
Kirkland, IL
60146

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 7pm
Tuesday 10am - 6pm
Wednesday 1pm - 7pm
Thursday 10am - 7pm
Saturday 9am - 3pm

Telephone

(815) 522-6260

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