LANPHER MEMORIAL LIBRARY MAIN ST. HYDE PARK, VT 802-888-4628 CURRENT HOURS: MONDAY 12-7 TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY 10-5 SATURDAY 10-1
  • Home Page
  • From the Librarian's Desk...
  • About
    • About Us
    • Hours & Directions
    • Trustee Meetings
    • Virtual Tour of the Lanpher Library
    • Annual Community Awards
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Search Our Catalog/Log In to Account
  • Free Digital Content
  • Udemy Free Online Classes
  • Vermont Online Library
  • Children's Corner
    • Mystery Ingredient Challenge
    • Outdoor Adventures with Mabel
  • Calendar of Events
  • Policies
  • Freedom to Read Statement
  • Links & Other Community Resources
  • Friends of the Lanpher Memorial Library
  • Local History Research
  • Donate to the Lanpher Library
  • Book Discussion
  • Attraction Passes for Loan
  • Connect Hyde Park VT
  • Snowshoe Borrowing

Library Bill of Rights & Freedom to Read Statement
click the box below to read and/or print


Library Bill of Rights & Freedom to Read Statement

From the American Library Association website ala.org

Library Bill of Rights History
First drafted by library director Forrest Spaulding in 1938, the bill was designed to speak out against the “growing intolerance, suppression of free speech and censorship affecting the rights of minorities and individuals.”
One year later, the revised document was adopted by the American Library Association. It has since evolved to include topics such as book banning, race and gender discrimination, and exhibit spaces. Based on the First Amendment, the Library Bill of Rights guides librarians in serving their communities and protecting the rights of all patrons.


Freedom to Read Statement History
“The freedom to read is essential to our democracy.”
The first sentence to the 1954 Freedom to Read statement remains the influential opening sentence today.
In 1953, a group of professors, directors, librarians, publishers and businessmen met to “discuss the current wave of censorship and attacks on books and libraries.” They created a document that defined the responsibilities of publishers and librarians to protect Americans’ freedom to read. Since its inception, the statement has been altered during times of violence and prosecution to defend the reading choices of readers – it remains a rallying proclamation for all literary community members.


Lanpher Memorial Library  P.O. Box 196/141 Main St., Hyde Park, VT 05655
802-888-4628                       [email protected]

Proudly powered by Weebly