Stone Avenue Library
Stone Avenue opened in 1914 as the Brownsville Children's Library, the world's first public library devoted to children. In the Arts and Crafts style, whimsical details include the Rookwood storybook fireplace tiles and rabbit-head finials on carved wooden benches. In his classic memoir, Walker in the City, literary critic Alfred Kazin recalls the library "where I read my way year after year from every story of King Alfred the Great to Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea." The Brownsville Heritage House founded by Mother Rosetta Gaston is located on the second floor of the building.
| Branch Contact Person: | Joycelyn Maynard |
Directions:
Subway3 to Rockaway Ave. station. B14 to Dumont Ave. Eastern Pkwy., South on Rockaway Ave., left on Dumont Ave. |
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Program & Events:
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| Technology Available: | General public area - 16 desktop computers, 10 laptops For more information about laptops for use in the library, visit our laptop loan page. |
| Internet & WiFi: | Yes - WiFi info |
| Building Facts: | 2 Floors and a Mezzanine |
| Multilingual Materials: | Arabic, Chinese, Russian, Spanish |
| Meeting Rooms: | One meeting room on the second floor, seats 60 |
| Copy Machines: | Yes |
| Restrooms: | Yes |

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