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Founded in 1871 as the Galveston Mercantile Library and reopened after the 1900 storm with Rosenberg's name on a new building, it is rivaled only by the 1899 Dr. Eugene Clark Library in Lockhart ...
GALVESTON, Texas (KTRK) -- A public library in Galveston is warning people not to use eclipse glasses it gave away, as they may not be safe. The Rosenberg Library says they were notified on Sunday ...
GALVESTON, Texas — The Rosenberg Library in Galveston has a warning. They say if you got eclipse glasses from the children’s department there, use caution.
GALVESTON, Texas — Books can teach us so much about history and the world around us. So can the building that houses them. "We are the oldest continuously operating public library in the state ...
A Galveston public library may have mistakenly passed out unsafe eclipse glasses for Monday's big event. The staff at Rosenberg Library made a Facebook post on Friday to warn local residents and ...
Founded in 1871 as the Galveston Mercantile Library and reopened after the 1900 storm with Rosenberg's name on a new building, it is rivaled only by the 1899 Dr. Eugene Clark Library in Lockhart ...
The water also impacted several businesses, including the Rosenberg Library. The library was closed on Labor Day. The library's executive director, John Augelli, found about the water Tuesday morning.
During the event, donors Doris and Samuel Collins III, a Rosenberg Library Board Trustee, will sit down with artist Eddie Filer Jr. to talk about the James Baldwin painting they ...
Now, as the library, a gift to the city from 19th-century businessman and philanthropist Henry Rosenberg Jr., observes its 100th anniversary, officials are scrambling to avert catastrophe.
Lucid Motors starts taking orders for its existential Gravity SUV Lucid Motors has officially started taking orders for its electric Gravity SUV, a critically important vehicle that's supposed to ...
Galveston was once known as a prolific newspaper town. Before the turn of the 20th century, the city was termed a "newspaper graveyard," because of the number of publications that came and went.