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Westport Bank and Trust Company

Buildings and structures in Westport, ConnecticutCommercial buildings completed in 1924Connecticut Registered Historic Place stubsNational Register of Historic Places in Fairfield County, ConnecticutNeoclassical architecture in Connecticut
Westport Bank and Trust Company, Westport, CT, USA 2012 C
Westport Bank and Trust Company, Westport, CT, USA 2012 C

The Westport Bank and Trust Company is a historic commercial building at 87 Post Road East in Westport, Connecticut. It is a two-story Classical Revival brick building, designed by local architect Charles E. Cutler and built in 1924. The bank was founded in 1852 by Horace Staples, a prominent local businessman, and was a longtime fixture in the local economy. The building is notable for its architecture, and for a series of murals in its lobby, commissioned in the 1960s and executed by Robert L. Lambdin, an artist best known for his Depression-era work funded by the Works Progress Administration.The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on November 6, 2006.

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Westport Bank and Trust Company
Post Road East,

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Latitude Longitude
N 41.141666666667 ° E -73.361111111111 °
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Address

Post Road East 46
06880
Connecticut, United States
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Westport Bank and Trust Company, Westport, CT, USA 2012 C
Westport Bank and Trust Company, Westport, CT, USA 2012 C
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Westport Library
Westport Library

The Westport Library is a public library in the town of Westport, Connecticut, established on February 4, 1886, by members of the Westport Reading-Room and Library Association.: 132 Morris Ketchum Jesup, born in 1830 to a country doctor,: 73  amassed a fortune in the railroad business and became the benefactor of the library, donating the land and $5,000 for the building.: 157  In April 1908, the Westport Public Library was completed at a cost of $75,000 and dedicated to the custody of the Westport Library Association by Jesup's wife, following the wishes of her husband who died four months earlier.: 157 In June 1984, plans were announced to build a new library on a site adjacent to Jesup Green on the Saugatuck River.: 308  Considerable discussion took place about how to raise the money for the new library and the proposed site, a former landfill. After a referendum was approved, the new library was built for $4.6 million and opened on Labor Day of 1986.As popularity of the library increased, another renovation and expansion was completed in 1998.: 324  The improvements included an innovative project called the "River of Names," a wall of small handmade tiles, paid for individually by donors, depicting local history.: 324 By the year 2000, the library was the second busiest in the state in terms of circulation per capita, averaging 1,200 visitors a day.: 7 Embracing a trend in expanding the role of libraries, the library opened a makerspace in 2012, a structure with 3D printers and other tools for people to create inventions and learn about new technology. The name of the library was changed to The Westport Library.In 2013, the library received a $246,545 grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services for the enhancement of the makerspace. In 2014, the library became the first library in the nation to use humanoid robots for the purpose of teaching computer programming.On September 2017, ground was broken on a renovation project for the library, dubbed the "Transformation Project." The renovation lasted two years, and the library was reopened on June 23, 2019.As a "forum for civic engagement and an incubator of new ideas," the Library provides many books and resources geared to fundraising, social entrepreneurship, and non-profit organizations. An example of a book about social entrepreneurship is the memoir, "Start Something that Matters" by Blake Mycoskie, the founder of the global footwear giant, Toms Shoes. The Library has the distinction of being a Funding Information Network partner of the Foundation Center, the nation's leading authority on organized philanthropy. A Grants Center section provides additional guides and manuals for becoming effective fundraisers for causes of all types and sizes.