Wake County celebrates 90 years of culture and connection at Richard B. Harrison Community Library

Richard B. Harrison Community Library exterior view

For 90 years, the Richard B. Harrison Community Library has been more than a place to borrow books—it’s been a cornerstone of Southeast Raleigh. Generations have come through its doors to learn, connect and grow, continuing the legacy started by its visionary founder, Mollie Huston Lee.

To honor nine decades of impact, Wake County Public Libraries will host a special 90th anniversary celebration at 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 9, at the Tarboro Road Community Center in Raleigh. The event will recognize the library’s history and its enduring role as cornerstone of the community.

“The Richard B. Harrison Community Library is a living legacy of culture, community, and literary access for all,” said Wake County Commissioner Tara Waters. “As we celebrate this remarkable milestone, I encourage everyone to join us in honoring this historic institution and the pioneering leadership of Mollie Huston Lee.”

The Richard B. Harrison Library first opened its doors on Nov. 12, 1935, in a storefront on West Hargett Street, offering library services to Black residents for the first time in Wake County. Over the next 90 years, the library moved from Hargett Street to Blount Street, and finally to its current home on New Bern Avenue, expanding its services and collections along the way.

Under Lee’s leadership, the library became a cultural landmark, attracting speakers such as Zora Neale Hurston and Langston Hughes and building one of the nation’s earliest collections dedicated to Black literature, now known as the Mollie Huston Lee Collection.

The Lee Collection chronicles the African American experience locally and nationally, as well as international history of the African Diaspora. It is composed of both adult and juvenile nonfiction, fiction and journals. Housed in the library’s Mollie Huston Lee Room, the collection may be accessed by appointment only.

Lee was the first Black graduate of Columbia University School of Library Science and was instrumental in the founding of the North Carolina Negro Library Association, a professional organization for Black librarians. She retired on Jan. 30, 1972, after serving as the librarian of the Richard B. Harrison Community Library for 37 years.

Nine Days to 90 Years

Leading up to the 90th anniversary celebration, the library will host nine days of special events starting Monday, Nov. 3, inviting residents of all ages to share their memories and explore the library’s history:

An expanded historical exhibit on Mollie Huston Lee and the library’s legacy will be on display starting Monday, Nov. 10, at the Richard B. Harrison Community Library.

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