Seven Corners Library “Nonsense Books”
There was a nice library stood
On a corner where it showed up good
Tall and green for to see
Which we loved just as much as we could
In the 1910s, Seven Corners Library decided to have a little fun. Library staff (and perhaps the patrons) crafted two “Nonsense Books” full of short, rhyming poems joking about themselves and their library. The first edition of the nonsense book is mainly inside jokes about people at the library. The second booklet, which includes the poems above, reflects on the library building and community. None of the poems are signed, so it’s impossible to say who crafted their quips. The pencil edits on some of the pages, however, suggest that the books were a group effort. Poems in the second nonsense book mention everything from the lawn, to the bookshelves, to the recent street paving in an ode to the library.
Seven Corners Library was founded in the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood of Minneapolis in 1905. The library served a booming immigrant community, including in the Bohemian Flats area. First located in a rented spot in Riverside Church, the library’s permanent building at 300 15th Ave. S opened in 1912. The library served as a community center for local readers and children, who gathered in large numbers at the branch. While the Seven Corners Library thrived for decades, its use declined in the mid-twentieth century as immigration slowed and the neighborhood changed. In 1964, the Seven Corners Library closed. The building was demolished to make way for highway expansion.
Nonsense books from the Seven Corners Library Records (HCL 061) in the Hennepin County Library Special Collections.