A book drop is located in the back of the building and is accessible 24-hours a day.
Free use of all PC computers, which include word processing and other software for public use.
Free WI-FI, Internet access, and access to extensive online databases.
Access to most public library collections in Allegheny County.
Children’s, Young Adult, and Adult educational and recreational programming.
Homebound delivery.
Meeting and study rooms.
History
According to Mr. Bayard H. Christy in a report prepared for the Home and School Association of Sewickley on November 8, 1912, the Sewickley Public Library owes its origins to the arrival of a whiskey boat at the Saw Mill landing one Saturday evening in the winter of 1872-73. "The consequent riot and disorder...led some, interested in the welfare of the young men, to think that such things would not be, had we a place for proper and rational amusement and self-improvement." The Young Men's Library Association was formed in 1873 and rented a room for library services at the Mozart Hall. It was later moved to a building next door called Choral Hall. In 1880 the property of the library was transferred to the Sewickley School Board under the general school laws of the state. In 1923 the library formally moved to its present location, a building given by Mr. William L. Clause in memory of his wife Elizabeth Ann Clause. In the dedication address by Mr. Clause, he stated, "In presenting this library, it is my desire that it should be the property of the entire valley, yet under the existing conditions, there is no way this can be done, as there is no way the matter can be handled except to deed it to the School District of the borough of Sewickley. Of course if the boroughs ever become consolidated, or if the school districts are ever consolidated, that would solve this problem." In the ensuing years, Osborne and EdgeworthSchool Districts also supported the library until 1956 at which time a jointure of eleven municipalities comprising Aleppo, Bell Acres, Edgeworth, Glenfield, Haysville, Leet, Leetsdale, Osborne, Sewickley, Sewickley Heights and Sewickley Hills, formed the Quaker Valley School District. In 1967, the Quaker Valley School District Board of Directors designated the Sewickley Public Library as its agency to provide public library service to Quaker Valley School District residents and taxpayers and resolved to maintain or assist in the maintenance of the library. The building was awarded Historic Landmark status by the Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation in 2003.
Awards and recognition
Sewickley Public Library was ranked as one of the country’s finest public libraries—for the fourth year in a row.