Just in time for Summer Reading! Can you decorate a cake based on a secret theme?
Participants will have an hour to decorate a small 8" round cake based on a secret theme! The theme will be given to you just before the decorating begins!
Open to anyone going into Grades 6-12 (ages 12-18).
Registration is required and begins on June 4th, so sign up early!
All supplies are provided from the cakes and frosting, to the items needed to decorate.
This program is completely free, and there will prizes for 1st, 2nd, and 3rd places.
Register for & attend this event and get 1 of 4 Teen Summer Reading exclusive keychains!
Friends and family are welcome to join us and watch the decorating take place, but no helping allowed!
For more information about this Summer Reading Club program, contact Susan Baker at 330-832-9831, ext. 321.
In 1897, local public servant and storekeeper George Harsh willed $10,000 for “public library purposes.” The funds purchased nearly 10,000 volumes for Massillon’s first public library. Also in 1897, J.W. McClymonds announced his gift of an endowment of $20,000 for a library. The Russell sisters, Flora and Annie, who married the McClymonds brothers, donated the Nahum S. Russell home, located on Prospect Street (now Fourth Street NE), in memory of their parents. The McClymonds Public Library opened on January 1, 1899, and was funded by private subscriptions and an annual disbursement of city funds. In 1922, the McClymonds Public Library became the Massillon City School District Library and was now funded by tax revenue.
In 1930, Annie Steese Baldwin willed her home “as the site for a new public library.” Built around 1835, the brick home overlooking downtown Massillon from Hill Street (now Second Street NE) was first the residence of the city’s founder, James Duncan.
The current Massillon Public Library (Main Location), located at the corner of Lincoln Way East and Second Street NE, opened in 1937. Designed by Albrecht & Wilhelm and funded in part by a Works Progress Administration grant, the Duncan/Baldwin home was connected by a Jeffersonian portico and rotunda to a west wing Reading Room and Children’s Room. The Massillon Museum was also housed at this location until 1996 when it moved to its present location at 121 Lincoln Way East.