The Portsmouth Community Library was built in 1945 to serve Portsmouth’s African American citizens, who then comprised about half of the city’s population. While the city founded its library system in 1914, the Portsmouth Community Library was the first freestanding building in Portsmouth to provide library services for African Americans, using African American staff. Despite the building’s small size (900 square feet) and shortage of resources, it was significant as a center for the black community and as a source of pride. The library operated within the doctrine of racial segregation but worked against it by providing information to African Americans. In the late 1950s, the library became the centerpiece of a federal civil rights lawsuit, which resulted in the provision of better library service for all residents. The building has been relocated twice, and now thanks to the African American Historical Society of Portsmouth, the City of Portsmouth, and many others, this historic piece has been restored and turned into a rare museum.
This Virginia historical site is now open as the Portsmouth Colored Community Library Museum and is on the list of the Virginia Landmarks Register & National Register of Historic Places, and the National Register of Historic Places. Its Documents can be found here.
This museum is currently closed for the season. It will reopen on January 17th, 2024.
Contact during hours: 757-966-9865 | Off- Hours: 757-393-8591