| Meet Irene Bullock | |||||||||||||||
Irene Kish Bullock "I've never stopped reading." Former teacher and principal, Irene worked in the summer of 1936 as our book truck driver. |
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| In 1936 Irene Kish, then a 20 year old graduate of the Jersey City Normal School, worked the summer as the driver of the Atlantic County Library book truck. She sat down with us recently and reminisced about her summer with the library. | |||||||||||||||
It was at that church she met her future husband, Harry Bullock. The Bullocks had three children: Kathryn, Tom and Larry. She was accompanied on her visit to us by son, Larry Bullock, of Baltimore, MD. |
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| Larry Bullock describes his mother this way ... "Mom was a school teacher for 35 years.She was my 4th grade teacher. Even though my mother, she didn't cut me any breaks - I think she was harder on me and expected me to set an example. Mom always stressed education. In fact, she went back and got another degree from Glassboro State College when she was in her 50s." |
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About the bookmobile! |
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| History of the bookmobile In its beginnings, the library operated strictly as a bookmobile. The book truck often became stuck in the gravel filled or muddy roads of Atlantic County, and sometimes had to be pulled out by Franklin Roosevelt's Work Progress Administration (WPA) road workers. By 1939, over 70 area schools were served by the Atlantic County Library bookmobile. At that time, the library's annual circulation of books was 32,000. Nearly every town maintained a collection as well, although often only a bookcase in a private home. |
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