In the words of Winifred Gambrill Carruthers, the Branch Librarian of the Fort Washington Branch from 1947-1966: "The history of a Branch library vividly reflects the exciting kaleidoscope quality of New York itself, a great colorful ever shifting city of interlocking and overlapping communities of many sorts. What is a slick fashionable we-buy-our-own books neighborhood today becomes a haven for the ambitious struggling foreign born tomorrow, religious or racial groups expand and spill over into outlying Bronx or upper west side sections, blocks of little business establishments gradually become completely residential, and so on all over the city there is this constant flux which can be read too in the changing character of our Branches." (Fort Washington Branch, Five Year Report, July 1, 1951.)
The Fort Washington Branch Library, located on West 179th Street in Upper Manhattan, two blocks from the George Washington Bridge, opened to the public on April 14, 1914, seventeen years before the George Washington Bridge was erected. The branch is named after the Revolutionary War fort that stood at the highest elevation in Manhattan and fell to British and Hessian troops in November 1776. The site itself cost $20,000, and the building was designed by Walter Cook and Winthrop A. Welch, and constructed by the William L. Crow Construction Company, at a cost of approximately $115,000, all paid for with funds donated by Andrew Carnegie.
The three story, five bay Classical Revival style library has a graceful limestone façade with a rusticated ground floor and a granite base. An interior balcony offers more shelf space for reading material as well as a panoramic view of the main floor. For years, a working fireplace in the children's room provided an inviting setting to enjoy books. The branch also has exhibition space for local artists and art groups.
In 1936 a theater was built in the basement under the auspices of the Works Progress Administration. For several years thereafter the branch had a resident theater troupe called the Fort Washington Players. After that group disbanded in 1942, other acting groups performed in the theater, including the Equity Library Theater. The theater was dismantled in 1949, and the space then became the Reference Room, moved from the third floor. The Reference Room houses the largest collection of reference materials in northern Manhattan.
At the 75th Anniversary celebration of the branch in 1989, several prominent luminaries, including statesman Henry Kissinger, playwright William Gibson and journalist/author Edwin Newman, recounted their fond memories of their time spent at the branch in their younger years. Among other notable personalities the branch has served over the years are baseball legend Lou Gehrig, opera diva Maria Callas, author Ralph Ellison, poet Marianne Moore and United States Senator Jacob Javitts.
Norma D. Liss, a Children's Librarian at the Fort Washington Branch in the 1980's, described the neighborhood that the branch serves as "a multi-ethnic section of Manhattan with a mix that includes Orthodox Jews from the 'old days', a variety of Hispanic cultures, some Blacks, Greeks, Russian émigrés, and the most recent arrivals, a sizeable Asian community. There are times, at least in the Children's Room when Fort Washington seems to be a kind of idealized U.N." (Fort Washington Branch, Annual Report, 1985.)
In 1994, to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the branch, Congressman Charles B. Rangel described the Fort Washington branch in the Congressional Record this way: "Throughout the years many thousands of people the world over and from all walks of life have availed themselves of the services of this branch . . . In the 1920's and 1930's immigrants came mostly from Europe-Ireland, Germany, Poland, et cetera, and settled in the Washington Heights-Inwood area. Now, the majority of the immigrants are coming from the Caribbean, particularly the Dominican Republic, as well as from the Soviet Union. The Fort Washington Branch is performing the same functions now as it has done in the past-namely, to reach out into the community by providing much needed services. They have books and cassettes to learn English . . . They also have books in diverse languages for those who wish to read in their native tongue. . . . [The branch] is usually filled up with wall-to-wall people of all ages-students doing homework, people reading Standard and Poors and the Wall Street Journal, as well as magazines on physical fitness, sports, and a broad range of topics. . . . The library is available to all and has been for the past 80 years. They are looking forward to another 80 years playing an important role in their ever changing and vital community."