Delhi Public Library
Delhi Public Library is a national depository library in the Indian Union Territory of Delhi. The library has 37 branches across the state.
History
The library was established on 27 October 1951 as a pilot project sponsored by UNESCO and the Government of India. The library project dates back to 1944, when Shri Ramkrishna Dalmia donated most of the amount required to construct a library building at the request of Gen. Sir Claude Auchinleck. In February 1950 the Indian Government and UNESCO agreed to initiate the project, and the library was officially opened on 27 October 1951, by then Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. The library buildings were acquired between 1951 and 1953, with operations formally transferred from UNESCO to the Indian Government in 1955. The library provides training facilities to both student librarians and social education workers and has done so from its early days.At present, The library network consists of a Central Library, 3 Branch Libraries, 20 Sub-Branch Libraries, 1 Community Library, 8 Resettlement Colony Libraries, One Braille Library, 100 Mobile Library Service Points and 33 Deposit Stations in the Union Territory of Delhi Delhi & NCR.The Delhi Public Library has been one of the four recipient libraries under the Delivery of Books and Newspapers Act of the Parliament of India, 1954. As per the provision of this act, the Delhi Public Library is entitled to receive one copy of each publication published in India from publishers free of cost.