The Crescent Heights library, circa 1940s. (Harry Pollard/Calgary Public Library)

The missing Calgary Public Library branch in Crescent Heights

It was more than a mere book repository.’

This week, with spring arriving in earnest, I have been doing a lot of walking in my neighbourhood.

On Wednesday, I had city council piped into one ear as they worked through the convoluted process of repealing blanket rezoning. Here and there I pulled out my notebook and jotted down a few notes. Good Sprawlcast fodder for later.

But the best part of my “walking office” is the side discoveries made along the way.

At the northeast corner of Centre Street and 12 Avenue N.E., there is a dental clinic. As I pass by, I imagine what it used to be: the Crescent Heights branch of the Calgary Public Library.

The Crescent Heights library, circa 1940s/50s. (Harry Pollard/Calgary Public Library collection)

With its streamline moderne design, the building was originally a late-night hamburger joint that, in 1939, opened to much fanfare. It was called Puckett’s Dine & Dance.

“This ultimate in dining and entertainment palaces has set an example for the world to aim at,” waxed The Albertan. “Nothing in Hollywood is smarter.”

From a newspaper ad for Puckett's Dine & Dance, The Albertan, December 23, 1939.

Puckett’s Dine & Dance was the ninth location of White Spot, a Calgary hamburger chain started by George and Jerry Puckett in 1929. This was a separate operation from the White Spot chain that Nat Bailey started in B.C. in 1928 (which, until recent years, had a couple locations in Calgary).

Unlike the restaurants of Nat Bailey—who, in the 1950s, bought the Vancouver Mounties Triple-A baseball team—Calgary’s White Spot restaurants had no nautical-themed Pirate Paks to speak of.

But they did have a baseball team in the 1930s, the White Spots, and the Pucketts did a lot to promote sport in the city after moving here from Saskatchewan.

The White Spot baseball team in 1932, at 307 8 Avenue S.E.—where Calgary's Central Library stands today. (Glenbow Archives, University of Calgary)

Despite the hype, Puckett’s Dine & Dance on Centre Street was short-lived. The Calgary Public Library bought the building and opened it in 1943, thanks in large part to Crescent Heights librarian Sada Kiteley, who saw opportunity when Puckett's closed.

The library had deep roots in the area. In fact, Crescent Heights was Calgary's first branch library.

In 1913, only a year after the Central Park library opened as the first big public library building in Alberta, the library opened an additional location in Crescent Heights.

It was originally in the Hicks Block at 1804 1 Street N.W., a brick Edwardian building that still stands across the street from Balmoral School in what is now Tuxedo Park.

It was well used to the point of overcrowding and by the 1940s, locals felt a real sense of ownership of the branch. “It belongs to the district,” wrote Kiteley in the Calgary Herald in 1943, “so that our readers say ‘When are we moving?’ not ‘When are you moving?’”

This was during World War II.

“This community sense is an important thing, this opportunity to belong and to share,” wrote Kiteley. “It is the beginning of a feeling of larger responsibility and co-operation which, we believe, must extend to nations as well as individuals and must characterize our world if it is to survive.”

“We hope that our branch library will increasingly become a community centre,” she added.

And so it did.

The children's section of the Crescent Heights library, circa 1950s. (Harry Pollard/CPL collection)

The Crescent Heights library on Centre Street served the area for half a century, although the building lost some of its elegance over time. For those in Renfrew, Crescent Heights and Rosedale, it was a library you could walk or bike to.

But in the summer of 1993, the library ran a notice in the Herald abruptly announcing that the branch would be closed due to “structural safety concerns.”

Closure notice in the Calgary Herald, July 31, 1993.

Locals were irked by the sudden closure, and fought to keep the branch open. What they described in 1993 echoed the aspirations that Kiteley articulated in 1943.

“Our branch library is much more than a mere book repository,” wrote Gus Barron to the Herald. “It has no parking space to speak of and that's all right; people walk to it. It's not much to look at, but it is warm inside—warm with friendship.”

One Renfrew resident, Shirley Hall, described how she had recently planted flowers outside the library with her boys as a gesture of appreciation.

“Sure there are larger branches, but I find Nora, Jane, Mary and Nancy each treat us as family—even recognizing my voice on the phone,” Hall wrote to the Herald. “In our large city this is worth a great deal.”

“My boys and I walk or ride our bikes to the library,” added Hall. No longer. “My 10-year-old could finally go alone but alternate libraries are too far for him to walk or bike—he has to use the public transportation—so now there's a cost involved.”

This community sense is an important thing, this opportunity to belong and to share.

Sada Kiteley, Crescent Heights Librarian, 1943

In 1994 the library announced that the branch would remain closed permanently.

It would have cost up to $640,000 to fix the roof. And with Calgary's sprawling post-war growth, the library system had a lot more ground to cover in the 1990s than it did in the 1940s.

According to the Herald, library board chair Bill Severson said “the branch needed to be closed as part of an over-all scheme ‘to provide equitable access to all Calgarians.’”

Councillor Bev Longstaff let fly on the library board. “They’ve completely ignored the community and they’ve completely ignored whatever input I gave them,” she told the Herald

But what was done was done.

The branch has remained closed for more than 30 years.

CHV Dental on the northeast corner of Centre Street and 12 Avenue N.E. Photo: Jeremy Klaszus

As I walk around the neighbourhood I wonder: Is it too late for a campaign to bring back the Crescent Heights library in some form?

I find myself getting agitated about all this but then remember that the building started as a private venture, not a library.

Today it is a dental clinic, CHV Dental (Crescent Heights Village). The Ng family bought the building after the library closed and has been serving the area for three decades now.

Inside the waiting room, a painting of the old library—rescued and cleaned up by Crescent Heights resident John McDermid—hangs on the wall, a reminder of what was there for half a century.

The Ng family has a painting of the library displayed in their dental waiting room. The name in the corner is Corbett. Photo: Jeremy Klaszus

When I get back to my desk after my wanderings, I look at my list of upcoming stories for The Sprawl and see it as a growing thing, with all kinds of new shoots coming up. I wonder how, in January, I was completely frozen and at a loss on what to write about.

This little library side quest reminds me of something Kate Bowler wrote in the Globe & Mail last weekend. “Joy lives on the detours,” she wrote. “It lives in the places where we let ourselves be interrupted, where we choose delight over duty...”

And speaking of joy... and books... now that spring is here, it’s almost time to roll out The Sprawl’s Pop-Up Press, which has been stowed away for the winter.

The first pop-up will be on Saturday, April 25, from 11 to 1 p.m., outside Shelf Life Books for Canadian Independent Bookstore Day. I've got something fun planned for the press that day. Mark your calendars!

Jeremy Klaszus is founder and editor of The Sprawl. Special thanks to Alan Zakrison for unearthing the historic photos of the Crescent Heights library in this story.

CORRECTION 2026/04/11: This story originally misidentified the cross street of the building as 12 Street N.E. It is 12 Avenue N.E. The Sprawl regrets the error.

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