Friends of the Library Presents Awards to Distinguished Pair
July 15, 2026
The Friends of the Huntington Public Library presented Huntington High School Class of 2026 members Walter Kusterbeck and Jesley Martinez Canales with $1,000 scholarships. Library officials presented the scholarships at the annual senior awards ceremony in the auditorium.
Kusterbeck played football, wrestling and lacrosse for the Blue Devils at one time or another. He plans to wrestle at Southeastern University in Lakeland.
An Advanced Placement Scholar. Ms. Martinez Canales is a county shot put champion. She is a four-time All-County track athlete. She plans to student biology at the University at Albany on a pre-veterinary science track.
Huntington Public Library is one of the oldest public libraries in Suffolk County with roots dating back to 1759. Thirty-nine people joined together to form the first circulating library in Huntington with Reverend Ebenezer Prime as the first “library-keeper.” The library consisted of 115 volumes which were housed in a “box of shelves.” A book could be borrowed for two months but a fine of "one copper per diem" per book was charged.
The library was destroyed during the British occupation of Huntington during the Revolutionary War and it emerged again in 1801 as a circulating library. It was known as the Huntington Lyceum between 1827 and 1843. Again, it was reorganized as the Huntington Library Association until 1858. In 1869, the Huntington Lyceum emerged once more; featuring debates and lectures and developed into the Young Men's Literary Association and continued until 1871.
Mary Talmage was considered to be the “mother of the library” because of her dedication to library services. The first Board meeting was held at her home on Fairview Street in 1875. It was in 1875 that the Huntington Library Association was formed and it became incorporated in 1883.
Through fundraising efforts, the construction of the Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Building was completed in 1892, commemorating our Civil War soldiers. It became the site for the new library. In July 1958, the Library was moved to its present location at 338 Main Street, the former NY Telephone Company building which was built in 1916.