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Quiet revolutionaries who made a simple idea happen in “Free For All: The Public Library,” on INDEPENDENT LENS – April 29 at 10pm


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“FREE FOR ALL: THE PUBLIC LIBRARY” PREMIERES ON

INDEPENDENT LENS ON TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2025 at 10:00 pm

New Documentary Tells the Extraordinary Story of How a Simple Yet Powerful Idea Shaped a Nation, and the Quiet Revolutionaries Who Made It Happen

A beloved American institution, the public library’s founding principle is simple: build a place where anyone can enter, free of charge, and encounter a universe of ideas. “Free For All: The Public Library,” premiering on INDEPENDENT LENS on April 29, 2025, chronicles the fascinating evolution of the American public library’s trajectory, from the original “Free Library Movement” that began in the late 19th century to the present, when many libraries find themselves caught in the crosshairs of the culture wars and struggling to survive amid budget cuts and closures.

Webster Free Circulating Library staff circa 1904. Credit: Courtesy of New York Public Library
Webster Free Circulating Library staff circa 1904.
Credit: Courtesy of New York Public Library

A film by Dawn Logsdon and Lucie Faulknor, “Free For All: The Public Library” will debut on PBS’s INDEPENDENT LENS on Tuesday, April 29, 2025, at 10 p.m.  The film will be available to stream on the PBS app.

By the time she was 12, director Dawn Logsdon had visited over 100 libraries in almost every state as she and her teacher-parents road-tripped across America during their summer vacations. In “Free for All,” she and co-director Faulknor embark on a new journey—a fun and eye-opening jaunt from Louisiana to California, Massachusetts to Wisconsin, New York to Oregon, and more, visiting landmark sites in library history and uncovering the stories of the colorful personalities who shaped our libraries and the communities they serve. The film highlights inspiring librarians, past and present, mostly women dedicated to upholding the library’s integral position within our democracy, spreading literacy, offering solace and refuge, and uplifting their communities.

Special Collections at the Boston Public Library Credit: Lucie Faulknor
Special Collections at the Boston Public Library
Credit: Lucie Faulknor

Among the stories discovered is that of Ernestine Rose, a librarian on New York’s Lower East Side who was one of the early pioneers in providing books in languages other than English; she also hired the New York Public Library’s first African American librarians, including Regina Andrews, who helped transform an uptown library branch into an intellectual and artistic hub of the Harlem Renaissance. Contemporary librarians include Elizabeth Timmons, who knows all of her rural Wisconsin patrons by name and their literary preferences, and Tameka Roby, who drives the East Baton Rouge bookmobile, providing books and other services to kids, families, and seniors. And, in the nation’s capital, Librarian of Congress Dr. Carla Hayden recalls becoming “all choked up,” thinking about how she, a descendant of enslaved people, is now in charge of America’s “temple of knowledge.”

“Our hope is that this film inspires viewers to see libraries anew—as dynamic, vital institutions at the heart of democracy,” said filmmakers Faulknor and Logsdon. “Libraries are more than places where stories are stored; they are where communities are built, where futures are imagined, and where dignity is upheld.”

“Libraries are the beacon of communities where they provide access to knowledge, community, and engagement and are often overlooked, but ‘Free For All’ is the story of how a simple idea shaped our nation,” said Lois Vossen, executive producer of INDEPENDENT LENS.