15150 NE US Highway 301, Waldo, FL 32694
352-866-7392 TTY 711 (Florida Relay Service)
Regular Hours
Day | Hours |
---|---|
Monday | Closed |
Tuesday | 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. |
Wednesday | 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. |
Thursday | 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. |
Friday | 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. |
Saturday | 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. |
Sunday | Closed |
Upcoming Events
Amenities

Snuggle-Up Center
Teen Space
Quiet Reading Room
ArtSpace
Wi-Fi
Teams
Vacant, Waldo Branch Manager
Fiona Lama, Senior Library Specialist
Renee Patterson, Public Services Administrators - Eastside Branches
Learn more about the Waldo Branch


A small library in Waldo was originally established by Reverend Fred Yerkes in the parsonage of the Episcopal Church. Years later, the Reverend passed the library over to Fern Ganstine. Then for some years before 1994, the only library services in Waldo came by bookmobile every two weeks. It was a big silver van sent out from the Headquarters Library, and it parked on Cole Street, near the Yerkes Center.
Alachua County Library District took over the small building that Yerkes had originally used on 14257 Cole Street in 1996, which became the Waldo Branch for 23 years. The branch operated with only 4 computers, and everything was housed in one room, including the children’s area, the reading area, the staff area, the books, and two tables. Michael Kemp became the first librarian at the Waldo Branch, and Melanie Aultman became the library assistant. There were 7,000 holdings at the branch and programs were held at the school, the Waldo Community Center, and the Yerkes Center, because of the small size of the branch.


In 2014, the Library District spent $325,000 to buy the empty Dollar General on Highway 301 for storage, which is where the Waldo Branch eventually found its new location. The ACLD paid $814,000 to prepare the building for the new public library. The Cole Street location was closed for relocation on May 31, 2019 and the new location of the Waldo Branch opened on June 8, 2019 with 250 people attending the Grand Opening. The branch meets the literary, technological, and recreational needs of residents in Northeast Alachua County, drawing patrons from Waldo and surrounding areas.

Today, the Waldo Branch Library still has the storage area for the Library District, houses 12,000 items, and has a Children’s Area, a Teen Room, a Meeting Room, two Study Rooms, a Quiet Reading Room, a Seed Library and 17 computers. Unique to Waldo is the ArtSpace (a Makerspace for Art), which hosts weekly art programs for the community.
Work Cited:
Dodd Penny et al. Waldo Florida : An Illustrated History. Waldo Area Historical Society 2019.