Woodstock Book Drive Asks Residents to "Pass the Story On" for Georgia's 250th
Donated books will restock Little Free Libraries across the city as part of the statewide Georgia 250 commemoration
Woodstock Community News Staff||1 min read

The City of Woodstock is marking Georgia's 250th anniversary the way any good story should be celebrated, by sharing it. A Little Free Library Book Drive, running under the tagline "Pass the Story On," is collecting gently used book donations to keep Woodstock's neighborhood book-exchange boxes stocked and reading accessible to residents of all ages.
Drop-offs are being accepted at the Woodstock Visitors Center at 8588 Main St. in Downtown Woodstock. Hours are Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday, noon to 5 p.m.
Little Free Libraries are the small, weatherproof book-exchange boxes found in neighborhoods and public spaces across Cherokee County, the ones where anyone can take a book or leave one behind, no library card required. Simple as the concept is, the boxes quietly fill a real gap, putting books within reach of children and adults who might not otherwise have easy access to them. Keeping those boxes stocked takes a steady flow of donations, which is exactly what this drive aims to provide.
The broader occasion is Georgia 250, the statewide initiative commemorating a quarter-millennium since Georgia's founding as a colony in 1733. Cities and counties across the state are marking the milestone with local events and projects that weave together history, community, and civic identity. Woodstock's contribution puts a distinctly literary spin on that commemoration, a reminder that stories, like communities, only stay alive when people keep passing them along.
The Visitors Center on Main Street serves as a community information and tourism hub for Downtown Woodstock, making it a natural gathering point for residents already spending time in the area. For more information on Woodstock's full slate of Georgia 250 programming, visit woodstockga.gov/250.
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