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Cards, gifts, a ‘tunnel of love’: Uvalde library offers healing

In the days after the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, last year, messages of love and support flooded in from around the country. The public library seemed a logical place to send all of them.

But the library wasn’t sure how to handle the items. It settled on starting an archival project, which aims to preserve the national response to the tragedy – and help residents and visitors learn more about Uvalde. 

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The public library in Uvalde, Texas, is documenting the “outpouring of love” after the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School last year, helping the town to process and heal.

Tammie Sinclair, a Uvalde native, returned home to lead the project this year. She’s been archiving thousands of cards, gifts, and newspaper articles and is helping to start an oral history project that will be run out of the library.

As Uvalde continues to heal after the shooting, Ms. Sinclair’s work aims to highlight the flood of love and support that has followed the devastating event. In the long term, the goal is to help Uvalde learn more about itself – and grow as a result. 

“There’s a lot of ugly that came out of [the shooting] – not just the tragedy itself, but the aftermath,” she says. “But it’s what you choose to focus on, and we’re trying to focus on the good.”

When Tammie Sinclair needed some peace and quiet growing up in a crowded, three-generation household, there was only one place to go. The public library was her sanctuary, her escape, even her summer camp.

And for the past year, El Progreso Memorial Library has been her workplace. She hopes her work here will benefit her hometown for generations.

Since January, the Uvalde native and former teacher has been leading a grant-funded program to archive the national response to the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School last year. She and a small group of volunteers have been archiving thousands of cards, gifts, newspaper articles, and more from the aftermath of the tragedy. She’s also helping to start an oral history project that will be run out of the library, and she’s helping plan the physical expansion of El Progreso to better house all of it into the future.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

The public library in Uvalde, Texas, is documenting the “outpouring of love” after the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School last year, helping the town to process and heal.

As Uvalde continues to heal after the shooting, Ms. Sinclair’s work is aiming to highlight the flood of love and support that has followed the tragedy. And in the long term, the aim is to help Uvalde learn more about itself – and grow as a result. In her view, there’s no better place to do all this than a public library. 

“This is one place in the community where anybody is welcome,” says Ms. Sinclair. “We want to be a place of hope and education.”

Henry Gass/The Christian Science Monitor

Tammie Sinclair, an archivist at El Progreso Memorial Library, is a Uvalde native and former teacher. She is leading a project at the local public library to archive the response to the Robb Elementary School shooting in May 2022.

“There’s a lot of ugly that came out of [the shooting] – not just the tragedy itself, but the aftermath,” she adds, “but it’s what you choose to focus on, and we’re trying to focus on the good.”

Library a “critical part of the healing and the coping”

For much of its 120-year history, El Progreso has been more than just a library. Since the shooting, it’s played an important role in supporting Uvalde, providing both services and a sense of normalcy.

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