Skip to content

The Great Library Adventure RPL Mystery Cache

Hidden : 2/25/2025
Difficulty:
2 out of 5
Terrain:
1 out of 5

Size: Size:   other (other)

Join now to view geocache location details. It's free!

Watch

How Geocaching Works

Please note Use of geocaching.com services is subject to the terms and conditions in our disclaimer.

Geocache Description:


Congratulations to Hapitok and pamstah for FTF!

Welcome to the fourth Geocaching Library Book of our series! We got this idea from another library book cache that we found in a free library and had the idea of putting books in public libraries. In order to find this book you will visit the posted coordinates in order to solve a math problem. Once you have solved the problem you will be able to determine the call number of the book that is directly next to our Library Book Cache that has no call number on it. The call number that you will solve for will be located in the Adult Non-fiction section in the basement. You can solve this mystery when the library is not open but you will need to visit the library when it is open to sign the log. You may not claim this cache without signing the log please. When arriving at the posted coordinates, you will be searching for a two digit number on a sign nearby (AB). The last three digits of the posted North coordinates (CDE) and the last three digits of the posted West coordinates (XYZ) are the other numbers you will need. 

AB + CDE + XYZ + 93 = the call number

You can use the certitude link to check your solution.

Rice Public Library Hours : Monday Closed Tuesday 10am-5pm Wednesday 12pm-8pm Thursday 12pm-8pm Friday 10am-5pm Saturday 10am-2pm Sunday Closed

Good luck and happy hunting!

About this Library:

Upon first opening, Rice Public Library had one reading room for ladies and a separate room for gentlemen.

The second floor of the building served as a meeting place for grizzled old Civil War veterans from the local Grand Army of the Republic chapter. It also housed a substantial collection of stuffed birds.

Obviously, RPL has seen a lot of changes since it opened on November 5, 1888.

The library was built and furnished at a cost of $18,500. Designed by the renowned Boston architect Sheperd S. Woodcock and constructed of Philadelphia brick, the Victorian-era building had a Romanesque visual style. Noted for its marble steps, granite sills and a spectacular vaulted ceiling with stained glass panels, this was an institution in which the town of Kittery could take great pride.

Rice Public Library was founded by Arabella Rice, the youngest of four daughters born to Capt. Robert Rice and wife Charlotte, and the only one to outlive her parents. Although a lifelong resident of Portsmouth, when Arabella died in 1872 her will included bequests totaling $30,000 to honor "the wish of my beloved father to give a sum of money for educational purposes to the inhabitants of his native town of Kittery.”

The library's first trustees were former New Hampshire Gov. Ichabod Goodwin (who was married to Arabella's cousin Sarah Parker Rice) and William Hackett of Portsmouth; and Rev. Daniel Austin, John Wentworth and Ephraim Spinney of Kittery.

Arabella stipulated in her will that none of the principal be used for the purchase of land or building. Her hope was that the town itself, or additional benefactors, would provide a home "suitable for a free public Library."

Fortunately, she included a clause allowing interest from the fund to be used toward a building if one was not established after a ten-year period. This turned out to be the case; even then, the trustees had to borrow another $5,000 on a personal note, which was paid back within five years.

Prior to this construction, the library was housed within a single room in what is now Wallingford Square.

Arabella's initials "AR" can still be seen as one approaches the building from Wentworth Street, elegantly carved within a panel to the left of the archway high over the main entrance. They are also inscribed along the Italian marble fireplace on the first floor inside the library.

The year "1888" is etched into the front of the building as well, up above the grand second-floor balcony. 

In 1979, RPL was added to the National Historic Register as a treasured landmark. "Of its type and style, the Rice Public Library is by far the most outstanding building in the State of Maine", the Maine Historic Preservation Commission stated in its July 1979 nomination form.

Over time, the Rice building became too cramped for its growing collections. The old Southern York County District Courthouse, located diagonally just across the street, was purchased in 1988 and renovated into the Taylor Building annex. The judge's bench was converted into an administration desk, and the judicial chambers became the staff room. 

Books were transferred from Rice into the annex through a human chain of Kittery residents one Saturday, with local police blocking off Wentworth Street. The Taylor Building, named for local physician and former library trustee Paul Taylor, opened in October 1990. 

In 1991, longtime patron Sarah Almyra Roberts left the library approximately $100,000 in her will, which funded a major overhaul of the Rice building. The renovation included the removal of a false overhead which had been installed for some reason to hide the library's exquisite vaulted ceiling.

That second-story room was later dedicated in Roberts' memory, and is today used for children's programming and youth collections. A plaque erected in her honor in January 1992, located beneath a large painting of the benefactress, declares: "She loved life, the library and flowers."

The Kay Howells Room, dedicated in memory of Katherine F. Howells, is located in what used to be the basement of the Rice structure. Today it serves as the periodical room, and is also used as a meeting space for RPL's board of directors and the Friends of Rice Public Library.

The Rice and Taylor buildings currently provide more than 56,000 books, DVDs, eReaders, audiobooks, MP3 units and portable video players for free usage. RPL hosts family movie nights with free pizza, a weekly children’s story time, a monthly Lego club, a needlework club and a history book club. Six computer work stations are located in the Rice building, with five more based in the Taylor annex.

Since 2007, RPL has been part of Maine's Minerva system, providing patrons with access to 13 million titles from more than 160 public, academic and special libraries.

The library also organizes events at local senior retirement housing facilities, including book and DVD deliveries, and conducts a summer reading program which has included as many as 500 children – a truly remarkable number for a town the size of Kittery. Adult education classes introducing residents to eReaders and computer programs are hosted at the library as well.

The Friends of Rice Public Library provide substantial support for the facilities, both financially and through volunteer efforts.

Kerr, Allan. “History of Rice Public Library.” History | Rice Public Library, www.rice.lib.me.us/Pages/Index/183538/history. Accessed 25 Feb. 2025.

All Libraries in the series: GCB304Z IPSWICH PUBLIC LIBRARY GCB3P5X RICE PIBLIC LIBRARY (KITTERY) GCB2HRF ROWLEY PUBLIC LIBRARY GCBDFYW TOPSFIELD TOWN LIBRARY GCB2B0Z GEORGETOWN PUBLIC LIBRARY GCBEWZK BOXFORD TOWN LIBRARY GCBFXP2 LANGLEY ADAMS LIBRARY (GROVELAND)
You can validate your puzzle solution with certitude.

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Ubj znal zvahgrf?

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)