In memory of Walter Hyatt Davis
May 25, 1873 - May 05, 1951Location
Memorial Page of Walter Davis
Here lies another successful and
philanthropic businessman who wasn’t born in Westminster but came to the city and
left a tremendous impact on his adopted community.
Davis was forced to quit school at age 12 and get a job. He arrived in Westminster in
1889 and found work as a journeyman trimmer in the highly respected Herr Brothers
carriage shop. That “transportation” experience may have inspired him to open a car
dealership in 1910 selling the Stevens-Duryea brand, then E-M-F autos (which went
out of business in 1912), and finally Buicks in 1920. His dealership and gas station appear
here on Westminster’s West Main Street near the railroad. Community service played a big
role in Walter’s life. He was a member of many service clubs including the Westminster
Rotary; he spent a short time as Westminster’s mayor, and a long time on the Board of Trustees of
Western Maryland College. The Westminster Chamber of Commerce once honored
him as “Citizen of the Year.”
Today, Davis is best remembered for his gift of the Davis Library. After years of being
inadequately housed around town, Westminster’s tiny public library moved into the
former Methodist Protestant Church which became the Davis Library, forerunner of
the Carroll County Public Library system. At the Library’s dedication in 1951, Lowell
Ensor, President of Western Maryland College, said, “The constant use of the Davis
Library will demonstrate for decades to come a grateful community’s living
appreciation to a great man and to his gracious wife.” Sadly, Davis died just three
weeks before the dedication ceremony. The library continued in the converted church
until the early 1980s when it moved into a brand new building at 50 East Main Street.

