Wednesday, 11 December 2013
Wednesday, 4 December 2013
NEWSLETTER No.1
Friends of the Launceston Mechanics' Institute Inc.
Newsletter 1
December 2013
Dear Members of FOLMI,
This is the first of (what we trust will be) many
newsletters to keep you updated on FOLMI's activities.
Incorporation
As you will have seen from the heading, we are now an incorporated
not-for-profit group, a legal entity under the Associations Incorporation Act
(1964). This means we can enter into agreements such as that which will be
required by Council to permit the transfer of the LMI Collection to our
safekeeping.
Council Resolutions
The following resolutions were passed unanimously at the
Launceston City Council's meeting of Monday 25 November 2013:
1. The majority of the collection of the Launceston Mechanics' Institute will be returned to the Council by LINC Tasmania, with ownership transferred by the Council to the Friends of the Launceston Mechanics' Institute, subject to the charter of the Friends of the Launceston Mechanics' Institute having a suitable clause which offers the collection back to the Launceston City Council or gives it right of first refusal in the event of a wind up of the Launceston Mechanics Institute.Ownership of a much smaller number of historically and culturally important items will be transferred by the Council to LINC Tasmania.Custody of the archival records of the Launceston Mechanics' institute will be granted to QVMAG by LINC Tasmania. The Museum will also receive an assortment of objects, as well as a selection of books that once were part of the Evandale Subscription Library (est. 1847).
2. Ownership of the Meston Collection will be transferred by the Council to LINC Tasmania.
Steering Committee
The next step in the process of transferring these
collections to their new owners and custodians will be the formation of a steering
committee involving representatives of FOLMI, LINC Tasmania and QVMAG. The
steering committee will need to begin meeting before the end of 2013, and we
will keep you informed of the outcomes of meetings and decisions taken. It will
be through this committee that the ramifications of the Council's decision will
be worked out in detail.
It is still possible that everything will be in readiness
for the LMI books to be moved in January-February 2014. We will update members
further when the work is about to start.
Support from Friends of
the Library, Launceston
At the November meeting of
Friends of the Library, Launceston, a
request was tabled for financial support in the form of a transfer of funds
from FOLL to the newly formed organisation Friends of the Launceston Mechanics'
Institute.
The funds were sought to enable our
organisation to undertake initial work and to defray the costs involved in
establishing the organisation and making it operational.
This request was made on the basis of a community of
interest between the two organisations, their shared goal of supporting and
enhancing library services in Launceston, and the importance of saving the
highly significant Launceston Mechanics' Institute Collection.
I am pleased to advise that the request was viewed very
positively by FOLL and most generously supported by their members, and FOLL has
made the sum of $2000 available to assist our work.
Meeting with Mary
Dent
In November, Mike and I had the pleasure of a two-hour
meeting with Mary Dent. Mary worked at the Launceston Library from 1945 until
1988, so she worked in both the Mechanics' Institute building and the new
Northern regional Library. Mary was able to answer so many of our questions
about the way in which the LMI collection was managed, how it was arranged and
later stored. She named the staff members shown in photographs of the interior
of the Institute and showed us how the books were set out, and made us aware of
the purpose of the surviving card catalogues. Through Mary's description we were subsequently able to
identify the three stock books which were used as Accession Registers
throughout the life of the Institute. These registers include a complete
chronological list of 37708 books which were added to the collection which will
be a marvellous cross-reference to the surviving volumes.
It was particularly interesting to find out that when mary
started work at the Institute books were still being sent to Chivers Bindery in
Bath for rebinding.
Mary has very kindly agreed to visit us when we are
established at UTAS to look at the collection and share her memories.
MIV Newsletter
The Mechanics Institutes of Victoria have asked for an
update on the Launceston situation for the summer issue of their newsletter Useful Knowledge. Mike has submitted an
article and illustration. We have a subscription to Useful Knowledge and will make the copies available to members as
soon as we are established at UTAS.
Blog Updates
The LMI blog is still being updated periodically at http://launcestonmechanicsinstitute.blogspot.com.au/
I will archive the newsletters on the site as they appear.
Peter Richardson
President
Wednesday, 27 November 2013
MEDIA RELEASE
Friends of the Launceston Mechanics' Institute
THURSDAY 28 NOVEMBER 2013
The members of Friends of the Launceston Mechanics'
Institute Inc. (FOLMI) welcome the decision of Launceston City Council to
transfer the former Launceston Mechanics' Institute collection to their
custodianship and future management.
FOLMI was formed as a response to the threat of dispersal
and possible disposal of a major portion of the LMI Collection. The
organisation brings together individuals with the enthusiasm, interest and most
importantly the expertise to organise, research and maintain this highly significant
collection for the benefit of the Launceston community, local historians and
the wider circle of researchers into Australian cultural history.
The aim of FOLMI is to ensure the LMI continues to be
acknowledged as an important cultural institution in the history of Launceston;
to preserve what remains of its holdings for their local and national
significance; and to facilitate research into the collection in all its
aspects.
This is a remarkable and important collection, not only for
the heritage of Launceston, but in a national context.
It is exceptionally rare to have such a large collection
surviving from the Mechanics' Institute era.
These organisations were the precursors of the modern public
library, of the technical and adult education movements, and in Launceston's
case of the QV Museum and Art Gallery.
By the 1890s there were over 2000 Mechanics Institutes and
Schools of Arts in Australia. Most Institute collections have been dispersed,
sold off, discarded, or destroyed by fire and flood many years ago. Of the
small number that have survived Launceston is the earliest and the largest –
comparable only with Adelaide and Ballarat but older and more complete.
Equally important is the fact that the Launceston Collection
has survived with its records largely intact – we still have the correspondence
files, catalogues, accession books and accounts of the institute.
This means we have a unique resource for researchers – with
an interest in library history, reading tastes, the history of ideas, nineteenth
century writing, bookselling and publishing, and the social history of the
city.
A long history of prudent management and wise decisions has
led to the survival of this collection;
- That the
Launceston Mechanics' Institute Committee took such care to build and maintain
its excellent library collection on behalf of the community between 1842 and
1929.
- That the
Launceston Public Library committee kept the collection in its safe keeping for
over 20 years, as did the Launceston City Council when it took over operation
of the Launceston Public Library.
- That the
Aldermen of the day had the foresight to retain ownership of the collection
when it was transferred to the Tasmanian Library Board's custodianship in 1971,
- And that
the Library has kept the collection in storage from that date until now.
In 2013 the FOLMI solution would seem to be the only way the
collection can be kept intact from this time forward, given that it does not
fit the collecting priorities of either QVMAG or LINC Tasmania. That is the
reason FOLMI was formed - to save the
collection from going the way of so many other similar collections.
Who are we?
FOLMI is an incorporated not-for-profit community group
which held its inaugural meeting on 18 October 2013.
Our Objects and Purposes
The aim of the Friends of the Launceston Mechanics’
Institute Inc. is to establish and maintain a working research Launceston
Mechanics’ Institute Collection by;
i) locating, selecting, organising, cataloguing and
preserving existing materials once the property of the Launceston Mechanics’
Institute between 1842 and 1929;
ii) liaising with local, state and national government
agencies and with relevant interest groups to promote the significance of the
LMI Collection;
iii) establishing a permanent home for the LMI Collection,
in particular those parts not integrated with local and state government
agencies;
iv) providing broad public access to the catalogue of the
LMI Collection and enabling direct access to researchers needing to use the
Collection;
Current Membership
Office-bearers President:
Peter Richardson
Secretary: Mike McCausland
Treasurer: Richard Pickup
Public Officer: Prue McCausland
Committee Peter
Richardson, Mike McCausland, Richard Pickup, Prue McCausland, Sue McClarron
(Vice-President), John Dent.
Members The
organisation currently has 34 members.
Our Project
The proposed transfer of Launceston Mechanics' Institute
books to FOLMI involves between 20,000 and 25,000 books and other publications,
of which 12,000 are non-fiction, 8,000 are fiction, and the remainder are
periodicals.
There are other surviving books in the Collection which are
still in use at Launceston LINC. It is proposed that these be retained in that
location until they are no longer required, and then transferred to FOLMI.
The books and periodicals transferred to FOLMI will
initially be held at the Newnham Campus of the University of Tasmania which has
made a suitable space available for storage, assessment and evaluation of the
collection.
FOLMI intends in the long term to establish the Collection
as a research base, and for this purpose external sources of funding will
eventually be required. It is envisaged that funds will be supplied through
private donations, joint ventures with partners, and through cultural sector
grants.
Peter Richardson
President, Friends of the Launceston Mechanics' Institute
Inc.
Sunday, 24 November 2013
Northern library collections agreement reached
Media Release from Launceston City Council.
Monday 25 November 2013
Launceston Alderman have today voted to enter into an
agreement with LINC Tasmania on the future of two collections currently held at
the Launceston LINC.
The Launceston Mechanics' Institute (est. 1842) and the
Meston collections are owned by the Launceston City Council and, by an
agreement signed in March 1971, have since been managed by the State Library
(now part of LINC Tasmania).
The collections, particularly the Meston Collection, hold
many valuable 19th century Australian and Tasmanian publications. The
Mechanics' Institute Collection is a window into the reading tastes of
Launcestonians of the 19th and early 20th centuries. It is one of the few such
Australian collections relatively intact and still in existence today.
In 2014, the Launceston LINC building on Civic Square will
undergo greatly anticipated renovations, as announced by the Minister for
Education and Skills in February 2013.
Preparation for this project has prompted a need to resolve
some long outstanding issues of collection ownership, and develop long-term
plans for items held in storage for many years.
The Council and LINC Tasmania engaged with a newly formed
community group, the Friends of the Launceston Mechanics' Institute (FOLMI), to
find a suitable arrangement for the large number of items that do not fit the
collecting priorities of either QVMAG or LINC Tasmania
Launceston Mayor Albert van Zetten said all three parties
had been aware of a need to do their utmost to care for the heritage of
Launceston, while at the same time balancing issues of responsible stewardship
with progress and development.
Aldermen today approved a recommendation that LINC Tasmania
be granted ownership of the Meston Collection as well as items from the
Mechanics' Institute Collection which has already been included in the
Launceston Local Studies and Reference collections.
Jenny Rayner, Director of LINC Tasmania, said: “These items
form the basis of our local heritage collections and we are delighted to
formally accept responsibility for their ongoing care and management. They will
be securely held in Launceston for consultation by Tasmanians and visitors from
all over the world, and for the benefit of future generations.”
It is also recommended that the remaining volumes in storage
be transferred to the newly incorporated Friends of the Launceston Mechanics'
Institute. FOLMI will be responsible for the large general non-fiction and
fiction collections and periodicals. They plan to make these items available to
researchers and the general public once they have completed the necessary
sorting and organising of the materials.
LINC Tasmania will grant custody of the official records of
the Mechanics' Institute to the Council's QVMAG. The Museum will also be given
an assortment of the Institute's objects. Books presently held by LINC Tasmania
which were originally part of the Evandale Subscription Library (est. 1847)
will also be transferred to the QVMAG Museum where they will complement an
existing collection.
Speaking for their respective organisations, the Directors
of LINC Tasmania and QVMAG expressed their satisfaction at the outcome of six
months of negotiations.
QVMAG Director Richard Mulvaney said: "This is a
sustainable outcome that will preserve Launceston's heritage well into the future.
On behalf of all parties involved I wish to thank everyone for their input and
advice, and for the amicable spirit in which the negotiations were
conducted."
It is expected that items will be transferred to their new
locations early in 2014.
Sunday, 27 October 2013
Friends of the Launceston Mechanics' Institute (FOLMI)
A very successful inaugural meeting was held on 18 October
to establish FOLMI. At the meeting we adopted a Constitution, elected office-bearers,
established a committee, and endorsed an application to seek incorporation under
the Associations Incorporation Act 1964.
The organisation currently has 34 members and we would welcome
any interested people who would like to contribute to this exciting project.
Our Aims
The aim of the Friends of the Launceston Mechanics’
Institute, as set out in its Constitution, is to establish and maintain a
working research Launceston Mechanics’ Institute Collection by;
i) locating, selecting, organising, cataloguing and
preserving existing materials once the property of the Launceston Mechanics’
Institute between 1842 and 1929;
ii) liaising with local, state and national government
agencies and with relevant interest groups to promote the significance of the
LMI Collection;
iii) establishing a permanent home for the LMI Collection,
in particular those parts not integrated with local and state government
agencies;
iv) providing broad public access to the catalogue of the LMI
Collection and enabling direct access to researchers needing to use the
Collection;
Office-bearers
President: Peter Richardson
Vice-President Sue McClarron
Secretary: Mike McCausland
Treasurer: Richard Pickup
Public Officer: Prue McCausland
Committee:Peter
Richardson, Mike McCausland, Richard Pickup, Prue McCausland, Sue McClarron,
John Dent.
Priorities
The immediate priorities for the organisation are;
•To seek Launceston
City Council endorsement for the transfer of the LMI collection to FOLMI and
formalise an agreement.
•To participate
in a steering committee with LINC Tasmania and QVMAG to plan future management
of collection.
•To establish
agreement with LINC Tasmania and QVMAG on what is to be transferred.
•To
establish an agreement with the University of Tasmania regarding occupancy of an
interim home for the collection (Room 007 on the University's Newnham Campus).
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