Geoffrey Burkhardt contributed a very interesting article on the collections of Mechanics' Institute libraries to the Book Collectors of Australia blog in September 2011. This extract from his article demonstrates the vulnerability of Institute legacy collections;
The demise of the Schools of Arts and Mechanics’ Institutes
from the 1930s onwards was largely due to the rise of the movement for the
establishment, by local government councils and municipalities, of free local
and regional public lending libraries in Australian towns and suburbs. This
development, together with the discontinuation of state government subsidies to
the institutes, led to the closing down of many country district institutes,
whose halls reverted to local government ownership and management in many cases.
With the exception of some of the large state capital institutes, mentioned
above, and a few surviving country institutes, many institute book stocks were
subsumed into the local municipal public library. This was the case with the
libraries of the Queanbeyan School of Arts and the Goulburn Mechanics’
Institute which in the 1940s became part of the Queanbeyan Public Library, and
Goulburn Regional Library respectively.
It is now hard to find many of these former institute
library books in these public library collections today, as repeated weeding of
public library stocks of “old” and seldom borrowed books has resulted in the
discarding of most of the former institute stock.
With many smaller institute libraries, the books were simply
thrown out due to lack of use and interest, or sold off to local secondhand
dealers, or local citizens. An example of this was the sad case of the sometime
esteemed library of the Braidwood Literary Institute. The remaining library
books were given to a local service club for a huge “white elephant” auction
held in 1971. I attended this sale, where many boxes of books containing many rare
and scarce items of Australiana were auctioned off at $5 and $10 per box, until
all the Institute’s library books were disposed of. Other institute libraries,
such as the Grafton School of Arts Library, in store at South Grafton, were
destroyed in a flood that struck the town in the 1960s. The institute library
at Cathcart was damaged beyond recovery when a roof guttering overflowed,
discharging torrents of water into the library reading room and down all the
shelving, soaking all the books. Other libraries were destroyed in earlier
decades by fire when local institute halls were burnt down during bush fires,
or through unfortunate accident.
Although the large majority of book collections once held in
the libraries of Schools of Arts and Mechanics’ Institutes have long been
dispersed or destroyed, the few original libraries which have survived and been
preserved may be regarded as valuable historical artefacts and sources for the
study of the Australian bibliographic history.
Burckhardt, Geoffrey, The Libraries of Schools of Arts and Mechanics' Institutes: Time capsules of Australian Book Collections, http://bookcollectorsaustralia.wordpress.com/, September 8, 2011.
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