Showing posts with label Newsletters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Newsletters. Show all posts

Saturday, 17 February 2018

Newsletter


Hello members and supporters of FOLMI,

It's quite a while since we circulated news of our activities. We've been travelling steadily on a couple of projects, so here's an update.  

All the best for 2018!


Restarting conservation work on the LMI Collection in D007
Conservation work will restart in the week beginning 26 Feb. It will be based at UTAS Room D007 and will focus on cleaning. We’ve rewritten the guidelines on this, and on other procedures, to make the tasks as straightforward and efficient as possible. Months of working on cleaning has convinced the teams that we can get much more done with a simplified procedure using the vacuum cleaner and smoke sponges for virtually all books.
If you’d like to be involved in any of the conservation activities, please contact Mike McCausland (63272540 or mmccausl@yahoo.com). He’ll also soon be ringing around the existing teams as well as potential participants inside and outside FOLMI.

Cataloguing
There’s been steady progress made by our dedicated team in adding entries to the Libraries Australia database over the last six months. Having completed the nonfiction the team has moved on to fiction and periodicals. They have now entered over 9,500 nonfiction and fiction titles.
The final number of fiction titles to be entered will be well down on the 6749 books of the Victorian & Edwardian Collection in the TALIS catalogue we inherited from the LINC. It seems the State Library used the Launceston Stack to ‘sequester’ old books that had come from donors and other libraries around the state; these went unchecked into the V&E Collection and catalogue. Interesting as these volumes may be – coming as they do from private collections, Sunday School prizes, regional libraries at Evandale, Longford, Ouse etc. – they can’t be included as part of our LMI Collection. Fortunately many have a new home in the QVMAG’s special collections.
Di Worth, our experienced cataloguer living in southern Tasmania, has done a magnificent job in entering the periodicals, which are certainly awkward to catalogue. There are a few queries being answered by examining the hard copies on the shelves at D007, but once this is done, this most significant part of the Collection will have been entered. Eventually they will need conservation work – a vital step considering their general condition.
The long-term cataloguing project will not be completed by the middle of the year, so we shall need to renew our registration for cataloguing with Libraries Australia for another year.

Facebook
Are you regularly checking our Facebook page?  It carries current news and links to the FOLMI blogspot and other sites of interest to members. Sue McClarron has been maintaining it; if you have any items you think would interest members and the general public, contact her at smcclarron51@gmail.com.
We also continue to post regularly on our blog at http://launcestonmechanicsinstitute.blogspot.com.au/


That long-term goal, a permanent home
There is a proposed collaboration between Launceston Historical Society, Tasmanian Family History Society, Royal Australian Artillery Association of Tasmania and FOLMI to establish a Launceston History Research Centre at the Paterson Barracks on the corner of St John and William streets. This is being followed up by John Dent, Gus Green and members of all four community groups. Its goal is to make a submission to the Department of Defence, the State Government and the City of Launceston to take ownership of the Paterson Barracks when it is decommissioned in a few years’ time.
The objectives of the group are to:
·         Preserve a heritage asset – the buildings
·         Bring new life to the buildings and a city precinct through a new use
·         Provide an information/research service that is currently lacking
·         Celebrate the military and immigrant history of the city
·         Provide new public access to community assets and resources
·         Create a new centre for sharing ideas, expertise and knowledge
·         Create new opportunities for collaborative research
·         Enhance the visitor experience in the city… and much more.


Mike McCausland
Secretary, FOLMI

Thursday, 14 May 2015

FOLMI Newsletter No. 3




ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING
The Friends of the Launceston Mechanics’ Institute is holding its AGM on 22 May 2015 at 5:30pm in the Adult Education Buildings, 8 High St.  Everyone interested in FOLMI’s activities is welcome. The agenda has the necessary and customary items, beginning with confirmation of last year’s minutes, then:                                                          

  • President’s Report; 
  • Treasurer’s Report, which will be followed by a motion that, because of the small amounts of money handled by the association, we will avoid the cost of auditing (currently about $600+) by taking up the Dept. of Consumer Affairs & Fair Trading offer to apply for exemption from audit;                             
  •  Election of officers and committee (all of those currently holding positions are willing to continue, but of course new nominations are encouraged and will be called for on the evening);                             
  •  Setting of annual membership fee – currently $0; there are no plans to change this;               
  •  Any further business.

There will be a less formal meeting and general discussion afterwards to talk about the events of the last year, answer questions and plan for the coming year, especially major projects.

SIGNIFICANCE ASSESSMENT
Well, we couldn’t have asked for more from our CHG-funded Significance Assessment of the LMI Collection.  Dr Susan Marsden of Adelaide was really enthusiastic about the Collection, spent several days looking over it and meeting with members and staff at QVMAG and Launceston LINC before writing a VERY commendatory report. It came in time for us to continue with the CHG round of 2015 applications outlined below. We’re planning to print off a dozen copies of the 44 page report to present to Council. LINC and others interested in the fate of the collection, as well as keep a copy for reference in D007 at UTAS.
You can access an electronic copy of the report, plus its appendices, via the FOLMI blog at: http://launcestonmechanicsinstitute.blogspot.com.au/.  We will have a copy at the AGM on 22 May.
Dr Marsden made quite a few recommendations to preserve and promote the collection, including:
             establish a suitable permanent home in Launceston, with public access to it;
             continue cataloguing and digitising of items;
             develop projects (such as work on assessing items) and training programs for volunteers;
             increase public knowledge and use of the Collection as a whole, as well as of the most significant items;
             offer non LMI books to QVMAG;
             negotiate with LINC to restore the Australian and Tasmanian titles and related publications to the LMI Collection [now that’s ambitious!];
             use her significance assessment (SA) as a planning document.
One of the most useful aspects of a successful significance assessment is that it allows us to make further applications for support for our work, especially in asking the Community Heritage Grants scheme to fund a Preservation Needs Assessment – in fact it seems that such a step is almost guaranteed by the scheme.  As well we’re looking for support for cataloguing the collection, and applications for both projects went in to CHG on 3 May.  Again there’ll be a long wait to find out what we’ll get, and it won’t be until November 2015 that we’ll have official notice of getting a preservation needs assessment (budgeted at $6,127) and perhaps funding for cataloguing training and registration costs with Libraries Australia (budgeted at $6,370, with opportunities for five members who are qualified librarians to receive specialist training in this form of cataloguing).

BLOG 
The latest information on our blog has some great new items posted by Dorothy Rosemann and Peter Richardson, including:

  •  a deal brokered in 1920 between the Commonwealth Parliament librarian Arthur Wadsworth and the LMI librarian Joseph Forward to obtain a complete set of the Historical Records of Australia – the only ones to be found outside a capital city;

  • Anthony Trollope’s works in the LMI fiction collection and the famous author’s visit to Tasmania; and

  •  publications by the Institute, especially in the C19th.


FACEBOOK
Sue and Emily McClarron have set up a Facebook account.  It’s an even more immediate means of keeping up with news and members’ interests. Its most recent pages  are on the Brindley organ (to mark Mothers Day 10 May); a 1917 children’s book The Young ANZACs; Anthony Trollope’s 200th anniversary; and an ABC OPEN posting of St John St as it might be now if the 1971 demolition of the Mechanics’ Institute hadn’t occurred.  The Facebook address is: https://www.facebook.com/launcestonmechanicsinstitute

RECENT AND CURRENT PROJECTS
Inventory of nonfiction – Some sixteen members of FOLMI have been involved in compiling an inventory of the nonfiction books shelved in D007 at UTAS. They worked from November 2014 to April this year, usually in teams of two, to record in long-hand the publication and accession details of approximately 8000 titles.  The recording sheets are filed in ring binders kept on the northern wall of D007.                                                                                                                                                          Creating an inventory has been a most important step in the long-term task of cataloguing the collection as a whole. We can use it to check via Trove which items are held elsewhere in Australia; where that’s the case, we can access full publication and physical details of these books.  It will be a great saving in time in cataloguing, as we can merely indicate in the National Union Catalogue that we hold a copy, and to extract those details for use in our own collection catalogue. It also gives us an opportunity to add LMI Collection titles that aren’t held elsewhere in Australian public collections onto the Australian National Bibliographic Database.

Inventory of popular fiction – Two of the inventory teams have continued to record details of the Victorian & Edwardian Fiction Collection inherited from Launceston LINC. The State Library back in the early 1990s created a catalogue for the fiction up to 1914, but it had a number of limitations.  It included quite a few books published before 1914 but had never been in the Launceston Mechanics’ Institute collection; they came from donations from the public or other libraries all over Tasmania, and seem just to have been included on the Stack shelves in Launceston because they were of a similar venerable age. Also, as we’ve learnt that the LMI certainly still existed partly under that name until 1929, and until 1945 administered by the once-LMI Board, any items transferred to the State Library in 1945 as part of the collection as it existed then we now consider as part of our collection.  
So some members have been separating out books that were never owned by the LMI and adding in the ones after 1914 that were, and the recording teams have continued filling out inventory sheets for them to include with the nonfiction when the big copy-cataloguing task begins. Quite a few of the weeded books, like those from Evandale Subscription Library, Longford, Deloraine and other local libraries, and those presented as Sunday School Prizes, will go to QVMAG, who are adding considerably to their holdings of books with regional affiliations.  Others, like those from Ouse, Green Ponds, Port Esperance and Bushy Park have been offered to local history groups elsewhere in the state who’ve shown strong interest in recovering items that offer insights into their past. It’s hoped that this part of the cataloguing project will be finished and reported on at the 22 May AGM.
Lady travellers – Anna Lynde has been compiling a bibliography of works in our collection by intrepid lady travellers and explorers of the nineteenth century. This was clearly a subject of great interest to LMI members.
Catalogues published by the LMI - Sue McClarron has been analysing the many printed catalogues produced by the Institute for the convenience of members. Sue is looking at the ways the collection was organised and how it evolved over time.
Women’s roles and contributions to the LMI – Dorothy Rosemann has been working through the Institute's records now held at QVMAG, recording the level of membership and involvement of women in the Institute.
Flickr project – Peter Richardson has developed an extensive online collection and exhibition of Institute bookplates, binders' tickets, booksellers' stamps and other ephemera found in the LMI books at https://www.flickr.com/photos/launcestonmechanicsinstitute/

FUTURE PROJECTS
It’s our hope that discussion and the Q&A session after the AGM on the 22nd will open up new avenues for members to initiate projects and to indicate their interest in participating in those that are suggested.  Come along and join in!

Mike McCausland
Secretary, FOLMI

Sunday, 30 March 2014

FOLMI Newsletter 2



Friends of the Launceston Mechanics' Institute Inc.

Newsletter 2

March 2014

Transfer of Launceston Mechanics' Institute Stock
The transfer of stock to FOLMI from the Launceston LINC building is well under way. As agreed with LINC management the first part of the collection to be transferred was the Adult Non-Fiction. This has now all been unpacked and shelved in our temporary location at the UTAS Newnham campus.
In all there were 620 boxes moved over two days. Most of these books had not been looked at since 1990 and were entirely unsorted. Now that they are on shelves the work can begin to sort them into order and arrange the collection for assessment and evaluation. Volunteers to assist with this work would be most welcome, particularly those who remember their Dewey Decimal System.
An interesting sidelight in this process has been the discovery of several books from other smaller Institutes such as Longford, Evandale, George Town, Carrick, Deloraine and Lefroy.

Open Day
Anyone who would like to visit the University (Room D007) to look at the collection is invited to do so on Saturday April 5.  Peter Richardson will be there from 10.00 -4.00 to show you around.

Thank you to Marion Sargent for this picture of the collection taken on our Open Day


FOLMI Annual General Meeting
Although we have only been an incorporated body since late in 2013, we are required to hold our AGM in the next two months. It is expected that this will take place in early May, and we will advise the date, time and place of meeting soon.

Community Heritage Grants Scheme
As previously advised, a submission is being prepared seeking funding from this Australian Government scheme to commission a Significance Assessment Report on the collection. The closing date for the current round is May 3.

Going to the Mechanics
We still have a couple of copies of Stefan Petrow's history of the Institute available for sale. These were kindly donated by the publisher Professor Campbell Macknight. If any FOLMI member would like a copy please let Mike McCausland know.

Visit to Ballaarat Mechanics' Institute
Mike and Prue McCausland recently spent a day visiting the BMI where they were given a very informative tour and outline of the history of the collection by a member of the BMI Library Committee. Ballarat's is the only other surviving Institute collection in a regional Australian city that is comparable with Launceston's.

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