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Significance Assessment of the Launceston Mechanics' Institute Collection (2.85mb)
Appendices (1.72mb)
Statement of Significance
The Launceston Mechanics Institute collection is a
historically significant collection of high value. The collection is primarily
of historical significance as a rich and now rare set of books and periodicals
dating mainly from the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries that comprised
the larger part of the library of a major mechanics institute in an important
regional city in Australia, and illustrating the reading habits, information
sources and connections of a colonial and non-metropolitan city, and its
international and British empire connections. This largely intact and extensive
Institute collection also retains (as a separate collection, at QVMAG) most of
the associated Institute records. There appears to be only one comparable (but
smaller) collection in Australia, that of the Ballaarat Mechanics Institute.
While the Collection in its entirety is of most significance
it has many significant individual items, including a first edition of
Middlemarch, books inscribed to and donated by founding settlers (as described
in detail in Part 2), and many other individual books and sets of periodicals
that are ‘collectables’ of some value.
Mechanics Institutes played a vital role in Australia’s
cultural development, particularly in regional towns and cities. One of the
most important of them was the Launceston Mechanics Institute. In operation
from 1842 until 1929, and as an institute membership-owned library until 1945,
this was one of the earliest mechanics’ institutes, ultimately one of the
largest, and with the retention of a substantial part of its literature and
archival collections, one of the most enduring institute libraries in
Australian history. Munn and Binns, two of the most influential figures in the
history of Australian libraries both highly rated the LMI library as the best
of any library outside the capital cities, and as probably the best surviving
institute library in Australia.
From the accession registers around 46,000 items were
acquired between 1842 and 1945. Some 20,000 books and 2,000 periodicals survive
from this library, together with the Institute’s records and some furniture and
other objects. The two most closely comparable Institute collections in
Australia are those of the Adelaide Circulating Library (at the SSL) and the Ballaarat
Mechanics Institute collection (Victoria), but the LMI collection is of earlier
provenance than both, is more representative of an institute library than
Adelaide’s, and is larger than the Ballaarat collection.
This significance assessment has confirmed that the size,
quality, scope age and provenance of the LMI collection places its importance
equal to or above any similar collection in Australia, and hence its national
significance. The LMI Collection is not only the most substantial and comprehensive
Institute library to have survived in an Australian regional centre from before
1850, but appears to be the most substantial and comprehensive library
collection to have survived from the entire period of the flourishing of
mechanics institutes in Australia, between the 1840s and the 1940s.
In their CHG application, FOLMI quoted specialists in this
field, Adjunct Professor Wallace Kirsop and Pam Baragwanath. Kirsop stated:
The Launceston Mechanics Institute collection, despite all
its vicissitudes, is clearly the most substantial one to have survived in a
regional centre from before 1850. Indeed Adelaide is the only other one of
comparable longevity and it is of course, metropolitan. Ballarat and to a
lesser extent Bendigo offer collections of impressive scope begun in the second
half of the nineteenth century. Consequently Launceston has claims to be
unique, and its collection is vital in my view to the heritage of the whole
country. After all we have lost the holdings of older institutes in Hobart,
Sydney and Melbourne, not to mention Geelong. In short Launceston is a special
case of national significance.
Pam Baragwanath made a similar observation (see also
1.2.2). This SA not only confirms those
specialist opinions, but adds to the unique status of the LMI collection.
This is also the last intact collection of books from the
major cultural institution in Launceston’s history. The significance of this
Collection is increased by having institute stickers and rules still attached
and by the preservation in Launceston (at QVMAG) of related administrative
records, and catalogues, as well as histories. The Institute’s history is
well-documented in newspapers and in unpublished and published accounts, most
substantially in Whitfeld, History of the Launceston Mechanics' Institute and
Public Library (1912), and Petrow, Going to the Mechanics (1998). Many of these
works also provide important contextual information. The Launceston Mechanics
Institute – and hence, the LMI collection - was significant not only because of
its early date, longevity and scale, but because the associated records of the
LMI have survived, and that rich documentation is supported by several
published histories, as well as unpublished research and news reports.
Congratulations must go to all who have worked so hard to collect and retain this significant collection in Launceston. Another first! A major contribution to our National history for which we must find a suitable and permanent home to enable public access.
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