Manchester Free Library
The Manchester Free Library opened on 5 September 1852 in Manchester, England.[1] It was the first to be set up up under the provisions of the Public Libraries Act 1850,[lower-alpha 1] which allowed local authorities to impose a local tax of one penny to pay for the service.[2] The terms of the Act required that a poll of ratepayers had to be held before the local authority was allowed to spend money on public libraries, and at least two-thirds had to vote in favour. In Manchester's case only 40 of the more than 4000 eligible voters opposed.[3]
The project was the initiative of John Potter, the Mayor of Manchester, who started a fund to raise money for the purchase of books and a suitable building to house them.[4] The library was housed in the House of Science in Campfield, close to the present-day site of the Museum of Science and Industry's Air and Space Hall.[ 1] On its opening it had a stock of 18,028 books, purchased at a cost of £4156.[5] So busy was it during its first week that a police officer was assigned to control the crowd around the borrowing desk.[6]
Edward Edwards was the first librarian.[ 1]
References
Notes
- ↑ The Royal Museum and Public Library in Salford was the first public library in Britain, opening in 1850, but it was set up under the provisions of the Museum Act, not the Public Libraries Act.
Citations
Bibliography
- Aspin, Chris (1995), The First industrial Society: Lancashire 1750–1850, Carnegie Publishing, ISBN 978-1-85936-016-3
- Briggs, Asa (1965), Victorian Cities, University of California Press, ISBN 978-0-520-07922-9
- Edwards, Edward (1869), Free town libraries, their formation, management, and history, Trübner & Co.