Catalogue description Records of the British Library and the British Museum Library
This record is held by British Library Corporate Archives
Reference: | DH |
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Title: | Records of the British Library and the British Museum Library |
Description: |
Records of the British Library, including those inherited from the former British Museum Library. Includes some records otherwise in ED 244 . |
Note: |
Records of the Royal Commission on National Museums and Galleries, 1928-29, are in: T 105. For the website of the British Library, please see: PF 88 |
Date: | 1826-1985 |
Held by: | British Library Corporate Archives, not available at The National Archives |
Legal status: | Public Record(s) |
Language: | English |
Creator: |
British Library Corporate Archives, (1973-) British Museum Library, (1753-1973) |
Physical description: | 69 series |
Access conditions: |
Access conditions: No records held at The National Archives in this departmental code |
Publication note: |
A History of the British Museum Library, 1753-1973 by P R Harris. London: British Library, 1998 |
Subjects: |
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Administrative / biographical background: |
The British Museum Library The British Museum Library, which formed the largest single element in the newly constituted British Library in 1973, as its Reference Division, originated in the founding departments of the British Museum, brought together in the eighteenth century. By the 1970s it embraced the departments of Printed Books, Manuscripts, Oriental Manuscripts and Printed Books, the Science Reference Library and, under the auspices of the Department of Printed Books, the Newspaper Library at Colindale and the Official Publications Library, formerly State Paper Room. In 1928 the Royal Commission on National Museums and Libraries chaired by Viscount d'Abernon reported on the serious overcrowding suffered by the library departments of the British Museum and recommended that their accommodation should be expanded as a matter of urgency. This proposal was not implemented, however, and the trustees of the British Museum did not favour the recommendation of the Kenyon Committee on Public Libraries in 1927 that the Central Library for Students should become a special department of the museum. During the Second World War the main reading room of the British Museum and adjacent storage and the entire newspaper storage at Colindale were extensively damaged by bombing; and the accommodation lost was only gradually replaced over the next two decades, while only a partial replacement of destroyed books and newspapers was possible. The post-war County of London Development Plan designated a new site for a national library and in 1955, three years after a public enquiry on this proposal, the Minister of Housing approved it. In 1964 the government gave approval in principle to outline plans for building on a site in Bloomsbury, south of Great Russell Street, which had been drawn up by the architects Sir Leslie Martin and Colin St John Wilson. Following the reversal in 1967 of the government's acceptance of the Bloomsbury site, a Committee on National Libraries was appointed under (Sir) Frederick Dainton. Its recommendations for the establishment of a national library separate from the British Museum, though modified by a white paper of 1971 (Cmnd.4572) were broadly those enacted in the British Library Act 1972. In July 1973 the British Library formally came into being, uniting the administration of the former British Museum Library with those of the former National Central Library, British National Bibliography Ltd and the National Lending Library for Science and Technology. Modern FunctionsThe former functions of the constituent parts of the British Library continued and developed after the formation of the library in July 1973. The library was divided into: In April 1974, the British Library also took over responsibility for the Library Association Library, which it administers as part of the Department of Printed Books in the Reference Division. Its function is to serve the book and other documentary needs of librarians in their professional capacity. The Library Association itself, although housed in the same building in Ridgmount Street, London W.C.1., remains a separate organisation. It was founded in 1877, received a royal charter in 1898 and is now registered as an educational charity. Organisation chart (1970s)
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