Guildhall Library
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Guildhall Library

The Guildhall Library is a public reference library in London, England, specialising in subjects relevant to London and its history. It is administered by the Corporation of London, the government of the City of London, which is the historical heart of London. The collection has its greatest depth on topics specifically concerned with the City, but also contains much material on other parts of metropolitan London.

There have been several incarnations of Guildhall Library. The first library at Guildhall was founded around 1425, when a "new house or library" was instigated by John Carpenter (Town Clerk) and John Coventry under the terms of the will of "the rich and pious merchant" Richard Whittington. This "fayre and large librarye", as John Stow called it, began in a building on the south side of Guildhall Chapel. There is no surviving catalogue of the contents of this collection, but it seems to have been a library for students of the divine scriptures and so it is logical to conclude that it was a library of theological books (as most libraries were at that time, before the development of printing). This library was described by contemporaries as the Libararia communis (the common library) at Guildhall.

The library is recorded in Stow's Survey of London (1598). Stow describes a "fair and large library, furnished with books, pertaining to the Guildhall and college". He reports that during the reign of Edward VI (around 1549) the whole collection was "sent for" by the Lord Protector, the Duke of Somerset. The books were loaded on to carts and taken away but were not returned. It is probable that the Duke "borrowed" the books to furnish Somerset House, his new palace on the Strand. It seems other collections were "borrowed" from elsewhere for the same purpose.[citation needed] By 1550 the building had been let to Sir John Aylif, surgeon to Henry VIII, as a market house for the sale of clothes which also suggests that the first library had come to an end by this time.

Only one book from the original collection has since returned to Guildhall Library: a thirteenth-century copy of Petrus Riga's Aurora, a metrical Latin version of the Bible, purchased from an antiquarian dealer. The Corporation does not appear to have attempted to recover the library from Somerset, and there was a gap of around 300 years before another library was formed.

It was not until 1824 that the Corporation of London appointed a committee to "inquire into the best method of arranging and carrying into effect in the Guildhall, a Library of all matters relating to this City, the Borough of Southwark, and the County of Middlesex". It was funded by the corporation out of the Privy Purse and not from the ratepayers (the library did not become rate-supported until 1921). The committee collected a number of valuable books and in 1828 the library was opened for use initially only by members of the corporation. There were only 1700 volumes in the library at this time but as the library grew so did its membership, tickets being granted to literary men as well as members.

The small library formed by the Corporation in 1824–1828 increased in size and importance. The core collection still focused upon London history and books which illustrated London's growth and development; but it also covered topographical studies and more general library volumes such as dictionaries and glossaries.

The library eventually outgrew its accommodation, and a new building was planned to the East of Guildhall and into Basinghall Street. The Corporation and Common Council decided that from now on access to its books and library treasures should be made available to the public free of charge.

The new library building was designed by Horace Jones (the City architect); it was built between 1868 and 1872 and opened to the general public in 1873. A substantial stone structure, it adopted the Perpendicular Gothic in style in order to complement the neighbouring Guildhall building. By then the library contained about 60,000 volumes of works covering the history of London, its architecture, topography, its suburbs and a large collection of early printed plays connected with the city. The Library still has a collection of plays from the 19th century, acquired through the Chapman bequest. It is this building which is now called "The Old Library", and the office of the Guildhall Librarian is now the Chief Commoner's parlour.

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