Town Library Of Ipswich
The William Smarte donation
The collection was started in 1599 but the first record of a corporation decision to support the library dates to 1610 when they decided to allocate some space in the Grammar School for this purpose. The Ipswich antiquarian Richard Canning wrote in 1747 that William Smarte might be consider the "accidental Founder" of the library as his Latin books were kept in a chest by the Ipswich Corporation until 1612 and then provided an impetus for the corporation to found the library.
Cave Beck fore-edge shelfmarking system
Cave Beck was appointed Master of the Ipswich Grammar School in 1650. He introduced a fore-edge shelfmarking system and the corporation paid Basil Breame 3 shillings to draw these on many of the books held by the library in April 1651. A diagonal line was drawn across the fore-edge of the books with additional marks to indicate to which shelf the book belonged.
Some of the books
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Alsted's Encyclopedia (1630)
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Books spines on shelves
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Terra Sancta, map on display
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The Proverbs of Salomon
References
- ^ Perkin, Michael Roger; Ker, Neil Ripley (2004). A directory of the parochial libraries of the Church of England and the Church in Wales (Revised ed.). London: Bibliographical society. ISBN 0948170131.
- ^ Blatchly, John. The Town Library of Ipswich. Woodbridge: Boydell Press. ISBN 0851155170.
- ^ "Ipswich School - a brief history". Ipswich School. Ipswich School. Retrieved 20 August 2023.
- ^ Fitch, J. A. (1964). "Some ancient Suffolk parochial libraries" (PDF). Proceedings Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute for Archaeology & History. XXX (Part 1): 44 to 87.
- ^ Blatchly, John (1989). The Town Library of Ipswich. Woodbridge, GB Wolfeboro, N.H: Boydell press. ISBN 0-85115-517-0.