Bromley House Library Explained

Country:England
Type:subscription library
Established:1816
Location:Nottingham
Coordinates:52.9535°N -1.1523°W

Bromley House Library (originally the Nottingham Subscription Library) is a subscription library in Nottingham, England.

Premises

The library is situated in Bromley House, a Georgian townhouse in Nottingham city centre. This building is grade II* listed[1] and retains many original features. It was built in 1752 as his town house by Sir George Smith, 1st Baronet (1714-1769) of Stoke Hall, East Stoke, Nottinghamshire, a grandson of the founder of Smith's Bank in Nottingham, the oldest known provincial bank in the United Kingdom. He used part as an office for transacting his lucrative business as Collector of the Land Tax.

In 1929 Evans, Clark and Woollatt added a new doorway and frontage, allowing the ground floor to be converted for retail use.[2]

In the first-floor 'Standfast Library' is a meridian line, dating from 1836 and used to set clocks to Noon 'local' time in the days before railway time or Greenwich Mean Time was introduced as the British standard. The longcase clock in the room is still set to Nottingham time, 4 minutes and 33 seconds behind Greenwich.

In the attics, Alfred Barber opened the first photographic studio in the Midlands on 2 October 1841.[3]

Started 1 April 2019 a major refurbishment project comprising new roof, sympathetically restored attic rooms and essential internal repairs partially funded by a grant from Historic England East Midlands.[4] The refurbished roof was completed in October 2019.[5]

History

The Nottingham Subscription Library was founded on 1 April 1816 at Carlton Street, in the Hockley area of the city.[6] [7] In April 1820, Bromley House was offered for sale by auction and purchased by the library for £2,750 . The library moved in during 1821.[8]

In the 19th century the library had around one hundred subscribers, including George Green and Edward Bromhead. Historically, the first name on the list of subscribers was the Duke of Newcastle as Lord Lieutenant of the county.

Library services

had 1,638 members who paid an annual subscription.[9] Items on loan are still recorded using a manual ledger system where each member has their own page. The library has a stock of just under 50,000 books (expanding by 700-800 each year) which includes a good selection of interest to local historians, and a wide selection of 19th and 20th century novels. It also holds audiobooks and CDs. The Heritage Lottery Fund contributed towards a project to create the library's computer catalogue 'Bromcat'. This involved a team of staff and volunteers cataloguing the entire contents over a two-year period, completing the work in 2013.

Librarians

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Shoker . Sandish . The fall and rise of subscription libraries . 4 August 2018 . . 10 April 2016.
  2. Book: Harwood, Elain . 1979 . Pevsner Architectural Guides. Nottinghamshire . Yale University Press . 59 . 0140710027 . Elain Harwood.
  3. Book: Heathcote . Pauline . Heathcote . Bernard . A faithful likeness: the first photographic portrait studios in the British Isles, 1841 to 1855 . 2002 . . . 0954193407.
  4. Web site: Roof of Nottingham's 'secret' historic library will finally be repaired . Ben . Reid . 16 March 2019 . Nottinghamshire Live.
  5. Web site: A Final View of the New Roof . 16 October 2019.
  6. "Members at the heart of a thriving library". Chad, 16 April 2014, p.70. Accessed 9 June 2024
  7. News: . Bromley House Library, One Hundred Years Old To-Day. . . 1 April 1916 . 9 September 2016 . . subscription.
  8. Book: 'Proceedings of the Library Committee, 1816 to 1830' (Bromley House Library Minute Book One) . 1830 . Bromley House Library.
  9. Web site: Bromley House Library Annual Report and Unaudited Financial Statements for the Year Ended 31 March 2018 . Bromley House Library . August 13, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190203090527/https://www.bromleyhouse.org//wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Bromley-House-accounts-YE-31.03.2018-1.pdf . February 3, 2019.
  10. Web site: Bromley House Library Librarians 1819-1927 . . 25 August 2013 . bromleyhouse.org . Bromley House Library . 9 September 2016.