New Zealand Parliamentary Library Explained

Parliamentary Library
Native Name Lang:mi
Former Names:General Assembly Library (until 1985)
Building Type:Library
Architectural Style:Gothic Revival
Structural System:Brick
Location Town:Wellington
Location Country:New Zealand
Coordinates:-41.2772°N 174.7767°W
Start Date:1897
Completion Date:1899
Architect:Thomas Turnbull
John Campbell
References:NZHP website

The New Zealand Parliamentary Library (Maori: Te Whare Pukapuka o te Paremata[1]), known until 1985 as the General Assembly Library,[2] [3] is the library and information resource of the New Zealand Parliament. The present building that houses the library was completed in 1899; it survived a fire that destroyed the rest of the General Assembly building in 1907.

History of the library to 1965

The first General Assembly Library was housed in a small room shared with the Auckland Provincial Council. It contained 750 volumes in 1860. The library then moved to a cottage behind Parliament's main building, and the collection grew to 4000 books.[4] After Parliament moved to Wellington in 1862, some books were sent down on a ship, the White Swan, which was wrecked on the Wairarapa coast. Many parliamentary papers and reference books of the inchoate library were lost.[5] The library also lost its accounts in the wreck. Premier William Fox, most of his Cabinet and government officials were on board, but there were no deaths. However, the order to jettison cases of papers and books in an effort to right the ship after it struck a reef, caused those cases to be swept into the Pacific. They were never seen again, despite pleas for their return. In subsequent years, it became common to blame the wreck of the White Swan for failure to produce documents which it was "thought inexpedient to produce".[6] The library then moved to six large rooms behind Parliament in Wellington.

The earliest catalogue was an author catalogue published in 1867 (8vo, pp. 213). The next was a classified catalogue, published in 1872, the library then contained 8,700 volumes. In 1875, an elaborately classified catalogue of 11,450 books was compiled by Ewan McColl (8vo, pp. 351). In 1880, the library contained 18,562 works, and by 1897 it held close to 40,000 volumes.[7] [8]

It was New Zealand's finest library and source of overseas ideas, philosophy and literature for representatives and staff. Premier and poet Alfred Domett supported access for some non-parliamentarians, although the offering of this privilege had its opponents at different times. The writer Katherine Mansfield had borrowing privileges when parliament was not in session, accessing books by Heinrich Heine, Nietzsche, a translation of Bushido by Dr Inazo Nitobe, the English poets, Ibsen, Maeterlinck, and a book on the psychology of women.[9] [10] [11]

The General Assembly Library continued to grow throughout the twentieth century. When, in 1965, it became one of the three bases of the newly formed National Library, it continued to function in the same bipartite manner, as parliamentary service and wide-ranging resource of international thought, art and literature. During 1965 to 1985 the international part of the library expanded significantly as a well-funded core element of the National Library. When the parliamentary activities of the Library were isolated and newly identified as Parliamentary Library, the international library, begun with allocation of funds in 1856, fell into neglect within the National Library, resulting in a 2018 directive of the Minister responsible for the former General Assembly/National Library approving "the removal of all overseas publications from the Overseas Published Collections, excluding those in subject areas identified as collecting priorities in the Overseas Collecting Plan, and in alignment with the 2015 National Library Collections Policy.[12] A large part of the National Library's international collection is therefore the legacy of the General Assembly Library, and its disposal has become highly contentious within New Zealand and overseas.[13] [14] [15] [16]

Services and separate identity

In 1966 the General Assembly Library became by law a founding entity of the new tripartite National Library of New Zealand; much of the library's collection (close to half a million volumes) was moved to various National Library locations, while certain texts inseparable from parliament's functioning remained in the Gothic building. In 1985, the General Assembly Library distinguished its function, becoming henceforth, the "New Zealand Parliamentary Library", and left the National Library to become part of the newly-formed Parliamentary Service. In so doing, it left its wide-ranging "non-parliamentary" collection in the guardianship of the National Library.[17]

The Parliamentary Library is now solely an information repository and research service for members of Parliament and parliamentary staff. Access to the building is generally restricted to those on parliamentary business, although research publications produced are available to the public.[18]

The Parliamentary Library Building

1899 construction of General Assembly Library Building

The current library building occupied by the Parliamentary Library in Wellington was completed for the General Assembly Library in 1899. It is the oldest of the extant buildings in the Parliament complex. It stands to the north of Parliament House (to its right, looking from the front).The library was originally designed as a three-storey building by Thomas Turnbull in Gothic Revival style.[19] It was fire resistant, being constructed of brick made at Mount Cook gaol[20] with an iron firedoor separating the then General Assembly Library from the main entrance section. The third storey of the design was not built to save money (costs had reached £50,000) and it was completed by the government architect John Campbell. He redesigned the parapets, gables and roof to take account of the building's reduced height. Turnbull dissociated himself from the entire project and asked for his name to be removed from the foundation stone.[21]

The fireproofing saved the General Assembly Library from the fire of 1907, which destroyed the rest of the wooden parliament buildings.[22] (Coincidentally, the same thing happened in Ottawa, Canada, in 1916—with fire doors saving the Library of Parliament when the Centre Block of the Canadian Parliament burned.[23])

1990s refurbishment

Like Parliament House, the building was strengthened and refurbished between 1993 and 1995. The building design was replicated to match the original designs. The ornate main foyer, which was damaged by another fire in 1992, was refurbished. The Gothic elements of the roof, including ironwork, turrets, and finials, were recreated. The original iron door (that saved the General Assembly Library in 1907) was restored.[24]

The building was registered on 7th July 1989 by Heritage New Zealand (formerly New Zealand Historic Places Trust) as a Category 1 heritage structure with registration number 217.

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ngā whare Paremata . teara.govt.nz . . 28 March 2020 . mi.
  2. Web site: New Zealand. General Assembly Library. January 1858.
  3. Web site: McLintock . Alexander Hare. General Assembly Library, Wellington. Alexander Hare McLintock . . 28 February 2018. 2005. originally published in 1966.
  4. Web site: Library.
  5. Web site: History of the Parliamentary Library – New Zealand Parliament.
  6. G.L.Meredith, quoted in John E. Martin, Parliament's Library, op. cit. p20
  7. Gen Assembly library catalogue of 1897 Volume 1 | https://archive.org/details/cataloguegenera01librgoog
  8. Gen Assembly library catalogue of 1897 Volume 2 | https://archive.org/details/cataloguegenera00stregoog
  9. Guy H. Scholefield, 'Katherine Mansfield', Beauchamp, Reminiscences and Recollections, p. 195.
  10. Web site: Katherine Mansfield and the Parliamentary Library – New Zealand Parliament.
  11. Web site: 5. Katherine Mansfield: A Modernist in Maoriland | NZETC.
  12. https://thespinoff.co.nz/books/20-01-2020/the-national-library-cull-of-600000-books-could-be-a-disaster-for-researchers Approval by minister to remove all "overseas material" quoted here and Minister's statement reproduced
  13. https://mailchi.mp/societyofauthors/internet-archive-national-library-of-new-zealand-last-chance-to-withdraw-your-books Alert to UK writers regarding infringement of copyright by New Zealand National Library, November 2021
  14. https://publishers.org.nz/national-library-partners-with-internet-pirates/ Publishers Association of NZ warning of National Library deal with internet "pirates"
  15. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P0BY9RABp98 Creative sector campaign to protect General Assembly and National Library international collection
  16. https://bookguardiansaotearoa.com/2021/11/21/how-internet-pirates-do-it/ Book Guardians Aotearoa criticism of National Library deal regarding General Assembly and National Library deletions
  17. News: History of the Parliamentary Library . www.parliament.nz . New Zealand Parliament . 29 March 2020 . en.
  18. News: Need more information? . www.parliament.nz . New Zealand Parliament . 29 March 2020 . en.
  19. Web site: Parliamentary Library . Wellington City Council . 29 November 2017 . 16 June 2019.
  20. News: The Dominion Post . Stuff.co.nz . Mt Cook Gaol a loathed landmark on Wellington's finest site . O'Neil . Andrea . 16 September 2015 . 16 June 2019.
  21. Web site: Sydney and Florence Turnbull at the Parliamentary Library, Wellington – Photographed by Mark Coote . . 29 March 2020 . en . 11 May 1993 . Thomas Turnbull had demanded that his name be hidden after his original design was modified. Restoration work on the Parliamentary Library had revealed his name on the foundation stone..
  22. Web site: Parliamentary library escapes fire . nzhistory.govt.nz . New Zealand History online. 10 December 2018. 29 March 2020.
  23. News: Feb. 03, 1916: When Canada's Parliament burned. Rci | English. Radio Canada. 28 February 2018. 3 February 2014.
  24. Web site: Parliamentary Library today . www.parliament.nz . New Zealand Parliament . 29 March 2020 . en.