Saturday 18 February 2012

Our Library in the Heritage Centre

AL of Trull writes:

As a member I used to browse the SANHS library when it was next to the Somerset Studies Library in Paul Street. I am now unable to browse the SANHS library since it is locked away at the Heritage Centre. What plans are there to release this library so once again we can browse it please. I have tried using the card index but unfortunately since I don't know either the author or title of any book on the subject I wish to research I am completely stuck! The staff at the Heritage Centre do their best but likewise if you don't know exactly what book you want, they can't find it. At least when I was able to browse I could find what I wanted relatively quickly, as I can in any other library but this is no longer the case unfortunately.

Wednesday 1 June 2011

2010/11 Library Report

The Library Collections Agreement arrived at between the Board and the County Council was achieved after pressure from Members of the Committee and others calling for what they saw as necessary assessment of the value and contents of our possessions.  In the event, no such requests proved achievable under the pressure of the removal timetable.  Nevertheless, the Agreement, signed on 28 July 2010 and in many ways lacking precision, bears within it the undertaking that both parties, the Society and the County Council, will establish a negotiating body to ensure that its terms are carried out.

About a month after the Agreement was signed the Society's Honorary Librarian, Mrs Anne Nix, became ill.  David Bromwich nobly volunteered to take her place one day a week so that the consequences of the move in terms of unpacking and shelving, and later of service to enquirers, could be carried out to some extent.  Unpacking and shelving have by now been completed, and service to readers continues so far as possible; and two projects - the improvement of the storage of the Braikenridge Collection, and Volunteer Cataloguing - are under way, the first with financial support from the Heritage Service, the second from the Society.

The absence of the Honorary Librarian has seriously hampered the work of the Committee over the last few months, but that it has survived at all is due in no small measure to the persistence of its chairman, Dr Roy Haines, whose concern for the library is well known.  He felt, however, that a deepening crisis over the future of Mrs Nix as our Honorary Librarian was likely to provoke more difficulties for the Society than he felt able to face.  Dr Robert Dunning has therefore taken his place as an interim measure and is ably supported as Secretary by Dr Andrew Butcher in a move to ensure that the Society's library and associated collections receive the care and attention that is due.

To that end the Committee has left the Board in no doubt of its determination that a properly qualified and experienced librarian shall have care of this, the Society's hugely valuable asset; that repairs and conservation, adequate access, a satisfactory level of purchasing, and an academically-acceptable catalogue shall be its active aim.