Start Over Please hold this item Export MARC Display Return To Browse
 
     
Limit search to available items
Record 29 of 45
Record: Previous Record Next Record
Corporate Author Bristol Library Society, author.
Title The minute book of the Bristol Library Society, 1772-1801 / edited by Max Skjönsberg and Mark Towsey.
Publisher [Bristol] : Bristol Record Society, 2022.
Copyright date © Bristol Record Society 2022.


LOCATION SHELVED AT LOAN TYPE STATUS
 BJL 4th Floor  DA 690 B8 B82(75)  8 WEEK LOAN  AVAILABLE

Descript xlviii, 381 pages ; 23 cm.
Content text txt
Media unmediated n
Carrier volume nc
Note 'Founded at a series of meetings in December 1772, the Bristol Library Society aimed to connect one of the eighteenth century's most important transatlantic ports with a dynamic cultural movement which sought to bring books, knowledge and enlightenment to urban communities across the English-speaking world. Between 1731 and 1801, well over 350 subscription libraries were established across the British Isles and North America in towns ranging from tiny rural settlements like Wigtown in rural Scotland and Fredericktown on the Pennsylvanian frontier, through to rapidly growing industrial centres like Belfast and Leeds, and bustling transatlantic ports like New York and Liverpool. Subscription libraries - sometimes termed proprietary libraries or (especially in North America) social libraries - were based on a simple model, pioneered by Benjamin Franklin in Philadelphia, whereby members paid a joining fee and an annual subscription to fund a common stock of books. The Bristol Library Society eventually become one of the largest of its kind, boasting nearly 300 members and around 8000 books by the early decades of the nineteenth century. While its unique run of surviving borrowing registers is an important source for understanding British reading habits, this edition of the Library Society's annual general meetings and administrative committee meetings - published on the 250th anniversary of its foundation - sheds fresh light on the operation of the library and the interests of the people involved in its foundation, including Bristol luminaries such as William Barrett, Richard Champion, John Prior Estlin, Samuel Farr and Jospeh Harford. Biographical information is given, not just on those active in the library committee, but numerous Bristolians recorded as owning or transferring shares in the Society. The volume also provides a bibliographical index of books recorded in the minute books.' -- Details from the publisher.
ISBN 9780901538451 (paperback)
Click on the terms below to find similar items in the catalogue
Corporate Author Bristol Library Society, author.
Series Bristol Record Society's publications ; volume 75
Bristol Record Society's publications ; v. 75
Subject Bristol Library Society -- History -- 18th century -- Sources.
Subscription libraries -- England -- Bristol -- History -- 18th century -- Sources.
Libraries -- England -- Bristol -- History -- 18th century -- Sources.
Bristol (England) -- Intellectual life -- 18th century -- Sources.
Alt author Skjönsberg, Max, 1987-, editor.
Towsey, Mark R. M., editor.
Bristol record society, issuing body.
Descript xlviii, 381 pages ; 23 cm.
Content text txt
Media unmediated n
Carrier volume nc
Note 'Founded at a series of meetings in December 1772, the Bristol Library Society aimed to connect one of the eighteenth century's most important transatlantic ports with a dynamic cultural movement which sought to bring books, knowledge and enlightenment to urban communities across the English-speaking world. Between 1731 and 1801, well over 350 subscription libraries were established across the British Isles and North America in towns ranging from tiny rural settlements like Wigtown in rural Scotland and Fredericktown on the Pennsylvanian frontier, through to rapidly growing industrial centres like Belfast and Leeds, and bustling transatlantic ports like New York and Liverpool. Subscription libraries - sometimes termed proprietary libraries or (especially in North America) social libraries - were based on a simple model, pioneered by Benjamin Franklin in Philadelphia, whereby members paid a joining fee and an annual subscription to fund a common stock of books. The Bristol Library Society eventually become one of the largest of its kind, boasting nearly 300 members and around 8000 books by the early decades of the nineteenth century. While its unique run of surviving borrowing registers is an important source for understanding British reading habits, this edition of the Library Society's annual general meetings and administrative committee meetings - published on the 250th anniversary of its foundation - sheds fresh light on the operation of the library and the interests of the people involved in its foundation, including Bristol luminaries such as William Barrett, Richard Champion, John Prior Estlin, Samuel Farr and Jospeh Harford. Biographical information is given, not just on those active in the library committee, but numerous Bristolians recorded as owning or transferring shares in the Society. The volume also provides a bibliographical index of books recorded in the minute books.' -- Details from the publisher.
ISBN 9780901538451 (paperback)
Corporate Author Bristol Library Society, author.
Series Bristol Record Society's publications ; volume 75
Bristol Record Society's publications ; v. 75
Subject Bristol Library Society -- History -- 18th century -- Sources.
Subscription libraries -- England -- Bristol -- History -- 18th century -- Sources.
Libraries -- England -- Bristol -- History -- 18th century -- Sources.
Bristol (England) -- Intellectual life -- 18th century -- Sources.
Alt author Skjönsberg, Max, 1987-, editor.
Towsey, Mark R. M., editor.
Bristol record society, issuing body.
LOCATION SHELVED AT LOAN TYPE STATUS
 BJL 4th Floor  DA 690 B8 B82(75)  8 WEEK LOAN  AVAILABLE

Subject Bristol Library Society -- History -- 18th century -- Sources.
Subscription libraries -- England -- Bristol -- History -- 18th century -- Sources.
Libraries -- England -- Bristol -- History -- 18th century -- Sources.
Bristol (England) -- Intellectual life -- 18th century -- Sources.
Descript xlviii, 381 pages ; 23 cm.
Content text txt
Media unmediated n
Carrier volume nc
Note 'Founded at a series of meetings in December 1772, the Bristol Library Society aimed to connect one of the eighteenth century's most important transatlantic ports with a dynamic cultural movement which sought to bring books, knowledge and enlightenment to urban communities across the English-speaking world. Between 1731 and 1801, well over 350 subscription libraries were established across the British Isles and North America in towns ranging from tiny rural settlements like Wigtown in rural Scotland and Fredericktown on the Pennsylvanian frontier, through to rapidly growing industrial centres like Belfast and Leeds, and bustling transatlantic ports like New York and Liverpool. Subscription libraries - sometimes termed proprietary libraries or (especially in North America) social libraries - were based on a simple model, pioneered by Benjamin Franklin in Philadelphia, whereby members paid a joining fee and an annual subscription to fund a common stock of books. The Bristol Library Society eventually become one of the largest of its kind, boasting nearly 300 members and around 8000 books by the early decades of the nineteenth century. While its unique run of surviving borrowing registers is an important source for understanding British reading habits, this edition of the Library Society's annual general meetings and administrative committee meetings - published on the 250th anniversary of its foundation - sheds fresh light on the operation of the library and the interests of the people involved in its foundation, including Bristol luminaries such as William Barrett, Richard Champion, John Prior Estlin, Samuel Farr and Jospeh Harford. Biographical information is given, not just on those active in the library committee, but numerous Bristolians recorded as owning or transferring shares in the Society. The volume also provides a bibliographical index of books recorded in the minute books.' -- Details from the publisher.
Alt author Skjönsberg, Max, 1987-, editor.
Towsey, Mark R. M., editor.
Bristol record society, issuing body.
ISBN 9780901538451 (paperback)

Links and services for this item: