Helen F
Warrington |
46 of 95
Tue 4th Aug 2015 1:35pm
It doesn't look anything like the familiar Gulson library that was between Derby Lane too Cuckoo Lane but it may have been either a satellite building or (as the picture is a very old one, pre 1900) it might be an original location before the other building was built. I can't place the location but the windows ring a bell in my mind. One of the sections I'm missing is the pre library section facing the church though it's not like the sections that faced onto either Derby Lane or Cuckoo lane. There are enough missing parts of the city for it to be part of inner Coventry but if I had to guess I'd say it was from further out. |
Sport, Music and Leisure - City Libraries | |
Midland Red
|
47 of 95
Tue 4th Aug 2015 1:40pm
The caption states "1905, from Broadgate" |
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Dreamtime
Perth Western Australia |
48 of 95
Tue 4th Aug 2015 1:53pm
That photo looks very controversial, Osmiroid if I may say so, but very interesting all the same. |
Sport, Music and Leisure - City Libraries | |
Helen F
Warrington |
49 of 95
Tue 4th Aug 2015 2:06pm
It could be 1905 but it's not Broadgate and the familiar Gulson library was opened in 1890. |
Sport, Music and Leisure - City Libraries | |
Midland Red
|
50 of 95
Tue 4th Aug 2015 2:09pm
I don't think there's much doubt about that, Helen |
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Osmiroid
UK |
51 of 95
Tue 4th Aug 2015 2:21pm
Thanks Dreamtime
Don't know if they are clues? At the right side, what may be part of the word "Artists" and at the left side, "Ladies".
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Sport, Music and Leisure - City Libraries | |
Dreamtime |
52 of 95
Tue 4th Aug 2015 2:33pm
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Annewiggy
Tamworth |
53 of 95
Wed 5th Aug 2015 10:00pm
This is from "Coventry up do date" 1896 which shows the same building as Whittindale, Dyer & Watson, Auctioneers, Valuers etc, 28, 29, and 30 Hertford Street. The building on the right looks like 27 ART over the door.
27 Hertford Street was Messrs Maule & Co artistic photographers.
31 Hertford Street was Hadden & co Athletic Outfitters with Haircutting attached ! |
Sport, Music and Leisure - City Libraries | |
Osmiroid
UK |
54 of 95
Thu 6th Aug 2015 12:45pm
Excellently solved Anne
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dutchman
Spon End |
55 of 95
Thu 6th Aug 2015 3:28pm
The City of Coventry: Social history from 1700
It was not, however, until 1791 that the Coventry Literary (or Library) Society was founded to conduct a subscription library. It was housed first in a building at the north-east corner of Broadgate (fn. 40) next to the Castle Inn, but in 1829 was reopened in a former chapel in Hertford Street. (fn. 41) In the early 1830s it had about 200 members. (fn. 42)
Working-class interest in cultural matters can be seen clearly as early as the late 1820s and the 1830s, but the impetus to organized activity came from the middle class. There were adult schools in Coventry in 1815, held in private houses. They then had 103 'learners' who were 'very fond of the Bristol Spelling Book for Adults' as well as 45 who had learned to read the testament. (fn. 121) It was, however, the Mechanics' Institution, founded in 1828, which was the chief means of advancement for young weavers in the 1830s, and many of them were members. It provided them with classes in writing, arithmetic, geometry, geography, grammar, and music. (fn. 122) As well as several classrooms, the institution's building in Hertford Street (acquired by 1834) possessed a museum, a library, a reading room, and a lecture hall capable of holding 500. The library had some 2,000 volumes in 1838. The reading room was said to be very popular and in 1850 was supplied with four daily papers and many periodicals. The museum was founded in 1834 and soon acquired a substantial, if unselective, collection. (fn. 123)
A growth of library facilities also occurred during this period. In 1850 the Coventry Library Society had about 10,000 books together with a news and reading room providing London and provincial weeklies. In 1840 there were 145 subscribers, and by 1850 about 200. In the 1860s, however, the institution declined. (fn. 214) This was probably a result of the economic depression combined with the high subscription of one or two guineas, rather than of any fall in the demand for reading matter. When the society was eventually forced to close in 1866, its volumes were bought from funds raised by public subscription (fn. 215) and in 1868 the library was reopened by the corporation as a free public library. Over 4,000 persons registered as borrowers and more than 60,000 volumes were issued in the first year. (fn. 216)
The establishment of a civic library open to all was perhaps symptomatic of a change in the attitude towards working-class educational advance. Joseph Gutteridge was astonished when in the 1850s his employer deigned to discuss botany with him and gave him copies of the Edinburgh Review and the Westminster Review 'notwithstanding our different social positions', for he felt at that time that the educated few were 'jealous lest their inferiors should taste of the tree of knowledge'. (fn. 217) Now Gutteridge sat with three other working men on the committee of the Free Library, side by side with John Gulson, mayor in 1868, who presented the city with a site for a new library building. (fn. 218) The Gulson Library replaced the Hertford Street building and was opened in 1873 on the site of the disused gaol and adjoining County Hall. It included a reading room and a circulating library and a new wing was added in 1890 to serve as a reference library. (fn. 219)
As a consequence the library of the Coventry Institute, formed in 1855 as an amalgamation of the Mechanics' Institution and the Religious and Useful Knowledge Society, became less important. The Institute's museum appears to have been dispersed about 1882. Like the old Mechanics' Institution the Coventry Institute had by 1871, few of the artisan class' amongst its members, who were mostly 'middle and upper class'. Lectures continued to be given and classes, including some in science, but the institute came to approximate more and more to a literary centre and social club. It lasted until 1888 when the building in Hertford Street was sold and the institute was amalgamated with the new Technical Institute. (fn. 220) |
Sport, Music and Leisure - City Libraries | |
NeilsYard
Coventry |
56 of 95
Wed 7th Oct 2015 2:17pm
Heres another angle from inside the Gulson library: Another thanks to the True Coventarian Facebook page:
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Sport, Music and Leisure - City Libraries | |
NeilsYard
Coventry |
57 of 95
Mon 23rd Nov 2015 6:18pm
For anyone who like me was brought up in the 70's and struggled to recall the Gulson Library - this extremely sad image brought it all back to me and the realisation that this was there up until the quite recently only to be needlessly destroyed..........
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Sport, Music and Leisure - City Libraries | |
Dreamtime
Perth Western Australia |
58 of 95
Tue 24th Nov 2015 12:15am
Neil, it just confirms what I have thought all along, there are gremlins on the City Council. |
Sport, Music and Leisure - City Libraries | |
PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks |
59 of 95
Tue 5th Jul 2016 9:02pm
Hi all
Library Closures.
Holbrooks where I live, used to have a small economical library in Brisco Rd. The big idea, but small brains brigade in the council, decided to move the economical library into part of the Ricoh shopping mall at a huge increase in rental & operating costs. In September, Holbrooks will no longer have a library. Where are the big ideas but small brains brigade that did this now? |
Sport, Music and Leisure - City Libraries | |
TonyS
Coventry |
60 of 95
Sat 23rd Jul 2016 9:48am
I just want to make people aware that the threat by Coventry City Council to close city libraries is now looking very real.
It is aiming to make savings of around £4M by closing a number of our libraries if communities don't come forward to run them. After rumours being around for a while, it has just been announced that the following now face closure:- Caludon Castle, Coundon, Earlsdon, Cheylesmore & Finham will all face closure if volunteer groups cannot be found.
This saving is being sought even though these facilities bring so much to our communities. The Council, with around £84 million pounds sitting in reserve apparently cannot or will not provide the money for these to remain open.
What is particularly curious is that the majority of these libraries facing closure lie to the south of our city, making it even harder for local residents to use the facilities that will remain.
Talks are ongoing, with promises that nothing is yet decided - but I somehow feel that we will be fighting a lost battle as it feels as though a decision has already been made. There is a lot to be discussed but I would encourage locals if you want to keep your local library then make your voice heard, contact your ward Councillor, and tell them! |
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