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The Voluntary Libraries of Victorian Britain: Volume 2
About this book
This volume provides an examination of the kind of free (or nearly free) libraries which were available to the general public in Scotland and Wales in the late nineteenth century, but which were not supported by local taxation. They were effectually substitutes for municipal public libraries in areas where that sort of library provision did not exist. They may have been funded by wealthy philanthropists or by well-wishers. Attention is paid too to libraries which were aimed at specific communities, such as workers in factories, mills, mines, railway works, and shops, as well as book provision for policemen, soldiers and sailors, hospital patients, nurses, workhouses, prisoners, and domestic servants (and hotel guests). The voluntary public libraries of England and Wales are dealt with in Volume 1.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Front Matter
- 1. Scotland: âMen with Moleskin Jackets Reading Booksâ
- 2. Ireland and the Channel Islands
- 3. Workplace Lending Libraries
- 4. âInvoluntaryâ Libraries
- Back Matter