This building is the Senate House in the
Bloomsbury area of London (next door to the back of the British Museum). It is
where I started my first job as a librarian, more than 40 years ago.
This is the central administrative building
of the University of London and it houses a library that is open to students
and staff who belong to any of the University’s many colleges. The library
occupies most of the building in the picture, beginning at the second row of
small windows and going all the way up to the top of the tower. When I was
there it contained around one million books – what its capacity is today I
simply don’t know.
On finishing my degree course (at Bangor,
North Wales) in 1974 I was unsure what I wanted to do as a career. I thought
that librarianship was a possibility, so I applied to join a scheme that
offered one-year placements for graduates at university libraries, at the grade
of “student assistant librarian”. This was like an internship, but a proper
salary was part of the deal.
So in September 1974 I started work. I
found a place in a hostel in Muswell Hill (north London) and commuted into
central London by bus and tube.
I learned a lot at the Senate House. There
were three of us who started on the same day, all from different universities,
and the library staff devised a plan by which we would work in two different
departments in each of the three terms. They shifted us round so that we never
worked together at the same time.
I therefore got a grounding in Circulation,
Acquisitions and Reference work, as well as working in some specialist subject
libraries. It was in the pre-computer age, as far as libraries were concerned,
so there were rows and rows of catalogue drawers to file cards into, a highly
complicated filing system for Acquisitions records, and a huge row of trays of
tickets for the manual issue system.
A regular job involved searching the closed
stacks for rare items and for PhD theses, the latter of which were stored at
the very top of the tower – the only part of the building that was not heated!
The library contained a number of special
collections that had been bequeathed to the University at various times. The
strangest of these had to be the Harry Price Library of Magical Literature.
Harry Price had been a noted psychical researcher (i.e. ghost hunter) in the
inter-war years and he had acquired a large collection of material on many
aspects of the paranormal. The library was stored in a remote part of the
building to which the public were not normally admitted. The wind whistled
through the pipes to add a distinctly eerie atmosphere, and many of the library
staff did not like visiting this collection as they sensed a “presence” when
they did so.
In recent years I have often wondered if J
K Rowling ever used this library as part of her research for the “Harry Potter”
books. She would certainly have gained a lot of information had she done so,
and the similarities between the Harry Price Library and that of Hogwarts School
are quite striking. I also wonder if that is why Harry Potter is called Harry.
After my year at the Senate House I felt
ready to carry on and become a proper librarian. I therefore won a place at the
College of Librarianship Wales (at Aberystwyth) where I gained my professional
qualification in 1976 (I returned in 1987 to take an additional Masters degree).
© John Welford
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