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Saffron Walden Town Library
History of Saffron Walden Town Library
by Peter Searby
Preface
For the last ten years I have been presenting historical programmes
on television, and writing books to go with them. The most recent have
been about what the Victorians and Tudors and Stuarts did for us, but
the earlier programmes were about long-dead scientists and inventors;
we called them Local Heroes.
Our starting point in looking for local heroes in a particular place
was always the local history or local studies library. There we could
be fairly sure to find both the information and the expertise to extract
it. I remember making a phone call to the local-studies librarian in
Perth and asking whether he had any suitable candidates. He said, “Would
you be interested in Mr Gilbert Malloch, who invented the combined walking
stick, camera tripod, salmon gaff, and landing net?” Sure enough,
Gilbert Malloch became a local hero.
I am always delighted to find a library that keeps old books. Often
these can supply different information from modern ones, and presented
in a different style. A simple example is my ninth edition of Encyclopaedia
Britannica, published around 1875. It has 50 pages on Egyptian cotton,
which I never want to read, but fascinating articles on perpetual motion,
and both Marc and Isambard Brunel, couched in Victorian language and
with a perspective that is quite different from today’s. Of all
the small-town libraries I have visited, few can match the one at Saffron
Walden. In search of information about Henry Winstanley, builder of the
first Eddystone lighthouse, I dropped in, and was rapidly offered both
the information and the knowledge of how to find it. Large institutional
libraries have many more books but can rarely offer this detailed personal
service. Long live the historic Town Library.
Adam Hart-Davis NEXT
© Saffron Walden Town Library 2005 www.townlib.org.uk |