Série 5 - Publications

Zona do título e menção de responsabilidade

Título próprio

Publications

Designação geral do material

  • Documento textual

Título paralelo

Outra informação do título

Título(s) de declaração(ões) de responsabilidade

Notas ao título

Nível de descrição

Série

Código de referência

CA NSHK UKC.LIB-5

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Declaração de edição

Declaração de responsabilidade da edição

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Declaração de escala (cartográfica)

Declaração de projeção (cartográfica)

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Declaração de escala (arquitetural)

Autoridade emissora e denominação (filatélica)

Zona de datas de criação

Data(s)

  • 1803-2007 (Produção)
    Produtor
    University of King's College Library

Zona de descrição física

Descrição física

2 m of textual records

Zona dos editores das publicações

Título da editora

Títulos paralelos das publicações do editor

Outra informação do título das publicações do editor

Declaração de responsabilidade em relação à série editora

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Nota sobre as publicações do editor

Zona da descrição do arquivo

Nome do produtor

(1799 - Present)

História administrativa

The Library was founded in 1799 through the efforts of Charles Inglis, first Bishop of Nova Scotia and founder of the University.

When King's was established in 1789, the Board of Governors collected funds for a Library, but it was not until a decade later that efforts were made to obtain books. The Board entrusted the money to alumnus John Inglis, son of the Bishop (and later Bishop himself), who sailed to England in 1800 to purchase books. He assembled books worth over £1250 and was promised further gifts once potential donors were satisfied that there was a real connection between the College and the Anglican Church. Through John Inglis' efforts, the nucleus of the collection was accumulated by 1802: books in classics, history, foreign languages, literature, the natural sciences and theology.

While in England, John Inglis also pursued a Royal Charter for King's, which was drafted in May 1802 and arrived in Aug 1802 with news of a grant of £1000 from Parliament. Once the Charter was in force, supporters circulated a printed plea for support of the young University: "The original character of the Institution was preserved by the Charter, which was henceforward to be its fundamental law. The connection with the Church was secured. The Archbishop of Canterbury, through whom all that had been effected in England for its welfare, had been obtained, was made its Patron, with the power of a negative on all Statutes, which may be regarded as the key-stone of the connection between the College and the Church. The Bishop of the Diocese was also appointed Visitor of the College; and it is well known to be the first duty of the Visitor, to take care that the intentions of the Founder are always preserved inviolate."

In Windsor, the early collection was housed in a room on the cast end of the main building, below what is now called North Pole Bay. The first recorded circulation transaction was on 20 Sep 1857. When Convocation Hall was constructed in 1858, the Library and Museum moved to the second floor. When the University moved to Halifax in the 1920s, the Library was installed on the third floor of the main building.

The University's first recorded Librarian was Benjamin Gerrish Grey. The University hired its first professional Librarian, Rebecca Nash, in 1963. Librarians have consisted of either Professors receiving honoraria for additional responsibilities or other staff performing Librarian duties.

Plans for a new Library building evolved during the 1980s, and fund-raising for it became a University bicentennial project, "A Rare Find." The University's first building dedicated solely to the Library and Archives was opened on 14 May 1991.

More information on the history and structure of the University of King's College Library can be found in the finding aid linked below.

História custodial

Âmbito e conteúdo

Series consists of accessions lists, donations, catalogues, serials, and weeding lists from 1859-2007. Details of all books acquired by the Library, including accessions and donations lists, are included in the series, as well as lists of books withdrawn from the Library's collections from 1983-2002. Most of the accessions lists are in bound volumes shelved separately. Series includes accession book from the Smith Memorial Library, a former recreational reading collection maintained for students living in campus residences.

Accessions lists are maintained to record additions to the Library's collections. A newly received book is given a unique accession number and added to the accessions list. Books that are withdrawn are noted on weeding lists. Accessions lists have been maintained for most of the Library's history in Halifax. Catalogues and lists of books exist from the Library in Windsor.

Zona das notas

Condição física

Fonte imediata de aquisição

Organização

Arranged chronologically.

Idioma do material

    Sistema de escrita do material

      Localização de originais

      Disponibilidade de outros formatos

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      Termos de uso que regem, reprodução e publicação

      Instrumentos de descrição

      Finding aid with file list available.

      Instrumento de pesquisa transferido

      Materiais associados

      Materiais relacionados

      Incorporações

      Further accruals expected.

      Identificador(es) alternativo(s)

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      Número normalizado

      Pontos de acesso

      Pontos de acesso - Assuntos

      Pontos de acesso - Locais

      Pontos de acesso - Nomes

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          Área de ingresso