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The E-Sylum: Volume 10, Number 2, January 14, 2007, Article 21 ON LIBRARY DEACCESSIONING POLICIES Regarding the previous story of the library book returned after forty-seven years, Len Augsburger writes: "This reminds me of a story Dave Bowers told - while a student at Penn State he was allowed to check out a certain volume for only 24 hours per the library rules, even though no one had checked out the book for one hundred years or so!" [The Bowers anecdote relates to last week's item about the purpose of libraries. While the 24-hour limit is harsh for a book in little demand, there's no question that the Penn State library was in the business of collecting material for the ages. Had they discarded or sold the book somewhere along the way, it wouldn't have been available century later. I ran into a similar situation when I first discovered the four-volume H. E. Kroos work, "A Documentary History of Banking and Currency in the United States." I don't think it had ever been checked out of the library until I came along. I pointed this out to the library clerk and offered to buy the set to no avail. I don't know if the response was based on stewardship of the collection or simple bureaucratic inertia, but the volumes remained in the library. Eventually I found my own set. -Editor] Coincidentally, Dick Johnson writes: "When I was a resident of Danbury Connecticut I visited the Danbury Public Library fairly frequently. In spring 1974, at a sale of surplus books, I picked up a small run of the American Numismatic Society's Numismatic Notes and Monographs. They had deaccessioned these a month or two before. "The card pocket and "Date Due" sheet were pasted in the back of each. The donor's name and 1935 date of donation were handwritten in the front. Every one of those NN&Ms were donated to the Danbury Library by nearby resident Anna Hyatt Huntington (she and her husband, Archer, were major ANS benefactors). "Not one of those monographs had been checked out since 1935! Not one entry on the Date Due sheet - reason enough to deaccession. [Unless your mission is to collect for the ages, of course. -Editor] Mrs. Huntington had died October 4th the year before. The library had kept those monographs on the shelf all those years while she was still alive. Was the reason for deacessioning that she was now dead? "Incidentally, the Danbury Library's greatest deaccession occurred years later (February 1996). Every single book was deaccessioned for smoke damage after a fire. (A mentally disturbed person had dropped burning rubbish in the book return slot.) The circulation department was entirely destroyed, but they made a decision to replace every book in the library (and moved the book return kiosk away from the building). "This was a tragedy for me. For research on my coin and medal technology encyclopedia I had often used the library's 5-volume set of Oxford's "A History of Technology" by Singer & others. I had made marginal notes in one volume in that library set. (Okay, not a good idea.) I'd give anything to own that set now." Wayne Homren, Editor The Numismatic Bibliomania Society is a non-profit organization promoting numismatic literature. See our web site at coinbooks.org. To submit items for publication in The E-Sylum, write to the Editor at this address: whomren@coinlibrary.com To subscribe go to: https://my.binhost.com/lists/listinfo/esylum | |
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