Sometimes the simplest ideas are the best
I guessed that the phrase "in connection with Mudie's" on John Pruddah's library labels might be a standard phrase used by Mudie's franchisees, so I searched Welsh Newspapers online for adverts using the phrase and got just under 700 hitsStuff, geeky stuff
Computing, archiving, digital media, and a bit of historical speculation
Thursday, 11 December 2025
In connection with Mudie's
Wednesday, 10 December 2025
John Pruddah
Richard Samways of the local history team at Weymouth Museum went above and beyond in providing me with further background information on John Pruddah, the owner of a major circulating library in Weymouth, in the 1870s.
Curiously, a book with a label from his library, pasted over a Mudie's label, turned up in the Stanley Athenaeum historic book collection.
How it got there is important for understanding the mid Victorian book trade in Australia, and hence I began to investigate Mr Pruddah.
John Pruddah was born in the 1840s in Hexham, Northumberland where his father, Edward was a printer and bookseller.
(His brother, also Edward, took over the running of the family business, and after his early death in 1879, his business was managed by Edward junior's wife until it was sold a few years later.
Interestingly an archive of the Hexham Pruddah's jobbing printwork - flyers, posters etc, came to light a year or two ago.)
John Pruddah didn't join the family firm, but moved to London where he worked for Mudie's Circulating Library before buying the Royal Library in Weymouth in 1869 - George III had visited Weymouth for his health, and was arguably responsible for turning it into a fashionable resort.
Several Weymouth businesses styled themselves as Royal as a consequence, but in reality they had no more connection with royalty than a chocolate royal.
John originally managed the business with his sister and quickly became an agent for Mudie's.
and was offering books for holiday reading.
In a list published in the local newspaper in July 1872 the books on offer included Middlemarch by George Eliot, Ombra by Mrs Oliphant, Poor Miss Finch by Wilkie Collins, and Robert Ainsleigh by Mary Elizabeth Braddon.
John Pruddah married Lucy Jane Bradbury in 1872 and their daughter Charlotte was born the following year.
In 1875 John Pruddah sold the business, including the stock of 3500 books, returned north to the industrial boom town of Middlesborough - then in the North Riding of Yorkshire, now in North Yorkshire, where he ran a successful booksellers for many years.
So, John Pruddah was obviously a shrewd businessman, but for our purposes the key takeaway is that Mudie's did appoint agents who had a formal agreement of some kind and perhaps an arrangement to be supplied with books from Mudie's stock.
Quite how the books ended up in Australia is still an open question...
(with thanks to Richard Samways and the Weymouth Museum for their assistance with this post)
Friday, 5 December 2025
The Mystery of the mid Victorian second hand book trade
In the 1870s, the patrons of the Athenaeum library had a taste for sensation novels, including those by Mary Elizabeth Braddon.
Among those in the collection is a triple decker edition of the now almost forgotten Lost for Love, one of her less popular novels.
Friday, 28 November 2025
Two more yellowbacks ...
Well, Walter Besant seems to have been pretty popular with the good folk of Stanley in the late nineteenth century, with today's guerrilla cataloguing uncovering another two yellowback editions of his books -
By Celia's Arbour and The Monks of Thelema, both written in collaboration with James Rice.Friday, 21 November 2025
Bookcover artwork from 1895
Up at the Athenaeum, I've been pressing on with the guerrilla cataloguing exercise, and I came across this rather battered 1895 edition of Dorothy Forster by Walter Besant - popular in his time for his historical romances and more or less forgotten now.
However, the book is interesting for two reasons - the use of colour on the cover and the fact that this is an Australian edition published by George Robertson & Co.
The history of Australian publishing in the 1890's is confusing with two George Robertsons, one of whom at one time worked for the other, but were not related to each other.
The elder George Robertson was the erstwhile partner of Samuel Mullen. Melbourne based, he was primarily a bookseller although he did begin to publish books. The younger George Robertson later went into partnership with David Angus to found Angus and Robertson, which was Sydney based.
This book is published by the Melbourne based publisher by arrangement with the UK publishers.
This is interesting because, at a time when most books in Australia were imported, George Robertson and Co were printing editions of popular novels in Australia, probably from the original stereotype shipped from England to save the cost of resetting the type.
The need to ship the stereotype from England may explain why one or two of the George Robertson reprints have publication dates a year later than the British originals.
The other interesting use is that while most of the books I catalogued today had fairly standard boring late Victorian covers, this one has a colour lithograph stuck to the cover of the book, in much the same way we might expect an illustrated cover on a paperback today.
Not all Victorian publishers listed the date of publication on the title page of their books. Most did, some didn't, and some did when they felt like it. Infuriatingly, while some other books republished in Australia by George Robertson had a publication date, this book didn't.
In an attempt to track down the publication date I searched ebay, as a lot of book collectors but and sell there, where I turned up a copy of the same book with the same cover illustration, but published by Chatto and Windus in London in 1895.
The Chatto and Windus edition was described as a yellowback, a term I had not come across before. I'd come across cheap paperbound books such as in this copy of An African Millionaire while documenting Lake View House for the National Trust
Saturday, 15 November 2025
Mullens circulating library
Up at the Athenaeum, the guerilla cataloguing approach continues to work well, and I think we have a methodology that works.
And it continues to throw up items of interest, yesterday's discovery being a book with a Mullen's circulating library label on the cover.
Friday, 7 November 2025
Guerilla cataloguing continued
However, when I can't find a book, I've been carrying out a manual search of both the British Library and National Library of Scotland catalogues, and then creating a manual entry based on their data and noting the data sources used in the comments section.
Ideally I'd simply rerun the Overcat search from Library Thing against the British Library, but LibraryThing's link to the British Library catalogue is unreliable, so searching manually it is for the moment.
Given that I would guess that around 90% of the pre 1950's items in the collection were sourced from the UK, even though the book in question may have originally been published in the USA, so, so far there's no need to check the Library of Congress catalogue.
However, working with the books directly has benefits - for instance the Treloar's hygenic library label at the top of this article came from a 1930s edition of a Max Brand Western novel, suggesting that perhaps the Athenaeum was sometimes buying books second hand to add to their collection.
It also shows that circulating libraries were still a thing in early 1930s Australia - post depression money was tight and being imported, books were relatively expensive. (Hygenic libraries were circulating libraries that made a point of sterlising books between loans, either by spraying them with antiseptic or placing them in an oven.)
One might have expected that public libraries might have taken up the slack, but only around 15% of Victoria’s population had access to a public library, often housed in a Mechanics Institute or Athenaeum.
For example, the Wangaratta Free Library was originally housed in the Athenaeum, and according to reports of the time was cramped and little used, and it was only due to a sustained fund raising campaign that the 'old' Free Library building on Murphy Street was built in 1909 replacing the earlier building
While what is now the State Library did send out boxes of books on loan to the Mechanics Institute libraries, the general lack of access meant most people used commercial circulating libraries, especially for fiction and other lighter reading.
Also, sometimes on gets to touch history - in our collection we have an 1863 edition of Alice King's now forgotten three volume novel Eveline.
Forgotten now, but obviously very popular when it first appeared as the flyleaves of each volume - volume 1 is unfortunately missing - are endorsed 10 days allowed in ink
suggesting that there was considerable demand, and that patrons could only sign the book out for 10 days rather than the more normal fourteen or twenty one days.

















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