One of our items is an 1841 edition of The Heiress and and her Suitors, which has a stamp from Joseph King’s Cheap Circulating Library in Norwich.
1841 is unusually early for the collection
- we have very few books from the mid 1850s as the Athenaeum was only founded
in 1863. What we do know is that many books were bought second hand from book
importers some of whom bought up stock from failed circulating libraries in the
UK.
Searches of those trade directories for Norwich and surrounding towns which are available online (principly via the Universith of Leicester) do not list Joseph King’s library
➜ a circulating library run by King and Baker in Bridewell is listed in the 1845 edition of White’s directory
➜ no circulating library owned by anyone known as King is listed in the 1854 directory
➜ no directories from the late 1850s/early 1860s are available online
with kind assistance from Darren Armstrong of
the Norwich Heritage Centre, Belinda Kilduff of the Norwich records office, not
to mention invaluable help from Hannah Henderson and Bethan Holdridge of the
Norwich Museums service in pointing me in the right direction, I think I can
now make up a story.
King and Baker’s circulating library was in
business in the early 1850’s but was not listed in any trade directory after
1856.
The Norwich Heritage Centre actually holds
a catalogue for King and Baker’s library which lists the Heiress and her
Suitors as one of the books available.
Unfortunately the catalogue is undated.
- King and Baker were in partnership until sometime after 1854 when the business ceased. - King tried to continue the business but was unsuccessful and the stock sold
- We know there were brokers who bought second hand book from circulating libraries, including failed ones, for export to Australia
- It’s more than a tenable suggestion that King’s stock was bought up and exported to Australia.
- As the Athenaeum library did not start until 1863 it’s possible that the book may have been in use elsewhere and resold before coming to Stanley, but the evidence would seem to suggest that it would be one of the earler acquisitions in the historic book collection

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