Queen鈥檚 University had a fledging 颅library before it had students, buildings, or even teachers. In 1840, Judge James Mitchell made a donation of six 颅volumes to the new institution. Now known collectively as the Mitchell Gift, these volumes were: a Latin Bible (1592), a Greek New Testament (1760), a French New Testament (1664), a Greek Lexicon (1821) and a 1760 two-volume set of John Locke鈥檚 Essay Concerning Human Understanding.
This was a full year before Queen鈥檚 College was formed by Royal Charter and nearly two years before two 颅professors and 13 students came together for Queen鈥檚 University鈥檚 first class.
These days the Mitchell Gift is housed in the 鈥檚 special collections, no longer used for everyday classes. Other rare volumes held at Queen鈥檚, however, are still part of modern student learning, such as the 1543 first edition of De humani 颅corporis fabrica by early anatomist 颅Andreas Vesalius. Medical students study the work as part of a course on the history of 颅medicine. Still others are much sought after by 颅researchers who travel to Kingston to consult resources such as the private 颅library of author John Buchan (Governor General of Canada, 1935 鈥 1940).
Speaking of the rich resources held in archives and special collections, Martha Whitehead, 颅Vice-Provost and University Librarian, says, 鈥淲e want our learners to be excited by these treasures, and to engage with them. This library is their world, and as they navigate through it, we want them to feel a sense of welcome, and that we will help them explore the many paths of research.鈥
In its early years, one of the library鈥檚 main 颅focuses was on expanding collections. It was so much a priority that it is said the Rev. William Snodgrass, Queen鈥檚 sixth principal (1864 鈥 1877) did not stop at soliciting donations of books from friends, family and Canadian authors, but 鈥渙ccasionally carried home more than was given,鈥 颅according to Volume I of the Queen鈥檚 history (And Not To Yield by Hilda Neatby).
This early emphasis on amassing physical 颅resources has shifted, over the years, toward a 颅focus on discoverability, the ability to uncover the existence of information. This includes not only the books and e-journals the library has collected, but information produced around the globe. 颅Library staff help researchers navigate the ever-expanding world of information to discover what information exists, wherever it is, and how to 颅acquire it.
The structure of the modern Queen鈥檚 颅library is based on the notion that anyone in the library is able to help a member of the Queen鈥檚 community get started on their research question.
鈥淭he research journey starts with one question and leads to many more, and we have people to assist at different stages along the way,鈥 Whitehead says. 鈥淲e want everybody to come to us as the place that can help them run with an idea, even if they don鈥檛 know where to get started. We are here to help them learn how to 颅explore different paths, and become even better inquirers.鈥
The library鈥檚 support for research does not end with 颅inquiry. Throughout the research lifecycle, the 颅library offers services: helping to guide data 颅management and 颅publication decisions, and颅 颅tracking the impact of research findings. The within the library 颅provides copyright and intellectual property 颅information and services, as well as practical 颅copyright guidelines for 颅instructors and students.
staff are also 颅responsible for conservation, and sometimes restoration, of the holdings. Students in the Queen鈥檚 Master of Art Conservation program also take on conservation projects with the archives every year.
In 2015, the archives was 颅contacted by the Yorktown-Mt. Pleasant Township Historical Alliance in Indiana, which had an item in its collection that, its staff felt, belonged at Queen鈥檚. Their gift was the 1856 鈥 1865 official ledger of Thomas Burrowes, Justice of the Peace and postmaster at Kingston Mills from 1846 until his death in 1866. The ledger contains a detailed record of cases (names, offences, sentencing and other 颅pertinent details). The volume is a great source of information for a variety of researchers: genealogists; social, economic and legal historians; 颅sociologists; and historical geographers.
When conservator Margaret Bignell began work on the Burrowes ledger, she discovered another interesting document within its pages: an 1841 hand-drawn survey map, documenting the Rideau Canal and surrounding region between Kingston and Lake Opinicon (Chaffey鈥檚 Locks). Bignell 颅restored the faded, delicate drawing to its original splendour. The map is a significant 颅document in the ongoing study of the Rideau Canal, especially now that it is a UNESCO World Heritage site.
Archivists also influence the learning environment at Queen鈥檚. This past year, they helped 颅develop two internships with the Department of 颅History. History 501 and 502 give course credit to students conducting archival work in collaboration with archives staff. [Learn more in 鈥溾漖
A legacy of revered learning spaces
A volume from the Mitchell Gift
In 1841, the library鈥檚 initial collection was housed in the tower of St. Andrew鈥檚 Presbyterian Church. By the 1870s, the library operated out of the old medical building, with no indoor access. The Queen鈥檚 Journal described chilly winter line-ups and a librarian, bundled up like 鈥渁 sort of library Santa Claus鈥 handing out frigid books. In 1880, the collections moved again, to Theological Hall, where Dr. George Bell, librarian and registrar, maintained a 鈥渄eath-like silence鈥 in the new 颅reading room, again, according to the Journal.
By 1924, the notion of the library as a community place had become central to Queen鈥檚. Douglas 颅Library, the first purpose-built library building on campus, opened in that year. Contrary to campus legend, the building was not constructed backwards. Despite a striking 鈥渂ack entrance,鈥 blueprints in the archives confirm that neither entrance was 颅designated the main 颅entrance. The elaborate east side of the building would have been the most 颅frequently used 颅entrance on account of the layout of campus in the 1920s.
Seventy years later, the Joseph S. Stauffer 颅Library was built, opening in 1994 and winning the Governor General鈥檚 Award for Architecture in 1997. In this same period, the library won an 颅innovation award from the Canadian Association of College and University Libraries in recognition of its leadership in providing services and 颅resources to students with disabilities.
Today, Queen鈥檚 students and researchers can connect electronically to library resources anytime, anywhere. And they still frequent the 颅libraries on campus. Library spaces are campus hubs with inviting, accessible learning spaces. Cozy library locations include the Alan G. Green Fireplace Reading Room in Stauffer Library, and the 1923 and 1966 wing reading rooms in Douglas Library. Students can find silent library space to concentrate deeply on their studies, as well as places where collaboration is encouraged.
Queen鈥檚 Learning Commons (QLC) supports students as they develop inquiry, communication and teaching skills. Aside from service and workshop delivery, QLC also hosts events such as a weekly 颅鈥淢aterial Matters鈥 graduate student discussion group, which provides a forum for interdisciplinary graduate research. This group started as a small project out of the Department of Geography: it has been so successful, a sister group is now being set up at the University of Toronto.
A tradition of dedicated people and services
In the 1840s, the library was open for approximately one hour a day. By 1889, the stacks remained closed to students who were permitted to borrow no more than two books at a time (In fact, if they had two books out, they were not 颅permitted to consult reference materials on site). But this didn鈥檛 imply a lack of dedication on the part of 颅library staff to their clientele. Back in 1895, Adam Shortt, the professor in charge of the library, returned from a visit to the Harvard library inspired, and single-handedly produced the first card 颅catalogue for Queen鈥檚, making the library鈥檚 颅resources much easier to find for users.
Today, undergraduates may borrow up to 100 items at a time and there are no limits for graduate students, faculty and staff. Stauffer Library is open 24/ 7 during exams, with a 2 am closing most other days in winter season. Queen's alumni, community borrowers and St. Lawrence College students all may obtain borrowing privileges, and they make regular use of the material at the library and archives.
Researchers from around the world visit the archives, in person and online, to view the genealogical collections. Parts of the 颅Dr. H.C. Burleigh fonds, which contains genealogical research on more than 1,000 families with roots in the Kingston area, have now been 颅digitized for online access. And sometimes the materials in the archives do the travelling. For example, 颅several items from the fonds of John Alexander (Alex) 颅Edmison, a key figure in the United 颅Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration during and 颅after the Second World War, have been used in 颅exhibits at the Canadian War 颅Museum in Ottawa and the 颅Montreal Holocaust Memorial Centre.
An evolving future
From six little books to a portal to the world of 颅information, the Queen鈥檚 Library has seen immense changes in the last 175 years. The library 颅remains a guardian of traditions, heritage and 颅history while facilitating teaching, learning and discovery in a changing world. 颅Anticipating 颅ongoing change, the Library and Archives Master Plan (LAMP) was developed in 2013 with input of the Queen鈥檚 community, and since then has been guiding the way forward. As Whitehead says, 鈥淥ur students, staff, faculty and alumni own the 颅library; it is theirs, and so it adapts to their needs.鈥 about LAMP.