Battersea Central Library
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Battersea Central Library is a public lending library situated on
Lavender Hill The A3036 is an A road in London, England, running from Waterloo to Wandsworth. Route It starts at the southern tip of the County Hall roundabout where the A302 Westminster Bridge, York Road and A23 Westminster Bridge Road all interse ...
in Battersea, south-west London. The library was built by the Battersea Vestry between 1889 and 1890, to a design by Edward Mountford, and remains in use in contemporary times as one of
Wandsworth Council Wandsworth London Borough Council is the local authority for the London Borough of Wandsworth in Greater London, England. It is a London borough council, one of 32 in the United Kingdom capital of London. Wandsworth is divided into 20 wards, e ...
's libraries, operated by Greenwich Leisure Ltd. A separate Battersea Reference Library, built in 1924 with a frontage on Altenburg Gardens, is connected to the Central Library, and together the pair are known as Battersea Library.


History

Municipal borough Municipal boroughs were a type of local government district which existed in England and Wales between 1835 and 1974, in Northern Ireland from 1840 to 1973 and in the Republic of Ireland from 1840 to 2002. Broadly similar structures existed in S ...
s in England and Wales were first given the power to establish free libraries by the
Public Libraries Act 1850 The Public Libraries Act 1850 (13 & 14 Vict c.65) was an Act of the United Kingdom Parliament which first gave local boroughs the power to establish free public libraries. The Act was the first legislative step in the creation of an enduring natio ...
. Battersea, which in 1850 had a population of some 12,000 and local government based on the
Vestry A vestry was a committee for the local secular and ecclesiastical government for a parish in England, Wales and some English colonies which originally met in the vestry or sacristy of the parish church, and consequently became known colloquiall ...
system, became eligible to consider adoption of the provisions of the Act after the Public Library Acts 1855 extended the types of authorities that qualified as potential Library Authorities. The Battersea Vestry considered the matter in a meeting in 1859, but declined to engage. By that date, much of the administration of local government in Battersea had been transferred to the Wandsworth Board of Works by dint of the
Metropolis Management Act 1855 The Metropolis Management Act 1855 (18 & 19 Vict. c.120) was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that created the Metropolitan Board of Works, a London-wide body to co-ordinate the construction of the city's infrastructure. The Act al ...
. Battersea experienced very rapid population growth over the next two decades; by 1881 it numbered 107,000 inhabitants, and as a result, both overshadowed the much smaller Wandsworth, and had ambitions to regain its autonomy. In 1887 the Wandsworth Board adopted the Libraries act and began making plans for library provision; it established temporary library facilities at two locations (on Battersea Park Road, and on the
Latchmere Estate Latchmere Estate is a housing estate in Battersea, Greater London, which was constructed in 1903. It is the first example of a housing estate built with labour directly employed by a local council authority. Between 1832 and the 1880s, Batter ...
) and engaged Laurence Inkster, who had experience as the borough librarian of South Shields. However, in the same year, the Metropolis Management (Battersea and Westminster) Act 1887 enabled Battersea to escape the Wandsworth Board and regain full control of all parochial functions. The revivified Battersea Vestry of 1888 was consciously progressive in nature, in part because of its newly won autonomy; in part because of the make-up of its population, and in part because of the ideals of some of its leaders, such as John Buckmaster,
John Burns John Elliot Burns (20 October 1858 – 24 January 1943) was an English trade unionist and politician, particularly associated with London politics and Battersea. He was a socialist and then a Liberal Member of Parliament and Minister. He was ...
and Andrew Cameron. Battersea Central Library was one of its first major projects. In 1888 the Vestry purchased what had been part of the West Lodge estate for £3,000: an L-shaped site with frontages onto Lavender Hill and Altenburg Gardens, to the west and south of Altenburg Terrace. It immediately held a design competition to solicit plans for a building based on very detailed specifications of requirements; ten architects submitted entries, and that of Edward Mountford was selected. Mountford was local and presumably well known to the Vestry; he was at the time engaged in the design and construction of the nearby Northcote Road Baptist Church (and three years later would be selected as architect for the new Battersea Town Hall). The Central Library was his first commission from the Vestry; his winning submission was the only design of the ten that could be built within the Vestry's £6,000 budget. Mountford's design is of three-stories (plus basement), in red brick by Richardson & Co of Brunswick Wharf, Vauxhall, with Portland stone dressings and a roof of Broseley slate to match the extant 'speculating builder' constructions which characterise the area - many of which owe their origins to the work of Alfred Heaver, the dominant property developer of what is now termed Clapham Junction. The front elevation of the building has five main bays, the second and fourth of which project slightly and are topped by shaped gables. A sixth bay in the form of an octagonal tourelle with a steep roof forms the right-side corner of the building. This feature was added to Mountford's winning design after its submission and before building commenced; originally projected as a two-story turret, it was built to three-stories height. One effect of the turret is to set the library's entrance off-centre. The building is minimally embellished, having only carved-brick garlands and
putti A putto (; plural putti ) is a figure in a work of art depicted as a chubby male child, usually naked and sometimes winged. Originally limited to profane passions in symbolism,Dempsey, Charles. ''Inventing the Renaissance Putto''. University of ...
above the ground-floor windows of the projecting bays, probably by Gilbert Seale of Camberwell; and decoration around the arched entrance with a
frieze In architecture, the frieze is the wide central section part of an entablature and may be plain in the Ionic or Doric order, or decorated with bas-reliefs. Paterae are also usually used to decorate friezes. Even when neither columns nor ...
above. Andrew Saint, in
Survey of London The Survey of London is a research project to produce a comprehensive architectural survey of central London and its suburbs, or the area formerly administered by the London County Council. It was founded in 1894 by Charles Robert Ashbee, an A ...
, Battersea, describes the building as being in the "mildly
Flemish Renaissance The Renaissance in the Low Countries was a cultural period in the Northern Renaissance that took place in around the 16th century in the Low Countries (corresponding to modern-day Belgium, the Netherlands and French Flanders). Culture in the Low C ...
style, in the spirit of
Ernest George Sir Ernest George (13 June 1839 – 8 December 1922) was a British architect, landscape and architectural watercolourist, and etcher. Life and work Born in London, Ernest George began his architectural training in 1856, under Samuel Hewit ...
". As initially constructed, on the ground floor, a central lobby and corridor led to a news room on the right, behind which was the librarian's office; and a magazine room on the left. The lending library shelving occupied the rear of the ground floor. On the first floor, accessed by a central staircase, a double-height galleried reference library with open-timbered ceiling occupied the rear of the building; a second magazine room was situated to the front-left, and on the right side a small (and poorly lit) Ladies Reading Room separated the reference library from the librarian's apartment. On the second-floor a book store was situated above the magazine room, with the right-side of the building housing the upper floor of the librarian's apartment. The basement provided accommodation for a caretaker, and the library frontage was set behind a low stone wall with wrought-iron railings and six stone piers supporting spherical finials. Shelving throughout the library was of pitch pine. The building was constructed by building contractor James Holloway, who tendered £5,600 for the job. A foundation stone was laid on 2 May 1889 by
John Lubbock, 1st Baron Avebury John Lubbock, 1st Baron Avebury, 4th Baronet, (30 April 183428 May 1913), known as Sir John Lubbock, 4th Baronet from 1865 until 1900, was an English banker, Liberal politician, philanthropist, scientist and polymath. Lubbock worked in his fa ...
, and work proceeded quickly, albeit Holloway died in 1889 before completion, and his executors arranged for his brothers' construction company,
Holloway Brothers (London) Holloway Brothers (London) Ltd was a leading English construction company specialising in building and heavy civil engineering work based in London. History Early history The company was founded as a partnership in 1882 by two brothers, Henry Th ...
, to complete the project. The library was opened by Sheffield Liberal MP A. J. Mundella on 26 March 1890. A number of modifications to the design were made in the very early years of the life of the building; as with alterations to Battersea Town Hall after its 1893 construction, all of these were designed by J. T. Pilditch, the vestry's surveyor with work being undertaken by the vestry's direct labour force rather than by contractors. The need to widen Lavender Hill road in 1895-6 necessitated removal of the railings and infilling of the light-wells illuminating the basement; this rendered the basement uninhabitable, as a result of which an extension was built to the rear of the library in 1897–8 to provide additional lending library space above which a new apartment for the caretaker was constructed. The second-floor book store had been repurposed as a lecture room in the very earliest period of the building's use, but in 1900-1 the first floor magazine room was galleried by removing the lecture room floor, the ground floor magazine room was turned into an auxiliary news room, and the second floor was extended to provide a children's library.


References


Sources

* * * * {{coord, 51.46401, N, 0.16420, W, type:landmark_region:GB, display=title 1890 establishments in England Libraries in the London Borough of Wandsworth