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Factory House Library of 19th Century Fiction, 1800-1898

 Collection
Identifier: 1982-001

Content Description

In 1982 McFarlin Library added a most unusual collection of nineteenth century fiction. In the early 1820s the merchants and wine-traders from Britain who had settled in Oporto, Portugal, felt the need for a library of English books to serve the increasing number of British families living in and near the city. A small library had existed earlier, but had been destroyed during the Peninsular War and had not been replaced. A librarian was appointed who used an agent in London to supply books as they were published. A fiction library was established at an early date, the titles being chosen either by the librarian, by the agent, or in response to the wishes of the readers. To cope with a British population which numbered about 1,000 at its peak, the number of titles was considerably increased to 1,000 over the following 70 years. In time the local population of readers decreased and many of the books were withdrawn from circulation. Tastes in literature also changed and once popular authors were no longer read. The books were returned to the shelves or stored away in back rooms. The current and popular books were located in a more accessible place and gradually the old fiction library was forgotten. This intact circulating library formed between 1820 and 1890 was discovered in the late 1970s and was acquired by The University of Tulsa. The library was started when, the three-volume (or three-decker) novel was supplanting the Gothic four-volume novel. The collection ended in the 1890s when the three-decker was at its last gasp, and the one-volume novel had finally replaced it. The library also includes one- and two-volume titles published at the same time and in its entirety numbers 2,500 volumes. The remarkable library provides insights into the reading tastes of a British community living abroad in the nineteenth century. It holds such outstanding items as Mary Shelley's Frankenstein side by side with the works of that popular author of sea tales, Captain Chamier. The prolific and popular Mrs. Gore is presented by over 20 novels, mostly first editions. W. Harrison Ainsworth, Lady Blessington, the silver fork novels of R. P. Ward, and others are widely represented as are the works of the American novelist J. Fenimore Cooper. Frances Trollope has some 18 titles present, all very rare, and her sons - Anthony and Thomas Adolphus - are represented by scarce titles. Charles Reade, Harriet Beecher Stowe, John Banim, the popular Mrs. Oliphant, Captain Marryat (a considerable collection), Mary Russell Mitford, Anne Manning, George MacDonald, Henry Kinglsey, Lord Lytton, a desirable group of novels by G. P. R. James Disraeli, Mrs. Braddon, and Rhoda Broughton are just some of the many writers of the century whose works are present, usually in first editions.

This collection may searched through the External Document link below.

Dates

  • Creation: 1800 - 1898

Conditions Governing Access

This material is open for research use by any registered reader.

Extent

216 Linear Feet (2,500 volumes)

Language of Materials

English

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Purchased from the Factory House in Oporto, Portugal through Bertram Rota, Ltd.

General

Sometimes referred to as the Oporto Collection.

Source

Title
Factory House Library of 19th Century Fiction
Status
Completed
Author
Marc Carlson
Date
2018-03-15
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
English

Repository Details

Part of the The University of Tulsa, McFarlin Library, Department of Special Collections & University Archives Repository

Contact:
McFarlin Library
University of Tulsa
2933 E. 6th St
Tulsa 74104-3123 USA
(918) 631-2496