Marx Memorial Library

51°52′29″N 0°10′57″W / 51.87472°N 0.18250°W / 51.87472; -0.18250LocationClerkenwell Green
London, EC1R, United KingdomTypeLibraryEstablished1933 (91 years ago) (1933)Architect(s)James SteereBranches1CollectionItems collectedBooks, journals, newspapers, magazines, prints, drawings and manuscriptsSize60,000+ items (2021)Legal depositNoAccess and useAccess requirementsOpen to anyone with a need to use the collections and servicesOther informationBudget£2 million GBP (2020)[1]DirectorProf David McLellan (president)Websitemarx-memorial-library.org.uk
Listed Building – Grade II
Official nameMarx Memorial LibraryDesignated29 September 1972 (1972-09-29)Reference no.1279541
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The Marx Memorial Library in London, United Kingdom is a library, archive, educational, and community outreach charity focused on Marxist and wider socialist bodies of work.[2]

The library opened in 1933, and is located at 37a Clerkenwell Green, formerly home to many radical organisations and base of an important publishing operation. The building, originally opened in 1738 as the Welsh Charity School, is Grade II listed.[3][4] The library's collection comprises over 60,000 books, pamphlets, items, and newspapers on Marxism, socialism, and working class history.[5]

Building background (1738–1932)

Early history

The building now occupied by the library was originally built in 1737–1738 to house the Welsh Charity School.[6] It was designed by James Steer, and the construction funded by subscriptions. The school moved out to a new home in Gray's Inn Lane (now Gray's Inn Road) in 1772. The building subsequently became (in part) a public house, the Northumberland Arms; and was put to other commercial uses.

Part of it was occupied from 1872 onwards by the radical London Patriotic Society; and from 1893 (with the financial backing of William Morris) by the Twentieth Century Press Ltd, publishers of Justice, the newspaper of the Social Democratic Federation.

Vladimir Lenin and Iskra

In 1902–1903 exiled Russian revolutionary Vladimir Lenin worked in the building that would become the Marx Memorial Library, publishing seventeen issues of his newspaper Iskra (Spark) from within the building.[6] The office he allegedly used is preserved as a memorial to him, although this room did not in fact exist at the time he was there: however, he may have worked in an earlier office partly on its site.[7]

Marx Memorial Library (1933–present)

The worker of the future upsetting the economic chaos of the present: mural by Jack Hastings, 1935

The Marx Memorial Library was founded in 1933, originally only occupying a part of the building but eventually taking over every room.

The library features the fresco The worker of the future upsetting the economic chaos of the present, painted by Jack Hastings in 1935 with the assistance of the American artist, Clifford Wight.[8]

Through these changes of use, the fabric had undergone numerous alterations and dilapidations, and in 1968–1969 the building underwent a major programme of work to restore the 18th-century appearance of the front.[4] The necessary interventions and reconstructions were so drastic that the result is described by the Survey of London as "a modern quasifacsimile – of the original only the outer quoins can have survived".[9]

The library building was listed Grade II on the National Heritage List for England in September 1972.[3]

Collections

As of 2021, over 60,000 items are held by the library.[5] Holdings include the first edition of The Red Republican (1850), the Votes for Women suffragette newspaper, and other socialist publications.[10]

The library now also houses "The Printers Collection" consisting of the archives of the printing and papermaking unions of the UK and Ireland. The collection includes union documents, magazines, photographs, badges and memorabilia. The archive was opened in March 2009 by Derek Simpson Joint General Secretary of Unite and Tony Burke, Assistant General Secretary of Unite.

Governance

The first president of the library in 1933 was Alex Gossip, president of the Socialist Sunday Schools.[11]

Journal

The library publishes an annual journal, Theory & Struggle, published by Liverpool University Press. Its current editor (2021) is Marjorie Mayo.[12]

References

  1. ^ "MML Accounts & Report of Work 2020 | Marx Memorial Library". www.marx-memorial-library.org.uk. Retrieved 13 September 2021.
  2. ^ "Marx Memorial Library, registered charity no. 270309". Charity Commission for England and Wales.
  3. ^ a b Historic England. "Marx Memorial Library (1279541)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  4. ^ a b "Our History". www.marxlibrary.org.uk.
  5. ^ a b "Collections | Marx Memorial Library". www.marx-memorial-library.org.uk. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
  6. ^ a b "Marx Memorial Library". www.lonelyplanet.com.
  7. ^ Temple 2008, p. 112.
  8. ^ Temple 2008, pp. 111–13.
  9. ^ Temple 2008, pp. 107–8.
  10. ^ "Marx Memorial Library". Islington Directory. Retrieved 15 April 2022.
  11. ^ Gerard, David (1 January 2002). "The Marx Memorial Library, Clerkenwell Green, London". Library Review. 51 (8): 417–419. doi:10.1108/00242530210443163. ISSN 0024-2535.
  12. ^ "Theory & Struggle". www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk. Retrieved 23 September 2021.

Bibliography

  • Begley, W. W.; Betjeman, J.; Briggs, Asa; Broadwood, Evelyn; Driberg, Tom; Hill, Christopher; Paget, Paul; Spear, Ruskin; et al. (5 May 1967). "A House Worth Saving (letter)". The Times. London. p. 11.(subscription required)
  • Rothstein, Andrew (1966). A House on Clerkenwell Green. London: Lawrence & Wishart.
  • Temple, Philip, ed. (2008). "Clerkenwell Green". South and East Clerkenwell. Survey of London. Vol. 46. New Haven, London: English Heritage. pp. 86–114. ISBN 9780300137279.

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