Missing from Preston’s Harris Library

Thirty years ago this month, Keith Johnson published his ‘People of Old Preston’, a well-written and well-researched account of twenty-three men and women from nineteenth-century Preston. When Keith was writing his book there was no online access to sources for local historians and no e-books. Readers had to buy their books in print, or pop along to their local library to borrow a copy.

There is no e-book version of Keith’s book, but thanks to the wonders of the World Wide Web, invented just four years before Keith’s book was published, it is now available to borrow at the Internet Archive (at the moment, loans are limited to an hour, but you can keep renewing for uninterrupted reading):
https://archive.org/details/peopleofoldprest0000john/

The situation is different at the Harris, where there is not a single copy of the book. There is one copy at the Penwortham Kingsfold Library, another at Burnley and two at Lancashire Archives. And yet the copy that the Internet Archive scanned to put on line was a Harris Library copy.

Keith has written getting on for twenty books on Preston history. The Lancashire Library has several of those titles, but you won’t find some of his best at the Harris, or even at any of the local branch libraries. Want a copy of his ‘Preston History Tour’? There are two copies available, one held at Chorley and the other at Tarleton.

To add insult to injury, this is from the book’s description in the county’s online catalogue:

‘Local author, Paul Richards guides the reader through its streets and shows how Preston’s famous landmarks and hidden-away gems have transformed over time. With the help of a handy location map, readers are invited on this tour to discover for themselves the changing face of Preston.’

Also available at the Internet Archive are two more of Keith’s books: ‘Preston Remembered’ (no copy at the Harris) and his ‘Chilling True Tales of Old London’:
https://archive.org/details/prestonremembere0000keit/
https://archive.org/details/chillingtruetale0000keit

Another local historian whose books are missing from the Lancashire Library is Stephen Halliwell, who publishes the encyclopaedic guide to the history of Preston’s public houses (https://pubsinpreston.blogspot.com/).

Stephen has written several other books, but Lancashire Library has only one of them, ‘Preston Pubs’. A glaring omission is his biography of Moses Holden, the self-taught Preston astronomer and popular lecturer. The book is now in its second edition, but Lancashire Library does not seem to have a single copy of either edition.

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