Winners of Volunteer Awards announced

CILIP Local Studies Group are delighted to announce the winners of the Volunteer Awards (Under 25 and Over 25 categories). These are new awards, and we had a good range of nominees, which made the judging very difficult. The winners are:

Under 25 category

Jess Pascal, University of Leicester Library

Over 25 category

There are joint winners in this category: Anne Langley, Warwickshire County Record Office and Stella Robinson, Wakefield Libraires.

Congratulations to all our winners and to everyone who was nominated. An award ceremony will be arranged soon.

We are hoping to continue the awards next year, so if you have a volunteer who you would like to nominate again, or anyone who has volunteered during 2024, please check the blog for details later in the year.

Case Study: Mapping the Wilkinson Postcards with volunteers

Wiltshire & Swindon History Centre have kindly shared a new case study with us. It will be of interest to anyone working with volunteers remotely and/or with online resources, particularly maps.

In 2020-21 a group of 4 volunteers worked from home during the lockdowns to pinpoint a collection of historic postcards to the Know Your Place historic maps website. By the end of the project, 324 historic postcards were geotagged to their relevant locations and added to the online maps. The work is a double first for Wiltshire Council’s History Centre – the first of its photographic collections to be added to the Wiltshire section of the Know Your Place (KYP) website and its first volunteer project to be completed remotely and online.

You can read the full report below. Thank you to Max Parkin (Archivist) and Julie Davis (County Local Studies Librarian) for sharing their work with CILIP LSG.

The Preservation Game – using volunteers to help preserve a historic collection

One of the National Aerospace Library’s goldmines is our pamphlet collection. It contains marketing and technical material from around the world. Much of the material was issued by the great names in aircraft manufacturing such as Junkers, Handley Page, Hawker Siddeley and De Havilland. We also have reports from the Air Ministry, Ministry of Munitions and Ministry of Aircraft Production, early airline timetables, aeronautical research papers and much, much more. As with all of us, as they have got older, they have acquired some aches and pains – a snagged cover here, a rusty staple there, etc. So late last year we started a project to help stabilise our delicate material so it would be around for future generations of researchers.

In the depths of December, a group of intrepid volunteers from the RAeS Farnborough Branch turned up for a day’s training course at the National Aerospace Library. Thanks to some help from the RAeS Foundation we had all the equipment that the group required and the National Trust’s Adviser on Libraries Conservation, Caroline Bendix, as our trainer, to give us all the key skills we needed. What became apparent was that this was not an ordinary assignment for Caroline. Normally faced with the cream of National Trust volunteers, she was not used to a group of retired aeronautical engineers, model makers and aero enthusiasts asking questions relating to feathering techniques and the strengths of differing materials – these were not the typical questions raised at Blickling Hall or Cragside!

Volunteer training  Volunteer training

Despite this our volunteers’ skills and experiences have really enhanced the project whether by using magnets to identify stainless steel staples that will not rust and do not need replacing or using a drill to make cleaner, smaller and more accurate holes in paper that a needle could ever do. As Caroline said, drills are not normal conservation equipment but they have worked really well for us!

Aerial Derby before preservation

So what is our band of volunteers doing? A typical donation to the NAL was a 1913 Aerial Derby programme. Packed with photographs, maps and biographical snapshots of competitors and manufactures, it paints an amazing picture of the intrepid days of early aviation. However, rusting staples had started to eat away at the paper and the covers had become torn and scuffed.

So our volunteers removed the rusty staples, cleaned the pages, repaired the tears and holes and then re-sewed the pamphlet. Once placed in an acid-buffered envelope and a box, it should be available for researchers and enthusiasts for many decades to come.

Aerial Derby after preservation   

However, some of the material we have found is beyond our volunteers’ training. We have found a large number of books that require professional work and so we have put many of these items into our Adopt a Book appeal. The RAeS Foundation grant also enabled us to buy some box board and inert polyester which allows our librarians to make boxes and covers to help protect some of our other delicate material.

As well as a steady supply of coffee, our volunteers have enjoyed working with a steady stream of amazing and sometimes weird material. A technical report that described experiments using circular runways caused a lot of discussion and so did experiments showing that supersonic aircraft did not seriously harm the built environment. Recently we discovered a plan of a D shaped aeroplane which someone pointed out would have saved Armstrong-Whitworth a large amount of money when they were sued by an American company after the Second World War for “copying” their D shaped aircraft designs – our plan dates from 1932. We’ve also enjoyed repairing some beautifully designed marketing material from Rolls-Royce, though the US Government Printing Office’s use of large industrial staples has not won many friends in the Farnborough area. However, the big danger is getting too caught reading some of the amazing material rather than repairing it. Perhaps the toughest assignment was attending our Volunteer Garden Party. It was a tough job celebrating our work whilst job sitting in the sunshine, drinking tea, eating home-made cake and watching the aircraft taking off and landing at Farnbrough Tag Airport – but somebody had to do it.

Volunteer Garden Party  

After seven months the project is going very well. We have filled over 100 pamphlet boxes and reviewed around 30% of our reserve collection, this means that we should be ready to move onto other parts of the collection in around two years. Until they read this our volunteers haven’t known that we have a separate pamphlet collection to investigate and around 40,000 technical reports still to do!

Lessons from a year in an historic library

In 2013 I spent the year in alien territory. After nearly ten years in local studies, I undertook a maternity cover contract at an historic library housed in a think tank-cum-learned society. So, what lessons would I bring back to the world of local studies?

  1. COPAC & ESTC. We had an excellent Associate Library Fellow who was a retired rare books cataloguer. Surprise, surprise, our rare book cataloguing was brilliant, however he also put our pre-1800 stuff onto the English Short Title Catalogue (ESTC) and were in the queue for COPAC. An important part of local studies is to help scholars, so surely our scholarly material should be listed where scholars look for them? COPAC seem to do all of the work for you and you just need to find your rare book on ESTC, log in and say that you have a copy (okay, things get more interesting if it is not on ESTC and you have to check pagination etc is the same as your copy).
  2. NADFAS. I have always worked with volunteers, but had not come across NADFAS. Not only will they do conservation and listing projects, they elect their own leader and manage themselves, taking some of the stress out of volunteer management. You do have to pay expenses. For more info see the second post on this site: http://ow.ly/xgJUE
  3. How close the world of heritage/specialist collection librarianship is to local studies. Okay, you perhaps don’t get the emphasis on community engagement, but you do have volunteers, specialist users, conservation, event management, ephemera, stockwork etc. After all, local studies is heritage librarianship with our geographical patch as our specialist subject.

And most importantly……

4. The power of shiny things. I had a lot of snazzy things in my collection and those above loved it when I brought some out for their important guests. Shouldn’t we be doing similar things for our political masters? Would Mayors like to see some pretty illustrations when they are hosting important visits from twinned towns? Would County Council Chairmen like to see a display of maps before an official dinner…. and most importantly, an enthusiastic person to talk about them. That will get us those all-important brownie points.