Carluke Library
My next experience of work began
one afternoon in the early summer of 1973 when, having just left Glasgow
University with an MA degree, I reported for duty to Carluke Library. I’d been
offered a post as a ‘trainee librarian’ following an interview with Willie
Scobbie, the head of Lanark County Libraries
– it was in fact more of a friendly chat than an interview,
for Willie, a leading figure in the Airdrie community, was known to my parents
and I suspect the job was mine before I’d opened my mouth.
A new library building had been
opened in Carluke some years earlier. Hailed by some as an architectural
landmark on account of its hyperbolic parabaloidal roof (rumoured to be the
first in the UK) its revolutionary design presented problems to those who had
to spend their days there – walled in vast curtains of glass, the building
became grossly over-warm on sunny days. There had also been problems with the materials
used to construct the roof – after serious defects were detected in the early
1970s, the contents of the library were hastily decanted to a cavernous empty
premises along the street. It was just beside the entrance to the town’s old
cemetery, and had previously been occupied by the venerable firm of Grahams,
joiners, upholsterers and undertakers. Library business was conducted from
there until a steel frame could be put in erected just inside the glass walls
of the new building to support the great hyperbolic parabaloid.
And so I found myself just after
lunchtime that June day being welcomed by the librarian, Freda Miller in the
small office just off the pavement where in the past you had gone in your grief
to arrange loved ones’ funerals. I also met Noreen Duddy, the library assistant
responsible for services to children. I eyed her with some apprehension – it
was Noreen who, some years before, had admonished me on finding in books I had
returned to the library on my mother’s behalf the Christian tracts from the
Victory Tract Club which she had secreted between random pages. But Noreen smiled
warmly.
As the sunlight shafted through
tall opaque windows, Freda introduced me to basic librarycraft. She showed me
the ‘issue’, the wooden trays full of people’s library tickets – small
cardboard pockets - each holding a book card recording the volumes which had
been borrowed and filed in author or subject order behind a marker indicating
the date due. Information technology had
just begun the long revolution in library practices, and its digital fingers
had not yet penetrated to the depths of south Lanarkshire.
Then I was set to work shelving
returned books, serving customers, helping them find what they were looking
for, and then stamping the items they wished to borrow with the date they were
due back. I remember thinking, very pretentiously, that if I were to write an
autobiography – it was around this time that James Herriot was enchanting
readers with his tales of life as a Yorkshire vet and inspiring folk in other
jobs to try captivating the public with stories from their professional life -
I would call it Stamping away the days of
my years, a title which certainly did not give due weight to the
professionalism involved in librarianship.
I found my way round the maze of
back rooms in Graham’s rambling premises, some of them shadowy and cold. Occasionally when you were shelving books in
the stillness of evening you’d be startled by unexpected creaks from the fabric
of the old building, and you’d wonder apprehensively if this were the room
where the coffins had been stored.
At the end of my first shift, I
walked home elated. A few weeks later, in Yorkshire with my parents on holiday,
I looked through the plate-glass front window of the library in Pickering, and
saw the arrangement of the stock and the issue and date stamps and rubber
ink-pads, and I thought to myself ‘I could just go in there and start working.’
I suppose in the midst of all the insecurities of that last holiday with my
parents I was clutching to the fact that I at least I had an embryonic
professional identity.
Sometime over the summer, the
necessary remedial work having been completed, the library moved back under the
hyperbolic parabaloidal roof. Sometime that autumn, Freda was appointed to
another post. Her replacement was a cheerful woman called Libby Bell on whose
team I remained until early spring 1974 learning more about the arcana of
librarianship – the Dewey Decimal system, the mysteries of national
bibliography, the principles of book selection - and, through the customers we
served, about the endlessly varied richness of human nature.
I vividly remember the elderly
female borrower who went off with a book, commenting sagely that you could
always be safe with a lady writer. Having seen the author’s name, I questioned
inwardly whether the borrower would in fact be totally comfortable with what
she had chosen. The next day, stony-faced, she marched into the library, dumped
the book (now wrapped in brown paper) vehemently on the counter, and hissed
‘That woman is no lady.’
I was touched that, when
Christmas came, Libby gave each of the staff a Christmas present – mine was a
colourful plastic receptacle for pens and pencils incorporating a perpetual calendar.
Mobile Library
In March 1974 I was assigned to a
mobile library. No longer was my workplace just a short walk across town – I’d to bus it to Hamilton each day in the
late morning, and walk to the County Library Headquarters in Auchingramont Road
where the driver Fred Reynolds would be waiting for me in his corporate grey vehicle. Each of the Lanark County Mobile Libraries
had a staff of two – the librarian (or in my case trainee librarian), and the
driver who also helped serve the public: the former was nominally in
charge. But like most of his colleagues
Fred had seen several librarians come and go, and quite obviously regarded
himself as the main man. He was a taciturn and rather daunting colleague, and
his attention to detail verged on the obsessive.
Three days a week – Mondays,
Thursdays and Fridays we worked from lunchtime until the early evening,
covering an area bisected by the A8 Glasgow/Edinburgh corridor. This included
the towns of Harthill and Salsburgh which seemed to me in my state of mind to
be shrouded in perpetually dismal cloud.
On Tuesdays and Wednesdays, we’d travel south into a more rural tract of
Lanarkshire and visit small communities such as Ashgill and Tillietudlem where
we stopped beside the Castle which Sir Walter Scott’s book had made famous.
For the first time I was
responsible for a budget and for selecting stock – I’d attend the weekly mobile
librarians’ ‘key copy’ meeting – looking with my colleagues at collections of
new books sent on approval by our suppliers - and mark those titles I wished to
purchase. Fred did not always appreciate my choices – and with good reason, for
he knew our readers and their requirements much better than I ever did. I
remember once ordering a copy of a biography of Leonid Brezhnev When it
arrived, Fred turned it over in his hands, and announced with frosty scorn
‘No-one will ever read this!’ We put it on the shelf, but I do believe he was
right. The general rule from Fred’s point of view seemed to be that you
couldn’t go wrong with romances, crime and westerns. These were read avidly –
many borrowers used to put their initials inside the back cover of each book to
indicate that they had read it. Which was fine until, greatly to their
consternation, we acquired another copy of the same title.
I remember long shifts on the
mobile when we’d be standing in some side-street in the dull, flickering
battery-powered lights as the oil heater fought a losing battle with the
advancing chill. I can only recall one of our regular borrowers, an elderly
lady who requested E. L. Shumacher’s mould-shattering treatise Small is beautiful. And I remember one
mobile stop on Wednesday afternoons, in a bleak lay-by near the M74 where once
there had been houses which were no longer standing. We sat by the roadside and
no-one came to make use of our service – ever. For all his meticulous
commitment, Fred seemed quite comfortable with this waste of our time, and it
never occurred to me to try to change our route in response to circumstances
long-changed circumstances.
Fred was a fan of Radio Clyde,
the Glasgow-based station and my recollection of these weeks on the road is
indelibly soundtracked by pop songs. Abba’s Waterloo
was riding high in the charts – I first heard it one afternoon on the way to
Hamilton as the bus sped down the hill from Motherwell Cross past Dalziel High
School; I’ll forever associate a street
in Allanton where we stopped at tea-time on Monday nights with Sugar Baby Love by the Rubettes; one
singer was Down in the strawberry patch
with Sally, although as far as I could gather what they were doing there
was left to the imagination, while another had just ‘called to say how much I
love you.’
I don’t have a particularly close
relationship with Fred. Insecure myself, I lacked the confidence to relax in
his presence. And so I hated the time I spent with him. A major concern was my
anxiety when toilets weren’t immediately available, and there were no
convenient trees to slip unobtrusively behind. This anxiety made me need to go
more often, even though I would dehydrate myself in an attempt to prevent this.
My days became increasingly worry-filled. Eventually, I found I simply couldn’t
face going in to work, and someone, presumably the long-suffering Willie
Scobbie arranged for me to work at the Auchingramont Road HQ until something
else could be found for me. I really appreciated his grace and support in my
gaucheness and immaturity – but on the other hand it has to be said I was given
very little help in transitioning to work on the road.
Auchingramont Road
The Headquarters building – where
I worked for a couple of weeks - was to become very familiar to me in later
years. Spending my days in a warm, comfortable environment with toilets just
along the corridor was a blessed therapy, particularly when I stood at an upper
window each day and watched the mobiles driving off from the car-park to visit
their first customers of the day, knowing I didn’t have to go with them.
HQ was a converted bank building,
with a large, three-floor extension at the back, the floors linked by an
elderly industrial lift used for transporting book-packed trollies. The
little-visited top storey was bursting with shelf after shelf of old stock, the
air heavy with the musty smell of decaying paper and old library book-bindings.
Up there, it was utterly quiet, and if you were so disposed you could hide away
among the stacks for most of the day without your absence being noted.
Shotts and Newmains
At the end of the two weeks’ I
was asked to serve as acting librarian at the libraries of two relatively-close
communities – Newmains and Shotts – which was fine, except that I could really
have used some basic instructions in out to manager people. My mother kindly
lent me her second-hand Ford Anglia to enable me to reach these sites easily as
they weren’t on a direct ‘bus route from home.
Shotts Library was in an old
building on a corner of the road leading into this former mining community. The
library itself was at street level, but the ground sloped steeply back from the
road, and you reached the library staff-room and office by descending a
staircase into the basement which was lit by a rear-facing window. I remember
going down the stairs for the first time, following the member of staff who was
showing me round – it struck me how tall this young woman was. But on
subsequent visits as I became more confident of my ability to do the job, I
noticed she seemed to have grown smaller, until I realised she was just of
average height.
The other library I was
responsible for was at Newmains, in a modern building close to the town centre.
Here as at Shotts the staff were friendly, we worked well together, and I enjoyed
my weeks at the two libraries, coping adequately with occasional crises, such
as the fainting pensioner in Shotts library, to whom I gave a lift home, and
the breaking of a window in the middle of the night at the same library – the
police phoned me at home. The two firms with contracts for boarding up broken
windows were Hurry Brothers and City Glaziers – I always imagined them in a
race to get to the damaged premises first.
I remember coming across John
Sutherland’s 1974 study Thackeray at Work
in Newmains Library, and was fascinated by its insights into the processes of
literary composition and publishing, which kindled my interest in the history
of publishing. The other book I remember seeing in Newmains was Julie Andrews’s
The Last of the Really Great
Whangdoodles.
One situation, however, I did not
handle so well. Late one afternoon, Mr Walker, who was Willie Scobbie’s deputy
phoned me at Newmains asking me to do the evening shift at nearby Newarthill
Library. Now this should not have been a problem at all – it would merely have
meant delaying my return home, and grabbing a sandwich for tea. However, I’d
heard that there were occasional problems at Newarthill with teenagers making
life difficult for library staff, and I was very anxious at the prospect of
working there. ‘I’m not going,’ I told the boss without, I think, helping him
understand my reasons. Despite his attempts to get me to change my mind, I
refused and eventually he rang off, a very unhappy man.
Shaken by this episode, I drove
home at the end of my shift, and howled my eyes out in front of my parents (and
our friendly painter Jim Prentice, who was working at the house when I reached
home.) I think this took place on a Friday night, and I had planned to phone
Willie Scobbie on the Monday morning to explain what had happened. But before I
could make contact with him, he came on the line. He was far kinder to me than
I was entitled to expect. ‘I believe the man upstairs has been giving you some
grief?’ he said.
One sunny Friday evening in July
I locked up Newmains Library, apprehensive, yet full of anticipation about what
lay ahead. The next morning I would be heading north to join the St Andrews
Scripture Union Mission Team for the first time. And just a few weeks after
that, I said goodbye to the staff at my two libraries, and enrolled at
Strathclyde University for the Postgraduate Diploma Course in Librarianship.
(Click here for details of my next role, as Librarian at Carluke)
(Click here for details of my next role, as Librarian at Carluke)
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