Friday, September 27, 2013

Books for Students at Oxfam Lincoln

This week as students are arriving and returning to University we have decided to help out by rummaging through our stock to find some useful academic books and study guides that can help you get ahead of the curve. Adjusting to independent living in the first few weeks of university can be expensive and with books to buy, nights out to fund and yourself to feed you’ll soon realize that it’s smart to cuts costs wherever possible.

 Range of academic books we have in the shop

Buying books second hand is the perfect way to save a little money while still getting everything on your reading list and keeping on top of your studies. Here at Oxfam Lincoln we have a great range of fiction and non-fiction books and it’s definitely worth checking whether the books on your reading list are in store. This week our window display features a great range of useful books on various subjects including Literature, Psychology, Criminology, Journalism and Business. We also have a great selection of academic diaries and stationary to get you prepared for the year.
Don’t forget to ask us if you can’t find what you’re looking for; we might have a copy sitting in the stock room, so it’s worth checking. If the book you want is not in store you can also look on our online shop which has a great selection of books at great prices which can be delivered right to your home.

Friday, September 13, 2013

Steampunk Festival

This time each year, you can see the cobbled streets of uphill Lincoln fill with characters dressed In Neo-Victorian attire. Men and women wearing dapper tailcoats, military uniforms, corsets and bustle skirts and accessorized with top hats, canes and pocket watches arrive in Lincoln to celebrate the biggest Steampunk festival in Europe, which takes place in and around the Castle between the 13th and 15th of September.

To celebrate and join in with the festivities we have an exciting Steampunk themed window display in the shop, complete with Victorian focused literature, a rustic leather trunk, brass candlesticks and gothic jewellery. But what is Steampunk? In short, it’s about mixing old and new, inspired by a combination of 19th century machinery and style and 21st century technology. With fantasy elements Steampunk is a science fiction sub-genre which is becoming increasingly popular across society, with literature, television, film and fashion all taking inspiration from the Steampunk genre.

Steampunk related items
a few of the Steampunk related items we have on display
So If you’re fascinated by Dickens, want to learn more about 19th Century Inventions or fancy a glimpse into a Victorian childhood then check out our display. Equally if it’s jewellery you’re after have a look through the trunk of accessories, with beautiful cameos and dramatic gothic necklaces there will definitely be something to match your Steampunk outfit.

Monday, April 8, 2013

Lincoln Lunatic Hospital Reports 1840 – 1849

Recently a very unusual book, detailing a decade in the daily life of the Lincoln lunatic Asylum (what we now know as The Lawn) arrived in the shop along with a donation of more ordinary romances and thrillers. It was our lucky day – the donor had intended to take it to the Lincolnshire Archives but they were shut, so she brought it to us instead. We did check with the Archives, but they had all the Asylum reports they needed and so were not interested in purchasing it. Golding, Mawer and Young made a tentative valuation for auction of £100, given that it is a unique part of the history of this very important institution. However we always like to try selling interesting and valuable items in our shop first, before we explore any other avenues; to make sure our regular customers get a chance to find these treasures. This time it didn’t even take a day for the book to sell! Our volunteer, Alison, saw the potential in it straight away, and did some research about the book. While we can’t sell it to anyone else now, we thought we would still share some of the history with all our followers:

This book is unique, as far as can be told. It may have been bound as a record for the Asylum itself deliberately to cover a decade, or it may have been the personal property of one of the board members. It is also highly significant in relation to the period it covers. In the five years from 1835, Dr Robert Gardiner Hill, who is credited with being the first to dispense with restraint as a form of treatment for the insane, was superintendent of Lincoln Asylum. As the book under discussion covers the ten years following Dr Hill’s departure, it must therefore be seen as a valuable record of the results of Dr Hill’s ‘experiment’; indeed the Chairman’s narrative report of 1841 gives over much space to its discussion.

The book is a custom-binding of individual year reports. Internally, the reports themselves are titled “State of the Lincoln Lunatic Asylum” alongside their relevant year. The yearly reports are each prefaced with a narrative commentary by the current chairman, which discusses issues related to the Lincoln Lunatic Asylum both in relation to the institution and the wider issue of general treatment of the insane. These narratives are by their nature idiosyncratic, outlining as they do the preoccupations of the current chairman. These are then followed by tables of data relating to patients, staffing, supplies, and financing.

The title page from the first report in our bound omnibus.

Over the 10 years covered within the book, the reports vary in content: for instance, some years detail patients’ employment where others do not. Appendices sometimes include letters and other extraordinary materials relating to problems and controversies. The reports also become far more detailed over time. At the beginning, the contents list tends towards pragmatics: patients in, out, deceased, food, finances and so on, but by the final year, the numbers of beds, rooms and their attendants are also included, so too is a list of the books held by the Asylum and by whom, as well as details of the daily (as opposed to the initial weekly) state of the patients and discussion of issues such as escape and noisiness. Also included in later reports are fold-out maps of the Asylum, including all patients and staff rooms, layout of the gardens and elevation. As was the style of the time, the map is embellished with a view of the Asylum and a finely designed compass.

Examples of the detailed records in the book.

One of the fold-out maps.

The book is board-bound in dark brown leather with soft brown leather to the corners and spine. The spine itself is embossed with gold lettering and decoration, with red leather backing to the title. Sadly, the binding is damaged, the cover at the front having come away from the facing page. There is also one filler page within – not part of any of the actual reports – that has a piece cut out of it. Some pages have also been lightly annotated in pencil, and some maps have torn where folded. On one of the front leaves is writing that may have been added later: a handwritten list (in various scripts, so not all by the same hand) as follows:
Walsh, F.D 1847
Pay of superintendent 1847
Marriage of Superintendent 1847
Chaplain 1848
No. of patients 140 in 1847
Finding treasures like this among the many items that are so generously donated to our shop is one of the highlights for our volunteers, and something that helps makes our shop so special. While this book has already found itself a new home, you can be sure there are many more unique and special volumes on our shelves – So make sure you visit soon, and see what you can find.