April 28, 2013 § Leave a comment

The curious tale of the stolen books –

This one puts a different light on the need for zealous security

By Martin Vennard BBC World Service

Image from weekly illustrated newspaper The Graphic, from 1886, showing a librarian in the library in Lambeth Palace's Great Hall

London’s Lambeth Palace, home to the Archbishop of Canterbury, also has a leading historic book collection. The palace’s library was the scene of a major crime that stayed undiscovered for decades.

A sealed letter that arrived at one of Britain’s most historic libraries in February 2011 was to leave its staff stunned.

The letter had been written before his death by a former employee of Lambeth Palace Library. Forwarded shortly after he died by the man’s solicitor, it revealed the whereabouts of many of the library’s precious books.

Staff had known since the mid-1970s that dozens of its valuable books had been stolen. But they had no idea of the true extent of the losses until the letter led them to the man’s house in London.

Lambeth’s recovered books

A map of the city of Cusco, in Theodor de Bry's America. (Frankfurt, 1590)

Key works now back at the Palace include:

  • 10 volumes from Theodor de Bry’s America, which contain many engraved illustrations of early expeditions to the New World
  • A volume with quarto edition of Shakespeare’s Henry IV Part 2, apparently presented to Archbishop Richard Bancroft in 1610
  • A True Discourse of the Late Voyages of Discoverie for the Finding of a Passage to Cathaya, about Martin Frobisher’s 16th Century search for a north-west passage to the Orient
  • The “spymaster’s scrapbook”, a collection of engravings illustrating conflicts involving the Spanish Netherlands, which belonged to Elizabeth I‘s spymaster Sir Francis Walsingham
  • The Frenche Chirurgerye by Jacques Guillemeau, describing skills and instruments of 16th Century surgeons, with many fine engravings

“We were staggered,” says Declan Kelly, director of libraries and archives for the Church of England. “A couple of my colleagues climbed into the attic. It was piled high to the rafters with boxes full of books. I had a list of 60 to 90 missing books, but more and more boxes kept coming down.”

They contained some 1,000 volumes, made up of 1,400 publications, many from the collections of three 17th century archbishops of Canterbury – John Whitgift, Richard Bancroft and George Abbot.

They included an early edition of Shakespeare’s Henry IV Part Two, finely illustrated books – such as Theodor de Bry’s America, which chronicles the earliest expeditions to the New World – and medical books, such as The French Chirurgerye.

“The scale of the theft is quite extraordinary,” says Robert Harding, director of Maggs Bros, a London rare book dealer. “It’s one of the biggest such thefts in recent decades.”

Harding says that if undamaged, the copy of de Bry’s America could be worth £150,000, while the Shakespeare would be worth about £50,000. He says others are also worth five-figure sums.

One of the most intriguing aspects of the case is how a member of staff was able to get away with stealing so many valuable and often large books.

During World War II, Lambeth Palace’s Great Hall – which housed much of the library’s early collection – took a direct hit from an incendiary bomb.

It was roughly estimated that up to 10,000 books were destroyed or badly damaged. In the years after, if a book was discovered to be missing it was easy to assume it had been destroyed in the war.

The library in Lambeth Palace's Great Hall Founded in 1610, Lambeth Palace’s library is the principal repository of the Church of England’s documentary history and houses more than 120,000 books
The cover of a book of prints on the theme of the Eighty Years’ War, with the arms of Sir Francis Walsingham. The library’s records date from the 9th Century to the present day, although many were destroyed by an incendiary bomb during World War II
World map from: Daniel Cellarius, Speculum orbis terrarum (Antwerp, 1578) Its founder, Archbishop Bancroft, bequeathed the core of the printed book collection, which was targeted by the unknown thief
A page from Jacques Guillemeau's The Frenche Chirurgerye … (Dort, 1598) The thief had removed many of the index cards relating to the books he stole, such as Jacques Guillemeau’s The Frenche Chirurgerye
The cover of Siegmund von Herberstein's Rerum Moscoviticarum commentarij. (Basel, 1571) which has had the arms of Archbishop Whitgift removed Investigators believe the removal of former archbishops’ arms from some book covers indicates the thief planned to sell them

But early in 1975 the then librarian noticed that some of the most important books which were known to have survived, including the Shakespeare, had been taken.

The thief had also removed the index cards of the books, making it even more difficult to work out exactly what had been stolen. It was concluded that it was a matter of just tens of books.

“The police did an investigation and interviewed all the staff, but drew a blank and nothing from the library had ever come up for sale in the book trade,” Kelly says.

Security was reviewed at the library in 1975 and in 2011.

Prof James Carley was interviewed on the BBC World Service programme Newshour

Prof James Carley, a Canadian academic, has been researching the history of the library. “In the 1970s it was very easy. There were no [detector] devices, nothing to stop you walking out with a book,” he says.

London-based antiquarian bookseller Tim Bryars says: “It would take years to do it one or two books at a time, but it would have been much easier if he had the keys and took significant quantities at a time.

“There would have been a great deal of confusion for some time after the war. It could have happened when the books were being stored in the crypt.”

The trail stayed cold for more than 35 years until the arrival of the letter.

Even though the true extent of the thief’s exploits was discovered more than two years ago, it is only now being made public. “We’ve delayed quite a while telling the story because we wanted to get to the point where we can start to make the books available again,” Kelly says.

Map showing putative route to China via Frobisher’s Straightes, from 8. Sir George Best, • A True Discourse of the Late Voyages of Discoverie for the Finding of a Passage to Cathaya (London, 1578)

He declines to say anything about the identity of the thief. “He was a former low-level employee. I don’t think he was there for that long after the theft was discovered.

“We don’t want to cause any distress to anyone still alive and connected with the thief. We want to look forward, not back.”

But Bryars has another theory. “I can understand why they didn’t reveal his name as there are other people out there who have stolen similar material, who if they saw someone else being named and shamed – even posthumously – that material could be for the bonfire,” he says.

The curious tale of the stolen books http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-22249700

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