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In the early years of the 20th
century the Library acquired by gift one of its most valuable and
historically important manuscripts. This was a
set of four fifteenth century illuminations on vellum which
provide the earliest known depictions of the English courts and
court dress. They date from about 1460 and show the four courts at
Westminster Hall - the courts of Chancery, Common Pleas, Exchequer
and King's Bench. The illuminations were presented to the Inn by
Lord Darling (Treasurer 1914-1915), who had purchased them at
Christie's in 1894.

The Library tower before
the air raid, 1940. |
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Between 1941 and 1942 the Library was destroyed
by a succession of enemy air raids. The Benchers of the day in 1939
had declined to agree to the removal of any printed books though the
manuscripts were taken out of London to safety. It was not until
after severe damage was done to the building and several thousand
volumes destroyed that the order was given to evacuate the Library,
leaving sufficient `day to day' books to carry on with. From
September 1941 until the final destruction in 1942 books were blown
off the shelves while windows, originally of glass, now of linoleum
substitute, were blown in daily. The roof was burnt off, rain and
snow had to be contended with, while books that were frozen hard to
the shelves had to be levered off with iron bars.

The Library tower after
the first air raid, 19 September 1940. |
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By May 1941 approximately half the book stock had
been moved to a dozen country houses. The remainder of the stock was
to be destroyed by fire on May 10th, 1941. Among material lost was
the John Austin collection of Jurisprudence, presented by his wife
after his death. It consisted of one hundred and thirty three
volumes of which thirty volumes had MS notes in his hand. All
vanished. The catalogue and shelf lists were saved but the subject
index was not. All the records of the Library up to 1940:
correspondence, memoranda and reports together with the Librarian's
files were burnt. The loss of buildings and facilities was costly
but these could in time be replaced. The loss in books was tragic,
for much that was destroyed was irreplaceable and the task of
restoration was not to be accomplished within thirty years.
In 1942 the Library commenced operating again in
four rooms in No. 2 King's Bench Walk with a stock consisting of
borrowed and hastily purchased books. This accommodation was
extended in 1949 and meanwhile a new Library was being planned and
built on the site of the pre-war building. It was opened by The
Treasurer, Sir Patrick Spens QC MP in April 1958, by which time much
of the lost essential legal material had been replaced through the
generosity of members and friends.
The present Library, designed by T W Sutcliffe,
occupies two top floors above the Benchers' private rooms and is
built in the shape of an L, thus conforming roughly to the plan of
the pre-war Library which it replaced. The main rooms housing the
legal collections are in the long arm of the L, looking south over
the garden to the river beyond, while galleries run round them at
intermediate floor level. There are, in addition, a number of
smaller rooms of different shapes and sizes. Built in a style
stemming directly from the traditions of the late 17th - early 18th
century, the Library is panelled throughout; the woodwork of the
tables, book-cases, doors and balustrades being of natural,
unstained English oak. A contrast in colour is provided by the
chairs which are covered in blue leather.

The new Library, Room D. |
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The books are shelved in cases that run,
bay-fashion, around the walls, leaving the centre of each reading
room clear for the siting of the readers' desks. The bay windows on
the south side contain single desks so that a reader may sit in
solitude or in company as the preference takes him. Heating is
supplied by oil-fired boilers throughout a succession of pipes
concealed in the ceilings, while additional warmth is provided by
radiators set in the recesses beneath the windows. Brass candelabra
in the main rooms provide a general light, the bookcase bays have
pendant globes to illuminate the various shelves and, in addition,
each reading space is provided with its own table lamp. Other
features are the pull-out flaps on the tables for the stacking of
used books, and the very fine craftsmanship of design of the
moulding on the pedimented doorways leading into the central room.
Comfort-cooling was installed in the Library in
2001. The various MSS collections and the more valuable
of the printed books are housed in a fire-proof strong room, leading
off the Librarian's office which commands the staircase approach to
the Library.
The recataloguing of the Library which was
necessary as a result of the war-time losses was a major undertaking
and was not completed until 1960. It took the form of a sheaf
catalogue, with a supplement on cards which was maintained until the
introduction of
computerised cataloguing in 1991. With the initial recataloguing
of the bookstock completed, attention was turned in 1960 to the
cataloguing of the
manuscript collection.
Dr James Conway Davies was invited by the Masters
of the Bench in 1960 to compile for publication a detailed catalogue
of all five of the manuscript collections - the Petyt Manuscripts,
the Barrington Manuscripts, the Records of the Inner Temple, the
Mitford Legal Manuscripts, and the Miscellaneous Manuscripts. Conway
Davies was a retired academic, some time Reader and Head of the
Department of Palaeography and Diplomatic in the University of
Durham. The resulting work, entitled Catalogue of Manuscripts in
the Library of the Honourable Society of the Inner Temple, was
published by Oxford University Press in three volumes in 1972,
though Dr Davies had died in the previous year, while in the final
stages of its preparation. In December 1976 agreement was reached
between the Inn and World Microfilms Publications Ltd for the
publication of the whole manuscript collection in a microfilm
edition. The results were published on 256 reels of microfilm in
1978.
In the new post-war building the Library occupied
not only the two upper floors but also the basement, in which older
and less frequently used material was stored, at first in fixed
metal shelving, replaced in the 1960s by compact mobile shelving
units. In 1991 it was decided by the Inn that the basement should be
converted for use as a student common room and bar. The Library
would in due course have additional space in the basement of a new
building but in the meantime the older legal material, together with
the non-law collections then housed in the gallery (the history,
biography, heraldry, genealogy, topography and literature
collections), was sent into storage. The return of the stored books,
to their new home in what had by now been officially named the
Littleton Building, was completed in 1997.

Internet access in the Library. |
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Perhaps the most important development of recent
years has been automation. Since its introduction in 1991,
information technology has taken on an ever more important role in
the Library. Users can now access the
online
catalogues of all four Inns of Court as well as a variety of
legal
databases via the Internet.
The Library has had its own web site since 1997
and Library staff also work with web site specialists,
ActiveWeb,
on AccessToLaw,
a legal gateway providing annotated links to free legal and
parliamentary web sites.
In 2007 the Library launched a selective current
awareness weblog,
which provides up-to-date information on new case law, changes in
legislation and legal news. Other technological developments include
an electronic newsletter,
legal research FAQs online and a
virtual tour. Some of these initiatives led to the Library team
winning a Halsbury Award for Best Legal Information Service (Non
Commercial Sector) in October 2007. The most recent initiative is
the creation of a
Facebook page which should help the Library to communicate more
directly with its student members.
More than 500 years since its inception, the
Library (with a staff of nine) still provides a service to meet the
needs of its two main categories of user: members of the Bar and the
judiciary, and student members studying for the Bar examinations.
Within this deceptively tranquil setting of book-lined shelves and
oak panelled walls it aims to offer a service which combines
traditional sources with new technology for the benefit of its
readers.
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