THE PLYMOUTH PROPRIETARY LIBRARY Founded 1810
What is the Plymouth Proprietary Library? The PPL is one of the oldest surviving private subscription libraries in Devon and Cornwall and still operates under similar rules as at its inception in 1810 – although it lost its premises and most of its stock during the Second World War when it was hit by an incendiary bomb during the Plymouth Blitz. The 19th century: how did it begin? By the turn of the century, Plymouth’s strategic position, shipbuilding industry and general expertise in maritime and naval affairs had elevated it into a busy and thriving city. The Napoleonic wars only enhanced Plymouth’s prestige and status, and the first decade of the 19th century saw a surge in civic pride and public responsibility amongst the prominent inhabitants of Plymouth. One of the first civic schemes to be proposed was the building of a new public ballroom/hotel/theatre and to make part of this building a small subscription library. Prosperous, influential gentlemen such as George Eastlake, Edmund Lockyer, John Hawker and especially Henry Woollcombe, quickly declared their interest and, at a public meeting held at the Guildhall on 20 November 1810, it was agreed to create a completely separate institution, to be known as The Plymouth Public Library. The ethos of the library was ‘for the general diffusion of science and literature, to be connected with a newsroom’, and the long-term aim was for ‘the gradual formation of a library, comprising the most useful and 1