The scrapbooks fall into two basic categories: scrapbooks of images and scrapbooks of text. Below are some of the most important:
The Manchester Scrapbook:
Maps, plans, views, portraits and broadsides of places and persons in Manchester and its vicinity, presented to the Library in 1838 by its compiler, Francis Egerton, 1st Earl of Ellesmere, and now comprises over three hundred and fifty items. It includes a series of watercolours and pen and ink sketches by the Manchester antiquarian and saddle-maker Thomas Barritt, dating from the end of the eighteenth century and represents an attempt to record the changes taking place within the town at that time.
Robert Langton Scrapbook:
Over 400 proofs by the artist and wood engraver Robert Langton, presented to the Library by the artist in 1885. Langton (1825-1900) began work in Manchester in 1849 as a wood engraver specialising in archaeological, architectural and historical engravings. Langton illustrated or contributed illustrations to many important local works, including Richard Wright Procter's Barber's Shop and Manchester Streets, Abram's History of Blackburn, Croston's Historical Memorials of the Church in Prestwich and J. E. Bailey's Palatine Notebook. In his day, Langton was widely regarded in this area as the successor to Bewick.
The Cambrics Scrapbook:
One of the most important collections of broadsides, broadsheets, and single-sheet pamphlets concerning Manchester and its environs within the Library. Its 254 broadsides range widely from light-hearted theatre posters and entertainment handbills to discussions of some the most serious political issues facing England at the end of the eighteenth century. The earliest piece dates from 1739 and the latest 1848; over two-thirds of them, especially the more political broadsheets, come from the years 1789-1800, the turbulent decade of the French Revolution, when Manchester's populace was also stirred by the spirit of Republicanism.
The Scrapbooks of William Robert Hay:
18 volumes of clippings interspersed with a selection of broadsides including political satire, poetry, advertisements, lotteries and other items of a transitory nature. Many of these are unusual examples of provincial printing, with some emphasis on items printed in Manchester or its environs. Hay, (1761-1839), was a clerical magistrate and stipendiary chairman of the Salford Quarter Sessions acting at Peterloo. The scrapbooks form part of a larger Hay collection in the Library which includes, in addition to the scrapbooks, two boxes of sermons, a notebook containing genealogical notes on the Hay family, and forty six memorandum or commonplace books, and some other miscellaneous material including a small amount of correspondence. The scrapbooks are complemented by the commonplace books into which Hay has copied or summarized anecdotes, political, legal and theological extracts, poems and news reports.
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