William Salt Library
Stafford
iYwi¢Y
Annual Report
2022-2023

Agenda Item No 

## **WILLIAM SALT LIBRARY** 

## **ANNUAL REPORT APRIL 2022- MARCH 2023** 

## **AN OVERVIEW** 

This year the Library building remained closed with access to its collection delivered through the Archive and Heritage Service in the temporary base at Eastgate House. 

The significant achievement of the year was the raising additional funds from several funders to cover the £1.7m inflationary pressures and enable construction to start on site on 1 February 2023. The Trust continues to play a very active role on the Project Team and Project Board represented by the Chair, Mithra Tonking, and Vice Chair, David Marriott. 

Access to the Library collection is restricted but there continues to be an enquiry service, copying and in some circumstances onsite access. Cataloguing of the collection is ongoing now supported by a Project Cataloguer. I would like to record my thanks to all of the Archive and Heritage staff, volunteers, and trustees. 

## **THE TRUST** 

Trustee meetings were held in person for the first time since March 2020 at Chillington Hall and at Eastgate House. At the Trust’s Annual General Meeting on 23 May 2022 the following people were re-elected as trustees: Mithra Tonking, Randle Knight, Frances Beatty and David Jacques. Mithra Tonking was re-elected as Chair and David Marriott re-elected as Vice Chair. Mr Charles Hawley was appointed Honorary Treasurer and Mr John Thorneycroft was re- appointed Honorary Advisor. Staffordshire County Council appointed Carolyn Trowbridge as its representative on the Trust. Dean’s Accountants were appointed as Honorary Auditors of the Trust. Two further meeting took place during the year for the Trust on 5 September 2022 and 23 January 2023. 

## **STAFFING AND VOLUNTEERS** 

## **Establishment** 

The key staff working with the Library collections were Chris Copp (Collections Manager), Dominic Farr and Liz Street (Collection Officers) and Lisa Williams (Conservator) who planned and delivered the relocation of the collection from December 2021 – May 2022. Louise Crompton started her post as Project Cataloguer in October 2022 and is working closely with Dominic Farr. 

Access to the collection was delivered by the History Centre Assistants (Claire Jackson, Henrietta Martinez, Amanda Spearman, Joanne Peck and Bev Sutherland) led by Julie O’Neill (History Centre Manager) and supported by Collection Officers (Liz Street, Dominic Farr and Rebecca Jackson). 

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Copying, photography, scanning, social media, website amendments and coordination of volunteers were delivered by the Engagement and Access team led by Sarah English (Engagement and Access Manager) and Helen Johnson (Community Engagement and Partnership Officer), Ben Cunliffe (Digital Officer), and Melanie Williamson (Volunteer Coordinator). 

Cataloguing of the Library’s collection is led by Dominic Farr (Collection Officer) and supported by the Louise Crompton (Project Cataloguer) with support from their manager Chris Copp and our volunteers. 

## **Volunteers** 

Our volunteers Catherine Nichols and Randle Knight continue to work on the Library collection at the temporary storage location.  Catherine has been working on the WSL accession material that was not used during the A2A project.  She has been adding them to CALM and editing the records.  Currently she is up to the accession collections received in 1940.  Randle has been listing the Library’s ‘Miscellaneous’ collection that contains for the most part unpublished research material.  He has completed 78 items from this collection to date.  As part of the NLHF funded project, Louise has been cataloguing the volumes from the old Reading Room that were not already on the online catalogue.  So far she has added 823 volumes to the online catalogue. 

## **THE LIBRARY BUILDING** 

Prior to the start of construction the Library building continued to be maintained along with servicing of alarm systems in the Library.  Staffordshire County Council covers the costs of the maintenance and monitoring. 

Since the 1 February 2023 the site has been handed over to the construction company Pave Aways Limited. Julie O’Neill is the key contact between the service and Pave Aways liaising with the site manager and ensuring the site is secured. Fire and intruder alarm maintenance is continuing for both sites. 

The garden has been largely removed to accommodate pre-construction archaeology, demolition of the strongroom and foundation work for the new glazed link. 

The Joint Venture Development Agreement and associated legal documents were completed on 1 February 2023 between the Trust and Staffordshire County Council. The first rent payment is due after practical completion of the construction work in Summer 2024. 

## **STAFFORDSHIRE HISTORY CENTRE PROJECT** 

The procurement process for construction of the History Centre completed in September 2022 with only one compliant bid and with an inflationary increase of £1.7m. The project team and Project Board value engineered some construction elements and then raised the additional funds by submission of a grant uplift request to the National Lottery Heritage Fund of £894,599,  additional funding from Staffordshire  County Council of £310,000, a grant of £100,000 from the Wolfson Foundation, grant of £250,000 from Stafford Borough Council from the UK Shared 

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Prosperity Fund, additional funding of £20,000 from the William Salt Library Trust, and £32,000 from the Hildegarde Simon Trust. There is also a commitment to raise £25,000 through a public appeal. 

The revised project costs are: 

- NLHF grant: £4.858m 

- Partnership matched funding: £3.921m 

- This includes funding from SCC : £2.148m 

- UK Shared Prosperity via SBC: £0.250m 

- WSL Trust: £0.040m 

- Grants and donations from trusts, Lichfield Diocese and Friends groups and a public appeal: £0.633m 

- Volunteer time in-kind £0.721m 

- Other in-kind for land and building maintenance £0.129m 

- Total project costs: £8.780m 

Imagemakers were appointed as interpretation consultants and commenced work in November 2022. The Archive and Heritage team are drawing up lists of items for display and inviting feedback through Twitter polls and events. Two focus groups will be established to seek more detailed feedback on all aspects of the project.The Audience Agency have been appointed as Evaluation consultants for the project. 

Procurement of the new website has been more complex requiring additional advice from legal services and assessment of the G-cloud Framework which has been rejected as it did not include a relevant package from the supplier. Progress is now being made through an open procurement process and engagement with a suitable supplier. In the interim a microsite for the project has been launched: https://staffordshirehistorycentre.blog/ 

As mentioned in the section on talks and visits (below) a very popular tour of the empty Library building was offered showing the recently revealed features. Three different types of wallpaper have been discovered from the Victorian and Edwardian periods and panels of each one will be preserved. 

The construction contract commenced in January 2023 with the whole site handed over to Pave Aways Limited on 1 February 2023. Work is well underway with piling at the rear of the site for the new strongrooms. Demolition of the WSL strongroom has been completed. During groundworks additional asbestos was removed which was found at both the rear of the site and in the courtyard. 

Archaeology work to meet the requirement for a watching brief was completed with some additional costs. The County Archaeologist assisted the project team in ensuring work was concluded to his satisfaction. Additional costs were absorbed by County Council property budgets and underspends in service budgets. 

During the preparation work more significant issues have been revealed in the Library building. In the cottage the wooden beams underneath the floor are rotten, they have been laid directly on to the soil, which is very unusual. The stairs leading to the first floor have sagged and need structural work. There are issues with the floor levels in the Trustees Room and water damage on the first floor. These items are all 

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variations to the contract and a request to use the contingency budget has been made to the NLHF. 

Based on the construction start date the anticipated completion is summer 2024 and opening date in the autumn of 2024. At the moment the programme is on schedule across the construction and the activities. 

Three progress reports and claims have been submitted to the NLHF and received favourably. 

## **FINANCE** 

The Annual Accounts have been prepared by Mr Hawley and the Librarian in preparation for audit by Dean’s Accountants. The Library’s general expenditure was £36,673 which was £6,013 over the allocated budget. This was due to additional costs on the History Centre project. The Trust has paid the first instalment of £20,000 as its contribution to the project. 

Income was £19,450 and exceeded the estimated targets mainly due to receiving the NLHF grant to cover History Centre Costs. The Library received its annual grant of £3,000 from Staffordshire County Council and late payment of the 2021/22 grant. Funding of £8,709 was received from the National Lottery Heritage Fund for work in connection with the Staffordshire History Centre project. 

Key sources of income continued to be reproduction fees and digital images plus increasing royalties from Bridgeman Images. There was no spend on the conservation of printed books or the main conservation programme. There was spend on purchasing boxes for the collection. 

## **COLLECTIONS MANAGEMENT** 

## **Conservation of Printed Book Collections** 

No work has taken place on the conservation of printed book collections. Conservation cleaning and packaging, supervised by conservator Lisa Williams, will commence once space becomes available at the storage location from July 2023. This will be supported by volunteers. 

## **COLLECTIONS DEVELOPMENT** 

## **Accessions** 

A total of 164 accessions were received during the year. The range of subjects covered by the year’s accessions has been very wide and details have been reported to the Trust meetings in the regular lists of accessions. 

A total of 72 printed books were added to the Library’s collections of which 8 were donated. 

## **Cataloguing** 

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Not all new accessions received during the year have been catalogued as the priority has been work relating to the Staffordshire History Centre project. The cataloguing backlog from has improved from 97.28 to 87.53 linear metres.  A total of 1,628 (compared to 1,427 for 2021-22) individual catalogue descriptions for new items were added to the online catalogue during the course of the year. 

Progress was made on the expansion of the online catalogue by the addition of legacy data on our holdings. In total 1,425 (compared to 1,065 for 2021-22) retrospective catalogue descriptions were added to the online database during the year. 

A key component of online cataloguing for Library items is the preparation of biographical information about authors and personal subjects associated with a particular work. These are called name authority records and, during the year, an additional 1,800 (compared to 348 in 2021-22) of these have been created. 

## **PUBLIC SERVICES** 

The Library collection is in storage with limited access and no items have been produced for in person visits. An in-person service is only being offered to readers whose request cannot be met through the copying/research service and meet the access criteria. The number of enquiries received has increased compared to the previous year. 

Photography and scanning orders were supplied through Staffordshire Record Office. The categorisation of orders is more limited and just identifies Library orders from the Record Office orders. 

Visitor sessions to the Staffordshire Views pages on the Past Track website have remained consistent. 

## **Public Service Statistics** 

||**2022/23**<br>**2021/22**|
|---|---|
|Personal Use via Staffordshire Record Office||
|Number of individual visits|0<br>118|
|Number of documents/restricted access items<br>produced for readers|0<br>802|
|||
|Distance Use||
|Number of postal and email enquiries|118<br>88|
|Numberof telephone enquiries|Not recorded<br>0|
|Total|88|
|||
|Talks andvisits|156<br>0|
|Reprographics Services||
|Number of photocopies supplied|Not recorded<br>0|
|Numberofphotocopy orders|Not recorded<br>0|
|NumberofStaffordshireViews prints sold|Not recorded<br>28|
|Number of digital images other than Staffs Views<br>supplied|Not recorded<br>37|



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|Numberofphotography orders|Not recorded<br>3|
|---|---|
|Total number of orders|45|
|||
|Online Use||
|Numberof visitorsessions onStaffsViewsweb site|1,633<br>1,651|



## **Permissions to Publish** 

Eleven permissions to publish or exhibit items from the Library’s collections were granted to: 

- Staffordshire View (SV.IV.195) of Fisherwick Hall by Roger Thornhill in an article in the Caughley Society Newsletter. 

- Staffordshire View (SV.V.157a) by J Buckler of Old House in the Close for use by Dr M Kingman in his book ‘Brickmaking and Brick Building in Midland England, 1437-1780’ published by Brewin Books. 

- Three Staffordshire Views (SV.IX.7b, 8a, 8b) of Shenstone Church for use by Friends of Shenstone Tower on information boards outside the tower. 

- Portrait of John Petit (Portraits Petit/John 1) for use by Peter Cousins for the Lichfield Civic Society website. 

- Norton Bridge Estate sale catalogue 1919 (SC/H/1/13) for use by Chebsey Local History Society in their book ‘Places in Chebsey Parish’. 

- Portrait of Henry Flitcroft (Portraits Flitcroft/Henry 1) for use by Gill Hedley om ‘The Ingenious Mr Flitcroft’ published by Lund Humphries. 

- Plan of Birmingham Canal (M740) and Staffordshire View (SV.II.31) of Bradley Iron Works for use by Dr N Tringham in an article by Peter King to be published in ‘Transactions of the Staffordshire Archaeological and Historical Society Vol LIV’ 

- Pre-printed card signed by Stafford allowing Mr Willis to view pictures at Cleveland House 18 May 1825 (S.MS. 892/8) for use by Dr A Nellis Richter in ‘Opening the Townhouse: Access in the Urban Environment in the Early Nineteenth Century’ in A Matter of Access eds. Adriana Turpin, Susan Bracken, and Andrea Galdy (Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars Press, forthcoming 2023) and also in  ‘The Gallery at Cleveland House: Art and Society in Regency London’ (London: Bloomsbury, forthcoming 2023-24) 

- Medical reports of the Effects of Arsenic 1786 by Thomas Fowler (B9 FOW) for use in the exhibition ‘Kill or Cure’ at the Ancient High House 9 February to 6 May 2023. 

- Staffordshire View (SV.IV.49c) of Drayton Manor for use by Drayton Bassett Parish Council on a heritage noticeboard about the historical area of Drayton Manor. 

- Staffordshire View (SV.X.58) of Stretton Hall in late 18[th] century for use by Dr R Thorpe in ‘Portrait of a family: the Conollys of Castletown’ published by Office of Public Works Ireland. 

## **Talks and Visits** 

A tour was developed to offer a unique opportunity to see the William Salt Library without the collection in situ and with the historic features revealed. Tours were offered from September 2022 - February 2023 with additional dates added due to the popularity of the tour. They included interpretation based on the research of Ben Cunliffe and the Conservation Plan. In total there were 13 tours and 97 visitors. The 

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tour has now been converted to a talk to be offered for groups. The talk was given in January to Gnosall Phoenix group to 59 attendees. 

## **Social Media** 

There are combined Twitter, Facebook and Instagram accounts for the Archive, Museum and William Salt Library from which a number of staff post items about the collections and work of all three services. 

Twitter: @ArchandHeritage Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/StaffordshireArchivesandHeritage Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/archandheritage/ 

The posts about the Library have focused on revealing the period features which have been rediscovered since the collection was moved and tours of the William Salt Library. 

## **Friends of the William Salt Library** 

The Friends of the William Salt Library held their AGM and Committee Meeting via Zoom on 24 May 2022 which was attended by the Librarian and Chair of Trustees. The Friends also held an event at Bishton Hall on Saturday 25 June 2022. 

___________________________________________________________________ 

Joanna Terry William Salt Librarian, May 2023 

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Charity registration number= 1173509
THE WILLIAM SALT LIBRARY TRUST
ACCOUNTS
for the year ended 31 March 2023

The William Salt Library Trust
General Purpose Account
Year ended 31 March 2023
Contents
Page
Accountants's Report
Income and expenditure account
Balance sheet
Income and expenditure account- ConseNation account
Balance sheet- Conservation account

The W411ram Salt Llbrary Trust
General Purpose Account
Year ended 31 March 2023
Accountonts'5 report to the trustees otThe Wllllam Salt Library TN$t
We have examined, without carrying out an audit, the Balanace Sheet5 dated 31 March 2023.
together with the Income and Expenditure Accounts for the year ended on that date.
and confirm that they are in accordance with accounting record5 and information supplied.
Deans
Chartered Accountsnts
Gibson House
Hurrlcane Court
Hurricane Close
Stafft>rd
ST16 IGZ
Date..
P38e I

The VTilliam Salt Library Trust
General Purpose Account
Year ended 31 March 2023
2023
2022
Income
Staffordshire County Council Grant
Other 8rant5
Interest
3,0(J)
260
896
596
8,709
1,387
904
169
COIF
M & G Fixed interest
Bank and Building Soaety
Donations and grants
Reproduction fees
Bridgeman royalties
Photographic permits
Staffordshire views
General income
71,937
225
122
105
396
785
236
635
435
12,889
77,914
Less Ex
enditure
Librarians salary
Printing, postage and stationery
Conservation work
Insurance
350
469
453
798
184
372
690
455
Accountancy
Subscriptions to 50cietTres
Books and manuscripts
1,003
2,100
72
31,182
1,076
2,1
Bank charge5
Relocation projert
97
8,671
36,709
13,930
Net Ideficitl/surplus for the year
123,8201
63,984
Page 2

The Wllliam Salt Library Trust
General Purpose Account Balance Sheet
Year ended 31 Marth 2023
2023
2022
Investfflents
COIF- Charitie5 Fixed Interest
Date
purchased
0610712￿J7
2810812007
0310412008
0310712008
3110312019
3110312020
3110312021
1111112021
3110312022
3110312023
Units
7.004.53
2.654.52
1.836.46
2,076.07
3.540.86
1.971.73
1347.(N)I
24,643.00
1300.631
1639.941
42,439.60
Cost
8.500
3,302
2,309
2,500
4,808
2.687
14651
33,250
13771
17541
55,760
Market value at 31 March 2023
£53.923
M&G- Chafltles Flxed Inte￿$t
Date
purchased
0610712007
1910712(KJ7
2ty0412IX)8
0210712008
1010512010
2110312011
1111112021
Unkts
2,214.846
2,800.566
1.951.488
2.189.142
5.733.006
4.084.968
27,301.090
46.275.11
Cost
2.589
3.302
2,309
2,500
7.000
5,000
33,250
55,950
111,710
111.710
Market value at 31 March 2023
£54.618
Total market value at 31 March 2023
£108,541
Bank accounts
CAF
Gold account
Cash account
4.285
28.803
Débtor
178
6,000
Creditor
17621
18.0361
115,412
138,478
Reserve account
Balance brought forward
139.232
75.248
IDeficitl/SiJrplus from income account
123.8201
63.984
115.412
139.232
Approved on behalf of the board of trustees
C Hawley
PaBe 3

The Wllliam Salt Llbrary Trust
Coftservation A<¢ount
Year ended 31 March 2023
2023
2022
Income
M & G interest
26
18
COIF interest
728
359
754
377
Less Ex
enditure
Bindin￿reStO￿tI0n
Net surplus for the year
754
377
Page 4

The Wllllam Salt Ubfary Trust
Conservation Account Balance sheet
Year ended 31 Mar¢h 2023
2022
Investments
COIF- Charltles Flxèd Interest
Date purchased
l June 2009
Transferred
31 March 2019
31 March 2020
31 March 2021
31 March 2022
31 March 2023
Unit5
5.672
Cost
7,089
13.5411
11,9721
346
301
640
1.446
14,4271
12,4641
433
376
800
1.807
1.807
1,007
Market value at 31 March 2023
1,702
M&G- Charities Fixed Interst
Date purthased
Jun-09
Units
15,280
17.878
17,878
17,878
Market value at 31 March 2023
18.036
Total market value at 31 March 2023
19.738
Credltor
19.685
18,885
Reserve account
Surplus for year
Capital gain on units transferred
18,885
754
46
19.685
18,S09
377
18.885
Approved on behalf of the board of trustees
C Hawley
Pa8e 5