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Amassing Treasures for All Times
Sir George Grey, Colonial Bookman and Collector

Donald Jackson Kerr

Amassing Treasures for All Times: SIr George Grey and his librariesSir George Grey, governor of New Zealand, South Australia and the Cape Colony, was an outstanding British colonial statesman in the nineteenth century. Brilliant and inscrutable, Grey, who was in contact with key Victorians from Darwin to Whately throughout his life, played a central role in overseeing the development of British colonies into politically autonomous entities. Less well-known of Grey is that he was also an obsessive collector of rare books and artefacts, which he selflessly bequeathed to the people he governed. This study, written by a former librarian of the Auckland Grey Collection, sheds desperately needed light on the genius and magnanimity of an increasingly controversial figure, demonstrating the complex humanity underlying his apparent remoteness. It is the first study on Grey of its kind.

 

Key Points

• Bio/biblio/graphy of a visionary intellectual pioneer
• Major Southern Hemisphere cultural patron
• Collected and gave libraries to South Africa, Australia and New Zealand
• Major collector of early indigenous-language publications in these places

Review Quotes

'Kerr asks critical questions. What did colonial officials read, what did they collect and how was this accumulation ultimately dispersed? Under what disadvantages did colonials operate as they attempted to build libraries at great distances in space and time from the European source of the books? And, more nuanced, how did the purchaser read the books and annotate them? And how did the books contribute to the mental development of the reader?... The most significant library philanthropist of the English-speaking world, Andrew Carnegie, declared Grey 'the truest & greatest prophet of our day', and Carnegie was his 'grateful Disciple'.' – The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, Vol. 36 2008

'...packed with facts ... I’m delighted that we have it...' – NZ Books

 

Contents

1 Introduction
2 Birth, Early Beginnings and the 'White Bear'
3 Sandhurst and Ireland
4 'Natural history is my only recreation here'
5 A 'National Loss' after Adelaide, South Australia
6 Indigenous Language Collecting in New Zealand
7 Collection and Dispersal
8 Indigenous Language Collecting at the Cape
9 Procuring Black Letter Books and Poetry
10 Cape Town's Munificent Gift
11 Boone's Catalogues of 1862 and 1863
12 Kawau Island, England and Home Again, 1862 to 1888
13 Private Library to Public Collection
14 A Rich Harvest from Local Sources of Supply
15 Later Purchases and Presentation Copies
16 The Grey Legacy

 

Author

Donald Jackson Kerr is Special Collections Librarian at the University of Otago, New Zealand. His doctoral thesis, from which this book is partly drawn, looked at Grey's strategies as a collector of rare books in the colonies he governed, and at the network of associations which he established with many of the prominent booksellers of his times. Dr Kerr was formerly Rare Books Librarian at the Auckland Public Library, which houses New Zealand's Grey Collection. He has edited a book on Charles Brasch (Enduring Legacy: Charles Brasch, Patron, Poet, Collector, Otago University Press 2003), written a book on the history of duelling in New Zealand The Smell of Powder (2006), and is currently working on Dr Hocken as a book collector.

 

Publication details

Biography, History of Print Culture
hardback, 235 x 155 mm, ISBN 1 877372 21 8, 336 pp, $59.95
Publication Date: October 2006