{{Short description|English research library in London, England}} {{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}} [[File:Dr Williams's Library.jpg|thumb|upright=1.3|Dr Williams's Library in [[Gordon Square]], London, in 2020]] '''Dr Williams's Library''' was a small English [[research library]] located in [[Gordon Square]], [[Bloomsbury]], London. The collection has now been relocated to Manchester. Historically, it had a strong focus on the [[English Dissenters]]. The library has also been known as '''University Hall'''.
==History== [[File:Dr Williams's Library, London; interior Wellcome V0013161.jpg|thumb|The interior of Dr Williams's Library, Red Cross Street, in 1826]] [[Daniel Williams (theologian)|Daniel Williams]] (c. 1643 – 1716) was a minister and theologian within the Presbyterian tradition. He left almost his whole estate of £50,000 to charity.<ref name=WB>{{cite web |url= https://biography.wales/article/s-WILL-DAN-1643 |title= Williams, Daniel |last= Jenkins |first= Robert Thomas |date= |website= Welsh Biography |publisher= |access-date= July 22, 2025 |quote=}}</ref> He left his books (7,600 volumes) and money to establish a library.
The library was founded as a theological library, intended for the use of ministers of religion, students and others studying theology, religion and [[ecclesiastical history]]. In addition to its theological holdings, it contains collections of philosophy, history, literature, and other donated collections. The library is known to researchers of history and genealogy for its holdings of pre-19th-century material relating to [[Nonconformist (Protestantism)|Protestant nonconformity]] in England.<ref name=CF>{{cite web |url= https://www.congregational.org.uk/news-and-events-latest-news/latest-news/post/722-dr-williamsas-trust-and-library-a-history |title= Dr Williams's Trust and Library: A History |author=<!--Not stated--> |date= 25 May 2022 |website= Congregational Federation |publisher= |access-date= July 22, 2025 |quote=}}</ref> The library opened in 1729 at Red Cross Street with its original benefaction of around 7,600 books from Williams.<ref name="London Encyclopaedia">''The London Encyclopaedia'', Ben Weinreb & Christopher Hibbert, Macmillan, 1995, {{ISBN|0-333-57688-8}}</ref> Its site moved frequently, until the acquisition of University Hall in Gordon Square,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=65182|title=University Hall (Dr. Williams' Library), Gordon Square - British History Online|publisher=}}</ref> in 1890.
It has always had close ties with the [[Unitarianism|Unitarians]] and several of its first directors were ministers associated with [[Newington Green Unitarian Church]].<ref>Appendix. Thorncroft, Michael (1958). Trust in Freedom: The Story of Newington Green Unitarian Church 1708–1958. London: Private publication for the trustees of the church. Available online [http://www.new-unity.org/about-new-unity/trust-in-freedom here] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110727120533/http://www.new-unity.org/about-new-unity/trust-in-freedom|date=July 27, 2011}}.</ref> After a [[V-1 flying bomb]] destroyed [[Essex Hall]], the headquarters of the [[General Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches]], the Library offered a few spare rooms to displaced workers. They stayed for 14 years, until 1958.<ref>[http://www.unitarian.org.uk/support/doc-EssexHall0.shtml ''The History of Essex Hall'' by Mortimer Rowe B.A., D.D. Lindsey Press, 1959] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120116153833/http://www.unitarian.org.uk/support/doc-EssexHall0.shtml |date=January 16, 2012 }}</ref>
==Holdings== In addition to its theological holdings, the library contains collections of philosophy, history, literature, and related subjects. There is also a large collection of works on [[Byzantine history]] and culture bequeathed by [[Norman H. Baynes]] (1877–1961). In 1976, it acquired the library of [[New College London]], which until then had trained [[Congregationalist]] ministers.
The library is known to researchers of history and genealogy for its holdings of pre-19th century material relating to [[English Dissenters|Protestant nonconformity in England]], including papers by Dissenting minister [[Joshua Toulmin]]. It holds the manuscript of a 17th-century diary written by [[Roger Morrice]] (1628–1702), an [[English people|English]] [[Puritan]] minister and political journalist; it covers the years 1677 to 1691, and in 2007 the Boydell Press published a six volume edition of ''Roger Morrice's Entring Book''. The library also has many manuscripts of [[Philip Doddridge]] (1702–1751), a Nonconformist leader, educator, and hymnwriter, including letters between Doddridge and his wife, his wife's diary and some of his artifacts. Among the other Nonconformist texts in its collection are a variety of editions of [[Book of Common Prayer (Unitarian)|Unitarian revisions of the ''Book of Common Prayer'']].<ref>{{cite book|url=http://anglicanhistory.org/bcp/maxwell1949.pdf|title=The Book of Common Prayer and the Worship of the Non-Anglican Churches|last=Maxwell|first=William D.|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|location=[[Oxford]]|date=1949|series=Friends of Dr. William's Library|via=Project Canterbury}}</ref>
On 13 July 2006 the library offered for sale at [[Sotheby's]] its copy of Shakespeare's [[First Folio]]. The book sold for a [[hammer price]] of £2.8 million.<ref>''Antiques Trade Gazette'', 22 July 2006.</ref> The library's director, David Wykes, commented:<ref>{{cite web|url=https://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/5175044.stm|title=BBC NEWS - Entertainment - Bard's first folio fetches £2.8m|publisher=}}</ref>
{{Blockquote|The library has been proud to own this remarkable copy of Shakespeare's First Folio, but its sale will secure the finances of the library and safeguard our important historic collections of manuscripts and printed books for future generations.}}
Amongst its aims was that, for a small fee, it kept a central registry of births mainly (but not solely) within non-conformist families, to avoid the necessity of having to have a child baptised in the Anglican church. It had variable success; up to 49,000 births were registered there until after a few months of the [[General Register Office for England and Wales]] starting up in 1837, following the Births and Deaths Registration Act the previous year. These registers are now at [[The National Archives (United Kingdom)|The National Archives]] under class RG5 and indexed in RG4.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C13330|title=General Register Office: Birth Certificates from the Presbyterian, Independent and Baptist Registry and from the Wesleyan Methodist Metropolitan Registry|publisher=}}</ref>
Dr Williams’s Library closed in 2025 and transferred its contents to the [[John Rylands Research Institute and Library]] at the University of Manchester. The new partnership brings together inarguably the two finest collections of non-conformist religious social history in the world and situates them in Manchester, itself a renowned city of dissent and innovation.{{fact|date=June 2025}}
== See also == * [[Gladstone's Library]] in [[Hawarden]], formerly known as St Deiniol's Library * The [[Evangelical Library]], London * [[Dr Williams' School]] in [[Dolgellau]], named after the same benefactor<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.archivesnetworkwales.info/cgi-bin/anw/fulldesc_nofr?inst_id=38&coll_id=3154&expand=|title=Home - Cymru Archives Wales|publisher=}}</ref> (closed 1975, now [[Coleg Meirion-Dwyfor]])
==References== {{Reflist}}
==External links== * {{official}} * [http://www.english.qmul.ac.uk/drwilliams/ Dr Williams's Centre for Dissenting Studies] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20161109083529/https://www.google.com/culturalinstitute/beta/partner/dr-williams-s-library Dr Williams's Library at Google Cultural Institute]
{{Libraries in London}} {{coord|51.5240|-0.1315|type:landmark_region:GB-CMD|display=title}} {{Authority control}}
[[Category:1729 establishments in England]] [[Category:Libraries in the London Borough of Camden]]