Bytown Mechanics' Institute

Bytown Mechanics' Institute.[1]
TypeMechanics' Institute
Established1847
BranchesPrior to 1863, in the Temperance Hall of the Congregational Church near Sappers' Bridge; post 1863.
Collection
Items collectedDaily local papers; tri-weeklies including 2 French, one from Dublin, one from Glasgow; 29 weeklies including Scientific American and Canada West; 4 illustrated papers including Punch and London Illustrated News; United Kingdom periodicals.
SizeIn 1856, 1004 volumes
Criteria for collectionThe Library Associations and Mechanics' Institutes Act of 1851
Other information
Budgetad hoc, however $50-$600 annually might be expected from government sources
Director1847: Hon. Thomas McKay -- President; G. W. Baker -- Vice President; Hamnett Hill -- 2nd Vice President; Elkanah Billings -- Corresponding Sec.; H. Bishoprick -- Recording Sec.; Andrew Drummond -- Treasurer
Employees1 librarian

The Bytown Mechanics' Institute is an Upper Canada example of a knowledge transfer organization aimed at encouraging grassroots participation. These institutions were Victorian and moralistic in tone and class-oriented in structure which, in part, explains their failure. However, they show the tendency towards democratic institutions in the early history of Canada where the border between the United States and Canada was more fluid than in the present era and encourage such ideals.[clarification needed] These institutions attempted to include the working class, French Canadians and women, where the British social model did not support these inclusions. The composition of the executive of the Bytown Mechanics' Institute in its various formations illustrates this and exemplifies the issues of cost and available leisure time that would eventually cause the institute's failure.[2]

  1. ^ Gaizauskas, Barbara. Feed the Flame: A Natural History of the Ottawa Literary and Scientific Society MA Thesis.(1990)
  2. ^ Blanchard, Jim. Anatomy of Failure: Ontario Mechancis' Institutes, 1895-1935, Canadian Library Journal, v.38(1981)p.396.