The Averett library - now holding well over 85,000 physical books - grew very slowly. In the early years, it was assembled primarily through one-at-a-time donations - generally sought out by the fledgling Philomathian literary society. See, for example,
the note to the right, which indicates that The Life of Bayard Taylor was donated by music teacher M. Elizabeth Lindsay in 1904, when we were still known as Roanoke Female College. It wasn't until the early 1920s that Averett finally ear-marked a budget ($300 per year) for library book acquisitions.
During the summer of 2024, as the current library staff shifted every single book in Blount Library (as part of a large-scale reorganization to free up floor space for other uses), the archivist made note of several old volumes still in the circulating collection that dated back to the early years of the Averett library.
The following three, featuring a cross-section of the type of interior markings to be found in these early volumes, are currently on display:
- A 1907 edition of Austin Dobson's biography of Henry Fielding, from the series "English Men of Letters."
- This volume is the oldest one one on display, as its markings indicate it was acquired some time in 1907-08. It is marked "From the Elocution Class 1907-08, to Roanoke College Library." Although alumni occasionally donated books years after they graduated, the use of the name "Roanoke College" - which we abandoned in favor of "Roanoke Institute" in 1910 - indicates pretty conclusively that this book was donated the same year the class graduated.
- The following students are known to have taken elocution lessons in 1907-08, and may thus have taken part in the gift: Georgie Anderson, Alice Boatwright, Jennie Crews, Mabel Davis, Mary Deitrick, Ida Giles, Isa Horton, and Hazel Tyree.
- For reasons lost to history, it carries a numbering of "307." (By the 1909 catalog, the college was already claiming to own 2,500 volumes. However, 15 years later, the catalog declared an 'actual count' of less than 1,500. So it is possible that "307" is a reference to the number of books we actually owned at the time, and that the other 2,200 were magazines or newspapers....or lies.)
- Its original shelving code, still visible inside the front cover, was "Section J, No. 21, Shelf 1."
- This volume is the oldest one one on display, as its markings indicate it was acquired some time in 1907-08. It is marked "From the Elocution Class 1907-08, to Roanoke College Library." Although alumni occasionally donated books years after they graduated, the use of the name "Roanoke College" - which we abandoned in favor of "Roanoke Institute" in 1910 - indicates pretty conclusively that this book was donated the same year the class graduated.
- A 1914 edition of Robert Louis Stevenson's Travels with a Donkey and An Inland Voyage.
- This volume is marked as a donation from "The English Dept." to "Roanoke Inst[itute]" (a name we adopted in 1910), and was donated on "Nov. 7, '14" (slightly less than 110 years ago).
- The only known members of the English Department in the 1914-15 academic year were Edith M. Converse (in her only year teaching here) and Pearl A. Reynolds. Unless students were involved, Converse and Reynolds were therefore the donors of this particular book.
- It carries a shelving code of "Section B, No. 27, Shelf 1" and is also inscribed with the number 670 (again, for reasons no longer clear).
- This volume is marked as a donation from "The English Dept." to "Roanoke Inst[itute]" (a name we adopted in 1910), and was donated on "Nov. 7, '14" (slightly less than 110 years ago).
- An undated copy of Edmund W. Gosse's biography of Thomas Gray, also from the series "English Men of Letters."
- This volume contains a bookplate from the Southern Library Association, which had a branch in Danville (along with Atlanta and Knoxville). At some point before 1917 (when we abandoned the name Roanoke Institute), the book was one of many acquired by us after being discarded by the Southern Library Association.
- As we have numerous volumes with old Southern Library Association bookplates, they were likely all acquired together at a time when our library was rapidly expanding. The library's location shifted multiple times in the early years of Main Hall, likely in response to significant growth of the collection caused by bulk acquisitions.
- Hand-written at the bottom of the book plate is our recognizable old shelving code, "Section J, No. 14, Shelf 7."
For the next few weeks, the above three books - open to their inside front covers - will be on display in the small display case on the main floor. These books - in the possession of the University since before it was even called "Averett" - are a throwback to a time when the entire library would have fit into a space the size of a small classroom. (See the image to the right, of the library in the old Patton Street campus building.)
For the adventurous, please feel free to prowl the stacks and look for other old books. (Most of the oldest books are from the field of English and American Literature and are thus now shelved in the call numbers starting with PR and PS.) There are several out there to be found which have been on our shelves since the early 1900s. Please contact the archivist (archives@averett.edu) and let him know if you spot an old book in our collection with interesting notations on the inside front cover!

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