The Library of Parliament Catalogue over the Centuries

Collection Spotlight

The Library of Parliament Catalogue over the Centuries

After you pass through the doors of the Library of Parliament, your eyes are drawn to the alcoves near the entrance, where you can’t help but notice that two of the alcove walls are lined with small wooden drawers. At one time, these drawers held the Library’s card catalogue. Today the catalogue is online, but its history stretches back to the creation of the legislative assemblies of Upper and Lower Canada in 1791, before Canada was even formed. 

In the early 19th century, the Library had several large printed and manuscript catalogues. They were placed on tables in the consultation room and contained the titles of all the books in its collection. They were updated each time new books were acquired and had to be regularly reorganized and rebound. To make it easier to do searches, the Library also printed indexes. The book titles were alphabetized by subject and by author and cross-referenced to the pages in the catalogue.

Around 1894, aware that the catalogue’s various volumes would be difficult to maintain, the librarians began to gradually introduce a card catalogue system. Transcribing the catalogue index onto typed index cards and finetuning the system took several decades, up until the 1950s.

In the late 1970s, the Library began automating its search tools and systems. It computerized its catalogue and installed terminals in the Main Library to provide users with access to more than 100 information databases. The catalogue was also searchable on microfiche. The new bilingual computerized catalogue meant that, a few years later, the card-based system was abandoned for good.

With the arrival of the Internet in the 1990s, the Library catalogue moved online. Today, the Library has a next-generation computerized catalogue that allows users to quickly and easily access its vast collection of materials and other resources that the Library has access to.

Details

  • According to the June 14, 1854, Journal of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada, after the fire that destroyed the Parliament Building on February 1, 1854, the Library worked on rebuilding its collection, and books poured in from all directions. The librarians took steps to prepare and publish a new catalogue as quickly as possible.
  • To hold the many catalogue cards, several wooden cabinets and drawer blocks were installed in the Main Library. The cards are now gone, but some of the wooden drawer blocks can still be seen among the Library’s wood finishes.
Photo of the wooden drawers that used to hold the Library’s catalogue cards. These drawers are located in two alcoves of the Main Library.
Wooden drawers that used to hold the Library’s catalogue cards. These drawers are located in two alcoves of the Main Library.
Photo of some pages from the index of the 1862 Alphabetical Catalogue of the Library of Parliament.
Pages from the index of the 1862 Alphabetical Catalogue of the Library of Parliament.
Photo of the title page of the 1833 catalogue of the Library of the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada
Title page of the 1833 catalogue of the Library of the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada, which was in Montréal.