- On Christmas Eve and over the next few days, over half a million
rare books were lost to fire and mold at Jenkins Company, a rare
book dealership in Austin, Texas. Many of then had leather bindings,
of course, which were destroyed by the heat and water even if not
touched by the fire. The building was not sprinklered, so the fire
had a head start. Eleven fire trucks responded to the alarm and
brought it under control in an hour. The company was without
electricity or telephone for three days. It was not possible to save
the books that were merely water-damaged because the insurance
company would not allow the owners to move anything. Austin has a
warm climate, so they were lost to mold. Librarians and dealers have
called the owners from all over the country to offer help, and
conservator Don Etherington made a personal visit.
This disaster illustrates the need for organizations other than
libraries, archives and museums to have disaster plans, and to share
in the information network used by libraries for disaster planning,
at least until they can establish networks of their own.
- On October 17th, a fire broke out in an elevator cab in the
Huntington Gallery in San Marino, California. There was no one in
the cab because it was after midnight, but the fire or the smoke
triggered an intrusion alarm, then heat and smoke detectors outside
the cab. The San Marino Fire Department responded within three
minutes and put out the fire in 12 minutes, being careful to
minimize water damage to museum objects (they are familiar with the
building and its needs, and have drills there frequently). An
unusual feature of this disaster was that the elevator doors were
blown open by an explosion just as the firemen arrived. There was
smoke damage and a few pieces were charred; cleaning has been
carefully planned and will go on for a long tine. The January
newsletter of the Western Association for Art Conservation,
waac, says that the exposed books and paper materials
are being cared for by the Huntington Library' s staff conservators,
Ron Tank, Griselda Warr and Jim Corwin, working with the Art
Reference Librarian Diana Wilson and her staff. These items have
presented no special problems. (The report, by Jim Greaves, is a
page and a half long.)
In this case, there was a disaster plan and it worked, but the
incident shows that you never can tell where trouble is going to
start. The elevator cab met all code specifications, but apparently
had a defective light fixture. The investigation is not complete
yet.
- On Friday evening, March 8, there was a fire at the National
Library of Australia which caused extensive damage. No detailed
report has been seen yet. The library's computers were put out of
service for months because burning plastics in the building left a
deposit that fouled electrical contacts. Blame was put especially on
sheets of polyethylene in an area undergoing construction.
The ICCM Newsletter (#16, received in January)
carried a notice that said that temporary staff bad been employed to
remove soot from the rare book collections. The air conditioner is
gradually being repaired, although it is unlikely to be fully
operational for several months. (This was probably written last
summer or fall. Their hot season comes during our winter
months.)