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Goss preferred the printed dictionary catalogue to the card catalogue. He further attempted to improve the usefulness of catalogues as a search tool, by adding a short description, close to what would now be considered an abstract of the text. This extra description of books was intended to
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until he retired. While there, he campaigned to raise the status and pay of library staff. He retired in 1941, and died five years later. Whilst there, he established some of their special collections in London history, labour history, freethought and humanism.
96:(1864–1946) was an English librarian, polemicist and cataloguing innovator. He worked in English public libraries at the turn of, and the early, twentieth century, and was prominent among opponents of open access libraries in the UK.
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Goss was a vocal opponent of the move to open access libraries (as opposed to closed access, where staff would fetch titles requested by readers, from the stacks) In 1898 he obtained an apology from
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in the course of their heated debate in the pages of the library press after threatening him with a libel action. Duff Brown had been at the forefront of introducing open access.
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The public librarian in modern London (1890–1914): the case of
Charles Goss at the Bishopsgate Institute. Michelle Johansen. (unpublished thesis), University of East London, 2006
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Johansen, Michelle (2003). "A fault-line in library history: Charles Goss, The
Society of Public Librarians, and 'the Battle of the Books' in the Late Nineteenth Century".
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120:(beating 300 other applicants to the post). He was forced out of this post, and left to become the librarian at the
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Home › Library › Library and
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complement and assist in closed access collections. One such catalogue he produced was
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Harris, C. W. J. (1970). "Charles Goss (1864–1946): Portrait of a
Reactionary".
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A Descriptive
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166:: a chapter in the History of London
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