101 Treasures of Chetham's

A weekly series in which we highlight some of the Library's most interesting stuff, which as well as famous books and manuscripts includes furniture, paintings, and objects from the museum collection.

Limited space means that much of this material is not on permanent display, making this a rare opportunity to get a closer look at some of the jewels in the Library's crown.

Click on the links below to see treasures from previous weeks.

Opera of St Augustine, Bishop of Hippo

Sir Henry Knyvett's 'Defence of this Realm'

Ben Jonson's Plato

The Manchester Man

Sir William Hamilton: Campi Phlegraei

Tim Bobbin

Hooke's Micrographia

Clog Almanack

Budé Bible

Thomas Barritt's Sketchbook

Strawberry Hill

Aulus Gellius

John Dee

Newton's Principia

Albert Memorial

Bolton's Harmonia Ruralis

Henry VIII's Prosper of Aquitaine

Saxton's Atlas of England and Wales

Latin Vulgate Bible

Portrait of Humphrey Chetham

Plantin Polyglot Bible

Karl Marx's Desk

Kuerden's History of Lancashire

Fore-edge Painting

Poetry of Alain Chartier

Glass Slides

Hollingworth's Mancuniensis

De Bry's Emblemata

Astrologica

Rocque's Map of London

Library of the Parish Church of Gorton

Christians Awake

Cologne Chronicle

Casson and Berry

Mouth of Hell

Manchester Scrapbook

Valentine's Rebus

Luddite Ticket

Book of Common Prayer

Flores Historiarum

William Seward's Diary

The Pigmy Revels

Papal Prayers of Alexander VII

Register of Swan Marks

Palm Leaf Manuscript

Hiroshige Woodblock Print

Ipomadon

diary_of_edmund_harrold_close_up

Edmund Harrold his book of Remarks and Observations

Manuscript diary covering the period 1712-16

This diary of Edmund Harrold (d. 1721), a Manchester wigmaker, was given to Chetham's in 1889 as part of the bequest of John Eglington Bailey, a prominent local historian. The diary is one of the most remarkable sources for the study of the social history of Manchester. In it Harrold describes the deaths of his second wife and daughter Sarah, the courtship and marriage of his third wife, recreation and social life, heavy drinking, periods of repentance and extensive reading. Like another more celebrated diarist, Samuel Pepys, Harrold peppered his diary with details of his sex life, which he usually described as ‘doing his wife’.

10 July Remarkable for Peter Nedom’s being drowned, and Peter Downes being married to Grace Hulm. My wife and I was very merry there at night. On the 9th at night I did wife two times couch and bed in an hour an[d] half time.

harrolds_diary