The Tabard Inn Library Bookplate, 1900-1906
THF291314 / The Tabard Inn Library Bookplate, 1900-1906
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Artifact Overview
Bookplates show ownership, but they can also tell us more. Often pasted on the inside of a book's front cover or endpaper, these printed labels contain the owner's name and sometimes the words "ex-libris" (Latin for "from the library of"). Coats of arms, crests, other decorative images, poems, mottoes, and even font type provide insight into the beliefs, passions, and interests of the book's owner.
Artifact Details
Artifact
Bookplate
Date Made
1902-1906
Collection Title
Location
By Request in the Benson Ford Research Center
Object ID
RC.1.25
Credit
From the Collections of The Henry Ford.
Material
Paper (Fiber product)
Technique
Printing (Process)
Engraving (Printing process)
Color
Multicolored
Dimensions
Height: 4.875 in (bookplate)
Width: 3.375 in (bookplate)
Height: 8 in (mount)
Width: 6 in (mount)
Inscriptions
on front:
THE Tabard Inn Library / With all the RED TAPE on the BOX / This book may be exchanged at any Tabard Inn Station on payment of the usual fee. / No. 3671 / Under the business management of THE BOOKLOVERS LIBRARY / 1323 Walnut Street, PHILADELPHIA
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Related Content
SetEx Libris
- 26 Artifacts
Bookplates, or ex libris, were commonly used in the late 19th and 20th centuries to mark ownership of books and to express personal style. The bookplates in this set -- only a sampling of those in the collection of The Henry Ford -- capture common design trends, as well as the individual tastes of the influential people who used them.