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Robert Blackburn, U of T's pioneering former chief librarian, celebrates 100th birthday

photo of Robert Blackburn
Former chief librarian Robert Blackburn, seen here in October, 2017 at the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library for the 125th anniversary of U of T Libraries, is turning 100 on Feb. 3 (photo by Geoffrey Vendeville)

The University of Toronto and its surroundings have changed a lot since Robert Blackburn started at U of T Libraries in 1947.

Classes were packed with veterans of the Second World War. On the radio, Francis Craig crooned, 鈥.鈥&苍产蝉辫;础苍诲 (until then, Canadians were British subjects).

Blackburn took the helm of the libraries in 1954 and was the first to officially hold the title of chief librarian, retiring after 27 years. On Feb. 3, he celebrated another important milestone: his 100th birthday.

His busy tenure at U of T encompassed the building of Robarts Library and first efforts to automate the library catalogue with computers, setting the example for institutions around the globe. 

When he visits U of T Libraries these days, he鈥檚 proud of what it鈥檚 become 鈥 and also somewhat relieved that he's no longer in charge. 鈥淭here is still the intensity of study going on around me,鈥 he says, 鈥渂ut now in ample space and pleasant physical environment and I am no longer responsible for the budget, staffing, services or security.鈥 

Over tea in Blackburn's Streetsville home, which he bought for $9,000 in 1950, he looked back on the chapters of his life. He took out a manila folder and leafed through photos of himself over the years: as a baby in his parents' arms, a wide-eyed university freshman, an Air Force navigator and a librarian.

He spent his childhood on a farm in Vegreville, Alta., east of Edmonton 鈥 where his life might have taken a drastically different turn if not for a lucky harvest. 

In his youth, the economy was mired in the Great Depression, and his family could not have afforded to send him to university if not for a good barley crop one dry summer. They sold the crop for $490, enough to cover his first year at the University of Alberta.

He wrote about the significance of that crop many decades later in his memoirs, . It was a life-changing stroke of luck 鈥 particularly since he didn't appear to have a knack for farming. 鈥淵ou better get that boy all the education he can hold,鈥 his grandfather had said. 鈥淗e'll never make a farmer.鈥


鈥淚 look like a frightened rabbit,鈥 Blackburn says of a portrait of himself as a university freshman (photo by Geoffrey Vendeville) 

Blackburn had originally set his sights on a medical career, but changed his mind after a classmate took him on a tour of the anatomy lab. 鈥淚n half an hour there, he killed any ambition I ever had to study medicine,鈥 Blackburn wrote. He enrolled in honours English.

At the onset of the war, Blackburn considered himself an objector, but felt compelled to enlist by the spring of 1941 after his father joined the Air Force and some of his friends were reported missing in action. He put off enlistment until after library school at U of T, 鈥渟o as to have some kind of professional qualification in case I survived the war,鈥 he wrote. 

He joined the Royal Canadian Air Force and attended navigation school. Of the 19 graduates in his class, 17 were posted overseas for night raids over the Ruhr. Only a few returned. 鈥淚 hope there were more, but I heard of only three,鈥 he wrote. 

He was held back as a navigation instructor and posted to Manitoba. After three years in the military, he applied for an honourable discharge from the RCAF, worked for the Calgary Public Library and went on for a master鈥檚 degree in library sciences at Columbia University.

He was lured back to Canada by U of T librarian Stewart Wallace, a former history professor and soldier wounded at Vimy Ridge, who kept a wartime souvenir on his desk: a piece of shrapnel from his leg that served as a paperweight.

When he succeeded Wallace at the helm of U of T Libraries, Blackburn inherited a library system that was bursting with books and desperate for space. To make matters worse, universities in the 1960s were bracing themselves for a surge in graduate students. Blackburn and then-U of T President Claude Bissell's advocacy were instrumental in getting a new library built, one that was meant to serve people's needs for the next 50 years. A $41-million project was approved at Hoskin Ave. and St. George St.


Robarts Library under construction in 1972 (photo courtesy of University of Toronto Archives)

The university hired a New York architecture firm and chose a triangular design with room for hundreds of study carrels with windows looking out on the campus below.

But Blackburn had to sacrifice some frills to reduce costs. The library nixed plans for an auditorium, outside terracing and artwork. Planners even considered scrapping the Fisher library's tower to save $10,000. The architect lobbied successfully to keep it, saying its absence would make the library look from one angle 鈥渓ike an elephant backing out of its stall.鈥

Construction started in 1968 and finished four-and-half years later. Robarts Library was named after the former premier, John Robarts, whose support for the project was vital. But for some, it was and remains 鈥淔ort Book.鈥

鈥淚t's an extraordinary facility,鈥 current Chief Librarian Larry Alford says. The building's aesthetics are the subject of never-ending debate,  and beyond. But Alford, who likes its appearance, notes it's an icon of Brutalist architecture that attracts admirers from around the globe. 

The carrels, meanwhile, remain prime real estate for studying. 鈥淪tudents use laptops instead of typewriters but they're still writing their dissertations there,鈥 he says.

Under Blackburn's watch, the central library amassed a collection that was the envy of institutions across the continent. In the 1960s, the library acquired up to a quarter million books per year, 鈥渕ore than any other university on the continent and maybe the world,鈥 he said. Many of those materials are among the library's greatest treasures, including Shakespeare's Four Folios gifted by the Fisher family. , published in 1623, was the first collected edition of Shakespeare's plays and only 232 copies still exist. 

Another of Blackburn's signature achievements, and possibly the most important, is taken for granted by most people who use the library today, Alford says. In the early 1960s, libraries usually had card catalogues with entries for individual titles, each typed and filed by hand. Blackburn supported the efforts of Ritvars Bregzis, associate librarian, and Calvin Gotlieb, director of the Institute of Computer Science, to use computers to automate the library's catalogue.
The console of the IBM 7094 computer at the Computer Centre at U of T (photo courtesy of University of Toronto Archives)

It was impossible to foresee where the technology would lead, Blackburn recalls. 鈥淚 had no idea where it was going, except to speed up our services and paperwork, and maybe save some money,鈥 he says.

The library acquired its own computer, a clunky Sigma 7 that required its own air conditioning. In the late 1970s, the library succeeded in freezing its card catalogue and introduced the forerunner of today's electronic catalogue.

鈥淚t was the beginning of using computers as other than toys,鈥 Alford says. 鈥淚t was truly, truly pioneering and became really the basis for what we now consider the standard discovery tools of all kinds. I would actually include Google in that.鈥

鈥淭oronto was the first large library anywhere to have its whole catalogue in machine-readable form,鈥 Blackburn recalls in his memoir.

Blackburn retired in 1981, freeing up time for other things. He's spent time with family and friends, travelled, gained acclaim for the home garden he tends to with his second wife Verna, and has written nine books, including a history of U of T Libraries. He also survived major health scares 鈥 a heart attack and broken hip.

He attributes his longevity partly to his upbringing on the farm, where he grew up on fresh food and worked up a hearty appetite. He's never smoked and, for the last 35 years, has exercised almost every day before breakfast. He does sit-ups, stand-ups and touches his toes.


Chief Librarian Larry Alford had lunch at U of T's Faculty Club with his predecessor Robert Blackburn to celebrate Blackburn's 100th birthday (photo by Paul Terefenko)

Ironically, although he spent his life surrounded by books, Blackburn rarely had time to take them home. Alford, who became chief librarian in 2011, sympathizes. The libraries have become a large IT operation, managing a petabyte of data. They select, acquire and preserve a vast collection. And they welcome tens of thousands of visitors per day, about 18,000 at Robarts alone.

Blackburn says much has changed at the library since his time, except, of course, 鈥渢he intensity of study鈥 all around. Speaking before his birthday, he said he would think about the library when he blows out the candles on his cake.

His birthday wish? 鈥淥nly that my work in all those covered-wagon days will continue to provide my successors with the flexibility and scope that are needed to command a great future.鈥

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