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The Supreme Court Library was established in 1912 and accompanied Justice Bevan to Darwin from Melbourne on the [SS Empire]. It was housed in the original [Courthouse] on the Esplanade until 20 February 1942, the day after the first Japanese air raid on Darwin. The practice of the early Judges was to restrict access to the library to legal practitioners, although special permission was granted to unrepresented litigants. In 1922, the Commonwealth appointed a Crown Prosecutor for the first time, and the then Secretary to the Administrator, and head of the public service, C.B. Story, gave permission to the Crown Prosecutor to occupy the library as his chambers. This led to an acrimonious dispute between Judge Roberts, the Crown Prosecutor, and the government over control of the Courthouse and the Library. This dispute was never satisfactorily resolved until permanent accommodation for the Crown Prosecutor was found elsewhere, and the Judge's control over the library was recognised. After the bombing of Darwin, the library (together with some of the more important Court records) was temporarily relocated in the Courthouse at Alice Springs, where it remained until well after the War had ended. In 1948 a Sydney Williams Hut on the Esplanade was converted into a Courtroom and used to house the Supreme Court. Two other Huts on the same site were converted to accommodate the library and the lower court. In 1965 the Courts moved to a new building on the corner of Mitchell and Herbert Streets, which also provided adequate space for the library. Prior to
self-government on 1 July 1978, the library was run by the
Commonwealth Attorney-General's Department and staffed by a library
clerk with visits periodically by professional library staff from
Canberra. On 1 October 1979, responsibility for the courts was
transferred to the Northern Territory Government and the library became
a Territory institution. The first resident librarian began work in
February 1980. That same year, a part time library officer was appointed
in Alice Springs to service the library collection in the Alice Springs
Courthouse. On 1 July 1991 the Supreme Court Library took over responsibility for the provision of library services to the Magistrates in the Northern Territory. The library has two main collections which are held in the Supreme Court buildings in Darwin and Alice Springs. It also maintains smaller collections in each of the Judge's chambers in Darwin, the visiting Judge's chamber in Alice Springs and in the Magistrates Courts in Darwin. It has in excess of 60,000 volumes, and is the largest law collection in the Northern Territory. There are extensive series of reports from all Australian jurisdictions, as well as from other countries. There is also a large collection of statutory material, textbooks and periodicals. The library also has access to several commercial databases and the Internet. The Library Committee is chaired by a Judge of the Supreme Court, the current chairman being [Jusice Southwood]. The membership committee includes a Magistrate, representatives from the NT Bar Association and the Law Society of the Northern Territory, a staff member from the Law Faculty at the NT University, the Master of the Supreme Court and the Librarian. Library Staff The present [library staff] consists of a librarian and three staff members in Darwin, with a further staff member in Alice Springs branch library. The library is open to the legal profession, and other users with the prior permission of the Librarian in most cases. Material, except for bound law reports, may not be borrowed. The library is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday to Friday. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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