Attic Books

Last updated
Attic Books
Type Private
IndustryBooks
FoundedLondon, Ontario (1976)
Headquarters240 Dundas Street
London, Ontario
N6A 1H3
Key people
Marvin Post, owner
Products Antiquarian and used books
Website Official website

Attic Books is one of Canada's largest independent used bookstore in London, Ontario, Canada. It specializes in antiquarian books, maps, prints, and ephemera.

Contents

History

Marvin Post opened Attic Books in 1976. [1] It was located on the top floor of 428 Richmond Street, London and moved to the second floor of 388 Clarence Street in 1977. Development in downtown London forced Attic Books to relocated to Parkhill, Ontario in 1987. In 1996, mayor Diane Haskett encouraged Post to bring Attic Books back to London. It is now one of the few longstanding destination businesses in the city's downtown core.

In 2006, Attic Books' second floor, previously only available to dealers and known collectors, was opened to the public and is stocked with specialized antiquarian books, maps, prints, collectibles, antiques and books on books.

Marvin Post

Marvin Post, owner of Attic Books, has been a member of the International League of Antiquarian Booksellers (ILAB) and the Antiquarian Booksellers Association of Canada (ABAC) since 1981. He is also a member of the Canadian Booksellers Association (CBA). [2] He "appraises a variety of archives, books and related material for a number of public institutions for insurance and tax purposes". [3]

Post was a stamp dealer in 1969. He owned a record store in the early 1970s called B-side Records, which used the label from an antiquarian book press for its symbol, a triad of bumblebees.

He is a regular attendee at the Ottawa Book Fair, the Toronto Antiquarian Book Fair and the Toronto Paper Show. [4]

Other information

Attic Books is one of the very few places where Charles van Sandwyk's fine art and fantasy cards and books can be purchased. [5]

Involved in the community, Attic Books often sponsors and hosts awards and events in London, Ontario. [6]

It is also the only local supplier of Brodart mylar jackets.

Attic Books also participates in trade shows in Toronto and Ottawa.

History of the building

The building at 240 Dundas Street is late Victorian red brick commercial in style. Originally, the building was a single floor and only about 20' long. It was not expanded until the 1880s, when the second and third floor were added. The second floor was attached to 242 Dundas Street, creating a large space that accommodated Somerset Hall. Doorways on the main floor also allowed access to the adjacent building. A hoist existed where the current elevator can be found. [7]

During a major renovation in 1919, arts and crafts elements were added to the façade. The back end of the store was extended and a mezzanine was added to the third floor. This renovation was designed and executed by famous London architect J. M. Moore. Before 1919, the building matched the three structures that surround it, two to the west and one to the east. The elevator was installed in 1919, and was made by the Roelofsen Machine and Tool Co. in Galt, Ontario. [8]

The large pane glass windows overlooking the street were installed by McPhillips & Co. in the 1930s. The outer two window panes on each of the upper picture windows pivoted to open like doors. These windows facilitated the movement of pianos from the street to the upper floors for display. They have since been replaced with more energy efficient windows

Marvin Post purchased the building from the Thompson family, owners of Supertest, in 1996. The Thompsons had owned it since the early 1930s. When repainting the elevator, Post removed 35 lbs. of lead paint from the car, unveiling a rainbow of colours that had been added over the years. The alternating dark and light wood on the second level flooring is called a "wedding floor", made of walnut and maple, and can also be found in 242 Dundas next door. When Post took possession of the building in 1996, the toilets had not been updated, although the plumbing had been. The toilet tanks were still made of wood, and have since been replaced.

The gargoyle overlooking Dundas Street was added by the current owner. It was designed by Florin Musta, and acquired through Tony O'Callaghan of Studio Celtia, former business at 242 Dundas Street. [9]

Other businesses at 240 Dundas St.

1875 – Abraham Spry, merchant tailor

1876 – 1880 – Various small businesses

1880 – Vacant

1881 – 1886 – Reid Brothers & Co., stationers

1887 – 1892 – Empire Tea Company (Main Floor)

Somerset Hall (Second Floor – London Temperance League)

1892 – 1907 – Anderson & Nelles Drug Store (Main Floor)

Somerset Hall (Second Floor – London Temperance League)

1892 – First electricity

1893 – First telephone

1907 – 1919 – People's Outfitting Company, furniture

1919 – 1927 – Thomas Furniture Company, furniture

1927 – Gray's Music, subsidiary of Eaton's

1930 – 1965 – McPhillips Company, pianos, radios, appliances

1965 – 1995 – Robert Holmes Stationery, stationery and books

1996 – present – Attic Books, rare and fine used books [7]

The ghost of Attic Books

In 2009, the Paranormal Knights of London [10] performed an investigation at 240 Dundas Street into the possible presence of a ghost. Activities that have been attributed to the ghost include books flying, lights flickering, and the strong odor of a cigar wafting up from the basement stock room near the original foundations. [11] The staff affectionately calls him Roland.

Related Research Articles

Toronto Eaton Centre Shopping mall and office complex in downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada

The Toronto Eaton Centre is a shopping mall and office complex in the downtown core of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is owned and managed by Cadillac Fairview (CF). It was named after the Eaton's department store chain that once anchored it before the chain became defunct in the late 1990s.

Eatons Canadian retailer

The T. Eaton Company Limited, later known as Eaton's, was a Canadian department store chain that was once Canada's largest. It was founded in 1869 in Toronto by Timothy Eaton, an immigrant from what is now Northern Ireland. Eaton's grew to become a retail and social institution in Canada, with stores across the country, buying-offices around the globe, and a mail-order catalog that was found in the homes of most Canadians. A changing economic and retail environment in the late twentieth century, along with mismanagement, culminated in the chain's bankruptcy in 1999.

Sam the Record Man Defunct Canadian record store chain

Sam the Record Man was a Canadian record store chain that, at one time, was Canada's largest music recording retailer. In 1982, its ads proclaimed that it had "140 locations, coast to coast".

College Park (Toronto)

College Park is a shopping mall, residential and office complex on the southwest corner of Yonge and College streets in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Bookselling Business of selling and dealing with books

Bookselling is the commercial trading of books which is the retail and distribution end of the publishing process. People who engage in bookselling are called booksellers, bookdealers, bookpeople, bookmen, or bookwomen. The founding of libraries in c.300 BC stimulated the energies of the Athenian booksellers.

Atrium on Bay

Atrium is a large 1,000,000-square-foot (93,000 m2) retail and office complex in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Atrium is located adjacent to Yonge-Dundas Square, and was built upon the former site of the former Ford Hotel Toronto, on the north side of Dundas Street West, extending from Yonge Street to Bay Street. The mixed-use building was constructed in 1981 with parking on the second and third underground levels and retail space street and concourse levels topped by an eight-storey office block that rises to 14 floors on the east end of the site and 13 on the west. As part of downtown Toronto's PATH network, Atrium's Concourse Level is directly connected underground to the Dundas subway station, the Toronto Eaton Centre south, across on Dundas Street. A now-closed underground tunnel connects the Atrium to the former Toronto Coach Terminal located west, across Bay Street.

The Antiquarian Booksellers' Association of America (ABAA) is an organization in the United States for dealers in rare and antiquarian books. The association is a member of the International League of Antiquarian Booksellers (ILAB).

The International League of Antiquarian Booksellers is a non-profit umbrella organization of bookseller associations, with its legal location in Geneva, Switzerland. It federates 22 National Associations of Antiquarian Booksellers, representing nearly 2000 dealers in 32 countries. Antiquarian booksellers affiliated to the League adhere to the ILAB Code of Ethics, and the League aims to server as a global network for the rare book trade.

The Antiquarian Booksellers Association (ABA) is the senior trade body in the British Isles for dealers in antiquarian and rare books, manuscripts and allied materials. The ABA organises a number of book fairs every year including its flagship fair held at Olympia, London in May, which features exhibitors from all around the world, and the Chelsea Antiquarian Book Fair in November. Fairs are held in Edinburgh in March and Bristol in July in conjunction with the Provincial Book Fairs Association. The ABA sponsors the London Rare Books School, the York Antiquarian Book Seminar, and a series of seminars at the University of London. The ABA Office is located on Bell Yard, off Fleet Street and next to the Royal Courts of Justice.

Schenley Quadrangle United States historic place

Schenley Quadrangle is a cluster of University of Pittsburgh ("Pitt") residence halls that is a Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation Historic Landmark and are contributing properties to the Schenley Farms National Historic District in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States.

Flatiron Building (Bellingham, Washington) United States historic place

The Hamilton Building also known as The Flatiron Building of Bellingham was the first "skyscraper" in Bellingham. Built in 1908 for Talifero Simpson Hamilton's growing Bellingham Bay (B.B.) Furniture Company established in 1889, the building cost $100,000 and used thirty-five thousand barrels of cement along with 200,000 pounds of steel. Due to its triangular shape and resemblance to the Fuller Building in New York, the building instantly garnered the flatiron nickname. It was Bellingham's tallest structure until 1926.

Charles Edwin George Bayntun, more commonly known as George Bayntun was an English bookseller, bookbinder, and collector.

American Bank Note Company Building Building in Manhattan, New York

The American Bank Note Company Building is a five-story building at 70 Broad Street in the Financial District of Manhattan in New York City. The building was designed by architects Kirby, Petit & Green in the neo-classical style, and contains almost 20,000 square feet (1,900 m2) of space, with offices and residences on the upper floors. The exterior consists of a main facade on Broad Street with two columns, as well as side facades with pilasters on Beaver and Marketfield Streets.

Weiser Antiquarian Books is the oldest occult bookstore in the United States. It specialises in books on Aleister Crowley and his circle, magic, mysticism, eastern religions and alternative spirituality. Its earlier New York incarnation, The Weiser Bookshop, was described by Leslie A. Shepherd as "perhaps the most famous occult bookstore in the U.S."

Adrian Harrington is a notable antiquarian bookseller, a Past President of the Antiquarian Booksellers Association (ABA), 2001–2003, and a recent Past President of the International League of Antiquarian Booksellers (ILAB). He has exhibited at major international book fairs in America, Canada, Hong Kong, Britain and Ireland, and between 2000 and 2010 Harrington was the Chairman of Britain's leading rare book event, the summer ABA Book Fair at Olympia, London, which, during his tenure, has been host to opening speakers including authors Jacqueline Wilson, Lynda La Plante, Joanna Lumley, Bob Geldof, Jeremy Paxman, Andrew Marr, Barry Humphries, Frederick Forsyth and former Poet Laureate Sir Andrew Motion. Harrington has been a regular consultant on rare books for Millers Price Guide, and has been interviewed on book-related matters by the BBC, and Australian Television

1–5 Pillory Street, Nantwich

1–5 Pillory Street is a large curved corner block in Nantwich, Cheshire, England, in the French Baroque style of the late 17th century, which is listed at grade II. It is located on the corner of Hospital Street and Pillory Street, and also includes 2 Hospital Street. Formerly known as Chesters' Stores, it was built in 1911 for the grocer's, P. H. Chesters, to a design by local architect, Ernest H. Edleston (1880–1964). The building has subsequently been used for a variety of retail and wholesale purposes, and it is currently a furniture store.

Ault Store United States historic place

The Ault Store is a historic commercial building in Dundas, Minnesota, United States. The building was placed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) on April 6, 1982.

Robert Frew is an antiquarian bookseller, founder of Robert Frew Ltd, a Past President of the Antiquarian Booksellers Association (www.aba.org.uk) (2005-2007) and a former chairman of the London International Antiquarian Book Fair (2009-2010), Britain’s premier antiquarian book fair held annually at the Olympia Exhibition Centre, London. Robert Frew is also the founder of London-based shipping and logistics company RF Shipping.

Thornton–Smith Building

The Thornton–Smith Building, located at 340 Yonge Street, is a prominent heritage building in the heart of downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Since the completion of the building in the twenties, Yonge Street has seen many transformations and while tenants in the building have reflected these changes The Thornton–Smith Building itself has remained true to its original architecture.

Metropolitan Stores

Metropolitan Stores of Canada Ltd. was a Canadian variety department store chain based in Winnipeg, Manitoba.

References

  1. The Dundas Street used-book store celebrates its 30th anniversary this week. London Free Press' Ian Gillespie's Blog 2006-11-16
  2. History of Attic Books Archived 2007-12-28 at the Wayback Machine from the company's website
  3. "OUR EXPERTS M to R". The Canadian Antiques Roadshow. Archived from the original on 2009-06-03.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  4. Marvin Post Curriculum Vitae
  5. Where to Buy Charles van Sandwyk [ dead link ][ dead link ]
  6. The Brickenden Awards 2005
  7. 1 2 The London Room, London Public Library Archives
  8. Cambridge Public Library
  9. Marvin Post, Interview, 2009
  10. http://www.pklondon.ca Archived 2012-06-15 at the Wayback Machine
  11. 2 November 2009, London Free Press