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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

The Reading Rooms are open to Readers from 9am-5pm, every day.  Residents can work in the Reading Rooms from 9am-10pm every day.

Staff are available to help all library users from 9am-5pm every day, and only the Theology Room is open outside of staffed hours.

Please email the Reading Room Enquiry Desk for all the latest information.

We don’t ask for paid memberships. Joining as a Reader is free. All you have to do is complete a short application form, provide two forms of identification (one proof of identity; one proof of address – if you have a driving license you can use that for both) and you can use the Reading Rooms the same day.

If your visit is only for the day, you can sign up as a Researcher. This is the same process in terms of completing the form and showing ID, but you’ll be lent a Researcher pass which you hand back at the end of the day.

Nothing! Becoming a Reader is totally free, though we ask anyone who joins or renews for a donation. This donation, starting at £10, helps support the cost of running the Reading Rooms, including looking after our historic collections.

Anyone who makes a regular donation to the library becomes a Friend. Friends benefit from priority booking for Library events and Friends-only offers and events. If a regular donation does not suit your circumstances, there are other ways to financially support Gladstone’s Library:

  • Please click here if you wish to make a one-off online donation to the Library using your credit or debit card.
  • Several of our long-running lectures, as well as some of our scholarships, are funded by individuals making a gift in their will, and you can read about making a bequest to Gladstone’s Library here.

We’re not a lending library, sorry! Our books stay with us and must not leave the building. If you’re staying with us, you can take your books to your bedroom or the Gladstone Room. We do ask, however, that you don’t take books into the dining room or any of the bathrooms; books belonging to the Gladstone Foundation Collection must never be removed from the Reading Rooms.

Yes, we offer both. When William Gladstone established his library, he wanted to ensure that anyone who would benefit from a residential period of study at Hawarden should not be prevented from doing so by financial constraint.

We offer both scholarships, which are awarded on an annual basis to those working in specific fields, and bursaries which allow people to stay at the Library at a highly subsidised rate if they are working on an academic project based on one of our core subjects (theology and religious studies/history and current affairs/classical and contemporary literary culture) or if they are members of the Society of Authors.

For details of how to apply for either, please visit our Scholarships & Bursaries page.

Please contact [email protected] with all photography, filming, or journalism requests.

Yes, but there are some conditions.

We limit the number of bags permitted on the Reading Rooms galleries. To keep you safe on our spiral staircases, each user can bring with them:

  • One laptop bag or briefcase sized-bag AND;
  • One rucksack.

Any larger bags can be stored in our secure luggage store. Reception staff are always on hand if you need access. If you require more bags than this, please contact us before your visit on [email protected].

We have consulted with a number of UK libraries, particularly those in listed buildings, and we think these restrictions will help facilitate users while also protecting our Grade-One listed Reading Rooms.

The Reading Rooms at Gladstone’s Library are currently closed to donations. Shelf space is very restricted and our accessions policy requires that we prioritise the collections that we already hold.

If you have a collection that is particularly significant to the Library’s core areas, please email the Reading Rooms with a brief description. We encourage you to think well in advance – donating a collection should be thought of in terms of years rather than months. The Reading Room team are always happy to talk with you about your hopes for your collection.

If you have books to donate, we suggest the following options:

  • List all the titles you have, including author, title, publisher and date of publication. This can be in either a word processed document, or a spreadsheet. Though time-consuming, having a list to distribute vastly increases the chance that a library can review your proposal;
  • Contact local antiquarian, specialist, and second-hand booksellers. They will often be able to visit and select from your collection;
  • Betterworld Books is a charity that takes donations of books. They sell them online and donate the funds to literacy and library charities in the UK and across the world. Donors receive a small fee for any book sold. Gladstone’s Library regularly uses Betterworld Books for de-accessioned titles that do not require disposal through specialist or antiquarian sellers.

If you are looking to deposit an archive please bear in mind that we are currently closed to donations due to lack of storage space. We are happy to give advice on a more appropriate or an alternative place of deposit.

However, we may be able to consider the deposit of archives relating to the Glynne-Gladstone family, and especially to William Gladstone and any that are relevant to the Library’s core archives collection areas. Please contact the Reading Rooms with a brief description (as below):

  • Have an accurate approximation of the number of items in the archive, as well as any useful information as to its size, e.g. number of boxes, size of files, etc.

If we are unable to take your deposit please:

  • Consider contacting your nearest archives, Record Office or library as a more appropriate home.
  • Contact specialist organisations for advice such as the British Records Association or National Archives.

All donations take time to process, from a few days to more than a year for large or complex donations. Donations are expensive to process, require specialist storage materials and we may require financial support in some cases.

Find out more about volunteering opportunities by clicking here.

We can’t offer work experience due to our staffing and projects. However, if you are over eighteen and live locally, you might be interested in one of our longer term volunteering positions.

Gladbooks, the Gladstone’s Library bookshop, stocks only books that support our programme. For a book to be stocked, an author must be the recipient of a Residency, speaking at Hearth or Gladfest, or giving some other talk or course as part of our official programme (i.e. that which is confirmed and booked the previous year and is in the printed programme).

If you’ve written a book that you think Library users might be interested in, you are very welcome to leave flyers on our windowsill dedicated to local events and interest.

Gladstone’s Library cannot advertise or endorse books via print advertising. Writers can apply to have their books mentioned on our social media accounts (Facebook, Twitter Instagram) and/or our e-newsletter to our mailing list if:

  • the book reproduces material from archives held at Gladstone’s Library;
  • the book makes significant reference to the Library’s history, staff, or collections.

If you have dedicated the book to Gladstone’s Library, or thanked the institution or staff in acknowledgements, please alert us via an email to [email protected]. The Reading Room staff are compiling a register of all books written, plotted, or researched here, to be kept in the Library’s archive.

Gladstone’s Library is a busy working library and cannot accommodate bespoke group tours. However, we  do offer regular set tours including:

  • Tea with the Warden happens around four times per year. This is a longer talk and tour, combined with afternoon tea.
  • Glimpses happen twice a month, on the second Tuesday and last Friday of the month. These are short tours of under thirty minutes that combine a short talk on the history of the Library with a visit to the silent Reading Rooms.

No pets (companion animals) are permitted within the building. If you have an assistance animal, please contact us before your visit so we can carry out a risk assessment and help make your visit go smoothly (email [email protected]).

Companion animals are allowed in the outside grounds, but owners must remove any waste and keep their dog on a lead. Please do not leave your dog in a car. We reserve the right to ask owners to leave if their dog is being disruptive.

Gladstone’s Library’s Safeguarding Policy is available below.

Gladstone’s Library Safeguarding Policy 2025