Derek Fielding

Fred Derek Osmond Fielding AM (14 August 1929 – 25 June 2014)[1] was an Australian librarian and author. In 1951 Derek graduated from the Trinity College, Dublin.[2] He was University Librarian at the University of Queensland from 1965 to 1994.[3] In 1991, he received the HCL Anderson Award from the Australian Library and Information Association.[2][4]

Fred Derek Osmond Fielding
Derek Fielding, University Librarian, University of Queensland, Brisbane, 15 Nov 1965. This photo used with the permission of Fryer Library, University of Queensland Photograph Collection, UQFL466, AG/P/109
Born(1929-08-14)14 August 1929
Belfast, Northern Ireland
Died25 June 2014(2014-06-25) (aged 84)
NationalityBritish, Australian
Alma materTrinity College, Dublin
AwardsALIA HCL Anderson Award Member of the Order of Australia

Early life

Fred Derek Osmond Fielding, usually known as Derek Fielding, was born in Belfast, Northern Ireland in 1929. After the early deaths of his parents, he was educated at the Masonic Orphan Boys' School in Dublin from 1939-1947.[1] He graduated from Trinity College, Dublin in 1951 with a M.A. in modern history and political science. He went to work for Sheffield City libraries from 1951–1957, and would marry Audrey Reynolds in 1953.[2]

Career

Fielding and his family migrated to Auckland, New Zealand in 1958 to be Deputy University Librarian at the University of Auckland. Following this appointment, they would travel to Perth, Western Australia to be Deputy University Librarian of the University of Western Australia from 1961–1965.[5] The University of Queensland Library in Brisbane, Australia had been without a University Librarian for two years, after the resignation of Harrison Bryan. Fielding would take up the position of UQ James Forsyth University Librarian in 1965, and bring about tremendous growth in the library's collection. Under his management, the library went from 360,000 books to 1.5 million volumes. Smaller libraries were amalgamated. He oversaw the building of three new library buildings in 1974, 1976 and 1990 and the establishment of the clinical library at the Royal Brisbane Hospital.[1] He sat on the University Senate from 1972-1983, and chaired a committee reporting on university organisation in 1982. He had the library collection recatalogued from 1968-1978 to the Library of Congress Classification system. As the university took on more students, and with the improvement in photocopying and electronic transmission of materials, Fielding became active in copyright law review. He worked with the Commonwealth Attorney-General's department and Australian Vice-Chancellor's Copyright Committee to develop guidelines for resolving the problems of copyright in an electronic age.[2] He would publish articles in the Australian Library Journal and other ALIA papers and conferences.

Fielding was Pro-Vice Chancellor, Academic Services, at the University from 1992-1994. He retired in 1992 and was made Librarian Emeritus. He died at his home in 2014.[2]

Awards

In 1991 Fielding received the Australian Library and Information Association's HCL Anderson Award. In 1996 he was awarded an AM, Member of the Order of Australia.[2]

Interests

An enthusiast of Rugby Union, Fielding sat on referee appointments committees in Brisbane. He was a volunteer radio announcer and committee member of Brisbane classical radio station, 4MBS. A strong believer in civil liberties and social issues from his youth,[1] he was committed to ensuring that the censorship of libraries, both academic and public, was discouraged. This was particularly significant during the political era in which he guided the University library, under the then Premier of Queensland, Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen.[6] Fielding chaired the Library Association of Australia's Freedom to Read Committee from 1969-1974. He was President of the Queensland Council for Civil Liberties from 1975-1979.[7] His diplomatic skills enabled UQ to permit student protests on campus, including the all night sit-in in the Walter Harrison Law Library. He was also an observer for the QCCL during the 1971 Springboks Rugby Tour during apartheid protests.[2]

Legacy

Fielding was survived by his wife, three sons and ten grandchildren.

An Inaugural Derek Fielding Memorial Lecture commenced in 2015.[8]

Published works

  • Fielding, F. D. O. (Fred Derek Osmond) (1968), Master of none, University of Queensland Press, retrieved 4 December 2014
gollark: Flick the switch on and off constantly for safety?
gollark: Yes.
gollark: BASICALLY THE SAME BUT LOWER NUMBERS!
gollark: Also cooler changes in NC3.
gollark: So, apparently, reactors running on multiple fuels is a problem so vast that it needs changes to the mod to "balance".

References

  1. Schmidt, Janine (2014). "OBITUARY: Derek (Fred Derek Osmond) Fielding, 14th August 1929 - 25th June 2014". Australian Academic and Research Libraries. 45 (4): 323–328. doi:10.1080/00048623.2014.973097.
  2. Routh, Spencer (2014). "Fred Derek Osmond Fielding". Fryer Folios (August): 27.
  3. "Fielding, F. D. O. (Fred Derek Osmond), 1929–2014". Libraries Australia. National Library of Australia. Retrieved 2 December 2014.
  4. "Previous Recipients of the HCL Anderson" (PDF). Australian Library and Information Association. Archived (PDF) from the original on 11 February 2015. Retrieved 2 December 2014.
  5. Schmidt, Janine. "Australian Academic & Research Libraries – issue 31.3". archive.alia.org.au. Archived from the original on 25 February 2016. Retrieved 17 February 2016.
  6. Byrne, Alex (1 January 2000). "We Would Live in Peace and Tranquility and No One Would Know Anything". Australian Academic & Research Libraries. 31 (3): 65–82. doi:10.1080/00048623.2000.10755128. ISSN 0004-8623.
  7. "Derek Fielding interviewed by Lindsay Marshall and Angela Dahlke in the Decades of Division oral his... [nla.oh-vn5037598] | Digital Collection - National Library of Australia". nla.gov.au. Archived from the original on 24 February 2016. Retrieved 18 February 2016.
  8. "The Inaugural Derek Fielding Memorial Lecture". Justice and the Law. Archived from the original on 21 March 2016. Retrieved 18 February 2016.
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