[On May
23rd, 1895, the project which would become the New York Public Library was launched. So for
the 125th anniversary, I’ve AmericanStudied a handful of libraries
and library contexts, leading up to this special post on the NYPL!]
On three famous
figures who helped with the century-long creation of the modern NYPL (along with
John Jacob Astor, about whose 1848 posthumous donation
I wrote in Tuesday’s post):
1)
Washington Irving: With the help of Astor’s
donation, the city constructed the Astor
Library, which opened in 1854 as a free reference library (ie, its collection
did not circulate). Irving, a longtime friend of Astor’s and one of the
city’s and the nation’s
preeminent early 19th century literary and cultural figures, served
as President of the Astor Library’s
Board of Trustees from 1848 until his 1859 death. Because of Irving’s
strong interest in European culture (in contrast to more American-focused
voices like the members of the period’s Young
America movement), the library’s collection initially tilted heavily that
way, an emphasis that continued to shape the library for many decades
thereafter (as illustrated by the 1931 purchase of Russian
Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich’s private library). But it’s fair to say
that without such a literary heavyweight, the library might never have endured
at all.
2)
Samuel Tilden: In 1870, the New York State
Legislature incorporated a previously independent collection, the Lenox
Library, based on bibliophile James
Lenox’s extensive holdings. But both the Astor and Lenox Libraries
continued to struggle financially (and neither allowed their collections to
circulate), and the entire system might have gone under were it not for a
timely and sizeable donation from Tilden,
the former NY Governor and 1876
presidential candidate. When he died in 1886, Tilden
left much of his estate--$2.4 million—so that the city could “establish and
maintain a free library and reading room in the city of New York.” With that
help of that endowment, the city was able to plan for a merger of the Astor and
Lenox Libraries, and on March
23rd, 1895 (the date for the anniversary of which this week’s
series exists) a number of prominent figures announced a formal plan for “the
New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox, and Tilden Foundations.”
3)
Andrew Carnegie: In order to carry out that
plan, however, the NYPL needed the land and resources to create a number of new
branch libraries across the city. And for that, it needed and received another,
even more sizable donation, from one of the Gilded Age’s leading
philanthropists (and robber barons, a contradiction about which I’ve
written in this space before), Andrew Carnegie. In March 1901, Carnegie
agreed to donate $5.2 million to help the NYPL construct 65 branch
libraries, an act that he called in his letter to NYPL Director John S.
Billings “a rare privilege.” “Sixty-five libraries at one stroke probably
breaks the record,” he added, “but this is a day of big operations, and New
York is soon to be the biggest of Cities.” While there’s probably a Platonic
ideal version of public libraries that can exist without political and business
figures like Tilden and Carnegie, the truth of such large operations is that
they certainly do need significant support and resources, and all three of
these figures were instrumental in providing them for the New York Public
Library.
Memorial Day
series starts Monday,
Ben
PS. Thoughts on
the NYPL, or other libraries you’d highlight/celebrate?
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