James Bertram (Carnegie secretary)

Summary

James Bertram (1872–1934) was the personal secretary of Andrew Carnegie, the industrialist and philanthropist, from 1897-1914. Bertram also served the Carnegie Corporation of New York from its inception in 1911 as secretary and trustee until his death in 1934. He thus continued to have an important role in Carnegie's philanthropic projects after Carnegie's death in 1919.[1]

James Bertram
Born17 March 1872 Edit this on Wikidata
Corstorphine Edit this on Wikidata
Died23 October 1934 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 62)
New York City Edit this on Wikidata
OccupationSecretary Edit this on Wikidata
Employer

Early life edit

Bertram was born in Corstorphine, near Edinburgh, the Scottish capital where was educated at Daniel Stewart's College.[1] His first position was with the Great Northern and Northeastern Railway company in Edinburgh. He emigrated to South Africa, where he continued to work in the railway industry. He returned to Scotland for health reasons in 1897, and was recruited by Andrew Carnegie, who had recently acquired a Scottish home, Skibo Castle.

Activities in the United States edit

Libraries edit

Bertram by 1908 supervised Carnegie's library program in the USA.[2] Carnegie became less directly involved with the project in his old age. Booker T. Washington's published correspondence gives details of how Bertram acted as an intermediary between Carnegie and the recipients of his largesse.[3] Washington obtained Carnegie funding for an academic library at Tuskegee and advised other institutions on how to obtain Carnegie funding. Washington found that it was worth cultivating Bertram, and when the latter asked for a domestic servant from Tuskegee he was not sent the standard letter denying that the institution trained domestic servants.

Bertram took a close interest in the design of new Carnegie libraries, commenting on the architectural plans submitted by applicants. His interventions discouraged extravagant architectural features, although he continued with trademark features such as steps to the main entrance symbolising the reader's spiritual elevation. He encouraged adherence to published guidelines. Bertram authored Notes on Library Buildings, a work which included complete plans, in 1910.[4]

Libraries, the example of Iowa edit

Carnegie began funding libraries in Iowa before the arrival of Bertram in the USA. In 1892, Fairfield, Iowa, received a grant from Andrew Carnegie for $30,000 to build a public library. Apparently, this was at the request of an Iowa senator: hitherto Carnegie had only funded libraries at places to which he was personally connected. At the turn of the century his giving increased dramatically. By 1903 44 Carnegie libraries had been built for Iowa communities (Carnegie also funded academic libraries in the state, including a second library at Fairfield).

 
Fairfield Carnegie Library, opened 1893
 
Sioux City Carnegie Library, opened 1913

The Carnegie Libraries in Iowa Project notes that Bertram was empowered by Andrew Carnegie to carry on negotiations, answer questions, and oversee contractual arrangements. The Carnegie Libraries in Iowa Project further asserts that Bertram, and not Carnegie, was the one who established the eligibility requirements for a community to receive funding. While he did not exhibit much of a fluid or articulate communication style -- leaving his letters, notes, responses, etc. more confused and misinformed than enlightened by his instructions, Bertram considered the power Carnegie entrusted to him as a kind of sacred trust demanding his protection. Therefore, Bertram established the primary requirements that the community population should be sufficiently large to support the library. He also determined, as time went on, that beautiful architectural enhancements that adorned the library buildings – domes, marble staircases, statues -- had to be eliminated in order to cut down on costs and to improve the libraries functionality and working space for library services. He began a campaign of informing inquiring groups with pamphlets on the need for practicality of design so that the grant amount would cover the construction costs to make it ready for immediate occupancy and fulfillment of its purpose. Bertram's rigorous guardianship of the Carnegie trust had the immediate effect he desired; however, it also caused substantial difficulties for some Iowa communities seeking to build libraries with Carnegie funding. Alice S. Tyler, secretary of the Iowa Library Commission from its inception in 1900 until 1913, objected to Bertram's stipulations, seeking to have them removed and encouraging communities to pursue local financial support and reject the Carnegie funds.[5] Of about 100 Iowa communities which applied for Carnegie funds, 5 chose not to accept.[6]

Pipe Organs edit

Bertram also involved himself with grants for pipe organs, and other projects.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "James Bertram Collection". Carnegie Mellon University Libraries. Retrieved July 4, 2022.
  2. ^ Ellen Condliffe Lagemann (1992). The Politics of Knowledge: The Carnegie Corporation, Philanthropy, and Public Policy. U of Chicago Press. p. 17. ISBN 9780226467801.
  3. ^ Booker T. Washington Papers By Booker Taliaferro Washington, Louis R. Harlan, Raymond Smock. See these pages on Google books.
  4. ^ Kirk F. Mohney (October 11, 1988). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Milo Public Library". National Park Service. p. 3. Retrieved July 13, 2016. with two photos from 1988
  5. ^ "Andrew Carnegie & James Bertram – Carnegie Libraries in Iowa Project". dsps.lib.uiowa.edu. Retrieved 2018-04-16.
  6. ^ The Carnegie Libraries in Iowa Project is inconsistent as regards the exact number of communities which applied, probably because of uncertainty as to how the first application (for Fairfield) was made. "Declined Carnegie grants". Retrieved 14 August 2023.