James Bertram | |
|---|---|
![]() | |
| Born | 17 March 1872 |
| Died | 23 October 1934 |
| Occupation | Secretary |
| Employer | |
James Bertram (1872–1934) was the personal secretary ofAndrew Carnegie, the industrialist and philanthropist, from 1897-1914. Bertram also served theCarnegie 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]
Bertram was born inCorstorphine, nearEdinburgh, the Scottish capital where he was educated atDaniel Stewart's College.[1] His first position was with theGreat 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.
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 the construction of a college library atTuskegee, 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 newCarnegie libraries, commenting on thearchitectural plans submitted by applicants. His interventions discouraged extravagant architectural features, although he continued with "trademark" elements such as steps to the main entrance symbolising the reader's spiritual elevation as she entered the library. Bertram encouraged adherence to published guidelines, authoringNotes on Library Bildings (the non-standard spelling is explained by the fact that Carnegie favouredspelling reform). This 1910 work included complete plans.[4]

Carnegie began funding libraries inIowa 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 (Scotland and Pennsylvania). At the turn of the century his giving increased dramatically. By 1903 44 Carnegie libraries had been built for Iowa communities alone (Carnegie also funded academic libraries in the state, including a second library at Fairfield).
As well as being empowered by Andrew Carnegie to carry on negotiations, answer questions, and oversee contractual arrangements, Bertram also came to establish the eligibility requirements for communities to receive funding. The host community was required to have a population sufficiently large to support the library (although in the case ofAlden Public Library, which served a large rural area, a population well below 1000 was deemed sufficient).
In the opinion of the Carnegie Libraries in Iowa Project, Bertram was not a good communicator, but he took his responsibilities very seriously.[5] Bertram 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 library 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, and would have preferred Iowans to pursue other sources of financial support, rejecting Carnegie funds.[5]However, there appears to have been enthusiasm about Carnegie libraries at a local level. Of about 100 Iowa communities which applied for Carnegie funds, only 5 chose not to accept.[6]
Bertram also involved himself with grants forpipe organs, and other projects.[1]
This article about an American businessperson born in the 1870s is astub. You can help Wikipedia byexpanding it. |