Today in History: March 12
Library Benefactor Andrew Carnegie
The man who enters a library is in the best society this world affords; the good and the great welcome him, surround him, and humbly ask to be allowed to become his servants…Andrew Carnegie, 1895
Carnegie Library, Montgomery, Alabama, copyright 1906.
Touring Turn-of-the-Century America, 1880-1920
On March 12, 1901, Andrew Carnegie, one of the world's foremost industrialists, offered the city of New York $5.2 million for the construction of sixty-five branch libraries. The Scottish immigrant's fortune eventually would establish many more libraries and charitable foundations.
Born in 1835, Carnegie immigrated to the United States in 1848 with his parents. Working in American industry and making shrewd investments, he amassed a fortune before the age of thirty. In the 1870s, he noted the potential of the steel industry and founded J. Edgar Thomson Steel Works near Pittsburgh, which eventually evolved into the Carnegie Steel Company. The company boomed, and in 1901, Carnegie sold it to financier J. P. Morgan for $480 million, received $250 million as his personal share, and retired.
Carnegie devoted the rest of his life to writing and philanthropic activities. Believing that any accumulated wealth should be distributed in the form of public endowments, Carnegie founded 2,509 libraries in the English-speaking world, including ones in Michigan, New York, Ohio, Vermont, and Washington, D.C. He also established several trusts and helped found Carnegie Mellon University. At the time of his death in 1919, Carnegie had given away over $350 million.
Ohio Works of the Carnegie Steel Co., Youngstown, Ohio, circa 1910.
Taking the Long View, 1851-1991
- To find more images related to this American giant, search across American Memory on Carnegie. Search results will include photographs of a 1908 Carnegie Steel Company corporate picnic.
- For a virtual tour of steel mills from Pennsylvania to Utah, search on steel in FSA/OWI Photographs, 1935-1945.
- To learn about the experiences of other American immigrants, read Immigration…The Changing Face of America, a Feature Presentation of the Learning Page.