List of Carnegie libraries in Europe
This is an incomplete list of Carnegie libraries in Europe.
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Belgium
A Carnegie library was built in the 1920s for the University of Leuven to replace a building destroyed in the First World War.
Funding came from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, which also built libraries in the war-damaged cities of Rheims and Belgrade. The architect of the Leuven library was Whitney Warren. Although the architect was American, he employed a Flemish style for this commission. His building in turn suffered severe damage in the Second World War, but has been restored. (For more details of this library, see Catholic University of Leuven#Library.)
France
The Carnegie library of Reims is the single Carnegie library in France. Reims was devastated in the First World War and the losses included library accommodation in the town-hall. The provision of a new library was conceived as a contribution to the city's reconstruction. Reims was one of three "front-line" cities to be given a Carnegie library, the other two being Leuven and Belgrade.
The Art Deco building was finished in 1927, and opened the following year in the presence of Gaston Doumergue, the French President and Myron T. Herrick, the US ambassador. The building was restored at the beginning of the twenty-first century. The library stock includes some material which survived the First World War. [1]
Ireland
Carnegie libraries are to be found throughout the island of Ireland.[2] Libraries vary considerably in size, some of the rural ones being very small, but the smallest must be the cabinets used for the Carnegie Library Lighthouse Service. A full list and description of Carnegie libraries in Ireland can be found in Irish Carnegie Libraries: a Catalogue & Architectural History by Brendan Grimes (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 1998)
- Bangor, County Down, extended, but still in use as a library.
- Belfast (3 Carnegie libraries, including Falls Road)
- Dingle, County Kerry
- Dublin City Public Libraries and Archive (4 Carnegie libraries including Rathmines and Pearse Street)
- Kilkenny City, John's Quay, 1910 - still in use as a library
- Killorglin, County Kerry, 1909
- Portadown, County Armagh - no longer in use as a library.
- Lurgan, County Armagh, 1906 - still in use as a library.
- Waterford City Library, foundation stone laid 1903 - first Carnegie library in Ireland and still in use.
- Lismore, County Waterford, 1910
- Glencullen Library, Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown , 1907
Serbia
The Belgrade University Library, Serbia, is a Carnegie library.[3] Much of Belgrade was destroyed in the First World War, and in the 1920s it became one of three "front-line" cities to receive a Carnegie library, the other two being Leuven and Rheims.
United Kingdom
The first Carnegie libraries to be built were in Scotland. The English Carnegie libraries began to be built at the beginning of the twentieth century. Carnegie, who in his retirement divided his time between the USA and Scotland, opened some British libraries personally.
In Britain the process of applying for a Carnegie library was broadly similar to that in the USA. It was adapted to British legislation, e.g. the Public Libraries Act, which permitted expenditure from the rates on local libraries. Carnegie assessed applications using criteria which favoured poorer towns, but applicants had to undertake to support their library, providing it with books etc. from the rates. While most towns were very grateful to receive a grant, Carnegie's project was not without controversy. For example, some people objected to the way in which he had made his money. In the case of Stratford-on-Avon there were objections to the proposed building for conservation reasons, and this resulted in a library which blends into the half-timbered neighbouring buildings.[4]
Most Carnegie libraries served the general population of towns and cities, but he also provided some academic libraries in the UK. (This pattern of town and academic libraries was in line with his policy in the USA where he provided a number of college libraries, for example at Tuskegee University.[5]) In Stoke-on-Trent the Carnegie United Kingdom Trust funded a specialist ceramics library.[6] The existence of special collections with catalogues gave scope for the development of interlibrary loans.
From 1913 applications were handled by the Carnegie United Kingdom Trust,[7] based in Carnegie's home town, Dunfermline. The trust continued to fund libraries after Carnegie's death in 1919.
Many Carnegie libraries continue in use in the UK. Sometimes new uses are found for those buildings that are no longer needed for library purposes, e.g. Grantham in the list below. However, some libraries have been demolished, e.g. Grays in the list below. The British system of protecting historic structures by designating listed buildings tends to favour pre-twentieth century buildings, leaving some Carnegie libraries at the mercy of the developer.
England
- London
- Brentford 1903, brick and terracotta construction
- Bromley 1908, by Evelyn Hellicar (1862–1929),[8] demolished.
- Crofton Park 1905, brick and stone. (Library run by London Borough of Lewisham).
- Hanwell designed by T Gibbs Thomas in 1905/6. (Library run by London Borough of Ealing).
- Herne Hill 1906, Grade II listed (Library run by London Borough of Lambeth)
- King's College, London: The Carnegie Collection of British Music on loan to The Maughan Library.
- Lea Bridge Road, Leyton
- Sydenham, (Library run by London Borough of Lewisham).
- Teddington 1906, brick and stone construction
- Twickenham 1906/7
- Ashton-in-Makerfield 1906. Grade II listed in 2009.
- Batley 1907
- Birkenhead, demolished
- Blackpool 1911, Grade II listed [9]
- Bridgwater 1905, Edwardian Baroque style, Grade II listed
- Chorlton, Greater Manchester
- Cockermouth
- Crosby 1905, brick and stone. (Library run by Sefton Metropolitan Borough Council)
- Eccles 1907,
- Farnworth, Bolton Metropolitan Borough, 10 April 1911 [10]
- Fenton, Staffordshire 1906, brick and stone construction (Library run by Stoke-on-Trent City Council)
- Garston, Liverpool
- Grantham Museum 1926, originally built to house the Library and Museum, with partial funding from the Carnegie trust. The Library is now elsewhere.
- Grays Free Library 1903, demolished.[11] Replaced by Essex County Council cultural centre in 1968, with Library on ground floor (now run by Thurrock unitary authority).
- Harrogate 1906. Currently undergoing refurbishment, due to re-open in 2010. (Library run by North Yorkshire County Council).
- Hove 1908, Renaissance style faced with stone, Grade II listed
- Hull, the listed building is no longer in use as a library.
- Ilkeston
- Keighley 1904, stone construction. (Library run by Bradford Metropolitan District Council).
- Kendal 1909, stone construction. (Library run by Cumbria County Council)[12]
- Kings Heath, Birmingham, 1905, Renaissance classical style with art nouveau features
- King's Lynn library, 1905.
- Langley, Sandwell, brick and terracotta construction.[13]
- Levenshulme 1904
- Lytham St Annes, brick and terracotta construction
- Milnrow, Greater Manchester
- Neston 1907 (Library run by Cheshire West and Chester Council)
- Pontefract 1904, Art nouveau building which now serves as a museum
- Portsmouth 1906, Edwardian baroque and free Renaissance style.[14]
- Ramsgate, Kent 1904
- Runcorn 1906, in local sandstone. (Library run by Halton Borough Council.)
- Sefton Park, Liverpool 1911. Mock Tudor style building with a modern 1960s extension.[15]
- Shipley, West Yorkshire 1905, stone construction. The building is no longer in use as a library.
- Solon Carnegie Library, no building provided. This academic library comprised books on ceramics. The collection is now in the Horace Barks Reference Library, Stoke-on-Trent.
- Sowerby Bridge (Near Halifax) 1905, stone. Run by Calderdale MBC.[16]
- Stamford, Lincolnshire, 1906. Grade II listed [17]
- Stratford-upon-Avon, partly timber construction
- Tuebrook, Liverpool. Currently unused and boarded up
- Tyldesley 1909, brick and stone construction
- Wallasey Central Library
- Wakefield 1905, stone. (Library run by City of Wakefield Metropolitan District Council).
- Wednesbury 1908, red brick and limestone at a cost of £5,000.
- West Bromwich 1907, Ruabon facing bricks with Portland stone and terracotta detailing.
Scotland
In Scotland the Carnegie libraries were typically built of stone.[18] In the rest of the British Isles there was much more use of brick.
- Aberdeen Central Library 1892,
- Airdrie Public Library 1894 and 1925
- Ayr 1893
- Bo'ness
- Burntisland
- Coatbridge library 1905 pink sandstone construction
- Ewart Library, Dumfries (named at Carnegie's suggestion after William Ewart)
- Dunfermline 1883, the first Carnegie library.
- Edinburgh, Central Lending Library 1890, French Renaissance style, by George Washington Browne.
- Grangemouth 1889, the second Carnegie library (which opened shortly before Braddock, the first Carnegie library in the USA).
- Hamilton townhouse library 1907
- Kirkwall 1909, no longer in use as a library.
- Jedburgh
- Kinross
- Montrose, Angus
- Motherwell
- Wick, Highland 1897
Wales
Carnegie's libraries were not exclusively for English-speakers. The Bangor library was called Llyfrgell Rydd ("Free Library" in the Welsh language).
- Abergavenny
- Aberystwyth
- Bangor 1907, brick and stone construction
- Barry
- Canton, Cardiff
- Cathays, Cardiff 1906
- Coedpoeth 1904, local sandstone construction
- Llandrindod Wells
- Merthyr Tydfil
- Newport (Rogerstone Library, Pillgwenlly Library, & Carnegie Library, Corporation Road)
- Wrexham
References
- ^ Template:Fr icon La Bibliothèque Carnegie
- ^ Photographic Catalogue of Irish Carnegie Libraries
- ^ "University Library "Svetozar Marković"". University of Belgrade. Retrieved 2009-06-18.
- ^ "Carnegie and Corelli" New York Times article from 1903. (Carnegie libraries usually avoided using wood, although Stratford-on-Avon is not the only example of wooden construction, the material was used at Hull, for example).[1]
- ^ Up from Slavery, Booker T. Washington refers to a grant received from Carnegie in 1900 to provide the college library.
- ^ The Carnegie United Kingdom Trust has deposited historic files in the National Archives of Scotland in Edinburgh, where they are available to researchers
- ^ Carnegie United Kingdom Trust website
- ^ The Bromley Record, June 1906, page 98
- ^ http://blackpoolcentrallibrary.wordpress.com/about/
- ^ http://www.brianiddon.org.uk/speeches/20090327_FarnworthCentenary.pdf
- ^ "History of Grays Library".
- ^ Kendal library from "Visit Cumbria"
- ^ Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council
- ^ History in Portsmouth, 'the Carnegie Library'. Accessed 24-11-08.
- ^ http://multimedia.mmm.com/mws/mediawebserver.dyn?6666660Zjcf6lVs6EVs66Sr8FCOrrrrQ-
- ^ [2]
- ^ "LCC comments on Stamford Library" (PDF).
- ^ Carnegie Libraries of Scotland