The grand and glorious New York Public Library in a hand-tinted linen post card from the early 1930's |
There may be taller buildings. There may
even be more beautiful buildings.
There are certainly more profitable uses
for prime Manhattan real estate. But maybe no building in New York City is more justifiably admired and beloved
than the Main Branch of the New York
Public Library which opened its
doors for the first time on this
date in 1911 at 5th Avenue and 42nd
Street.
It was recently named the Stephen A. Schwarzman Building in honor
of the billionaire banker who pledged $100 million to restoration and repair of the structure. It hardly put a dent in his personal fortune.
Schwarzman made headlines in 2012 when he compared President Barack
Obama’s proposal to raise taxes to “Hitler’s
invasion of Poland.” Luckily, no one
outside his immediate family and his
billionaire buddy Mayor Michael Bloomberg ever uses that
name for the iconic building.
Several smaller libraries were consolidated into a new city
institution in the late 19th Century.
Big gifts from a bequest by former Governor and Democratic Presidential Candidate Samuel J.
Tilden and from library patron
and steel magnate Andrew Carnegie made
possible the erection of an imposing building.
A rough design of the building was developed by the System’s first Superintendent, Dr. John Shaw Billings. His vision was the basis for a well-publicized
competition among the top architects in the country. A relatively little known firm, Carrère
and Hastings, won for its Beaux-Arts
design.
In this 1920's cartoon famous writers are depicted using the Reading Room. The most recognizable is James Joyce with the dramatic wing on his hat. |
Construction began
in 1897 and the cornerstone laid in 1902.
It was the largest marble building
ever constructed in the United States with
walls three feet thick. It cost a hefty
$9 million when that was an almost unimaginable sum. It took 14 years for master craftsmen, many
of the European trained masons, to complete the building. It took more than a year just to move in and
shelf on miles of book cases the collections from the consolidated libraries.
President William Howard Taft joined Governor John
Alden Dix and Mayor William Jay
Gaynor for the opening ceremonies.
The Main Reading Room of the Library is an impressive public space with the reverence of a Temple. |
The library was not only immediately one of the largest in the world, it was noted for an
efficient system to produce volumes from the vast stacks and deliver them
into the hands of patrons within
moments. The first book checked out, a
scholarly study of the ethical works of Friedrich
Nietzsche and Leo Tolstoy in German was in the hands of the library
patron in just 11 minutes.
The most famous feature of the library is the grand and vast Rose Main Reading Room. Walls
are lined with reference books, two rows of large tables
accommodate readers, researchers, and students and the room is appointed
with crystal chandeliers, brass lamps, and comfortable chairs. On sunny days the room is flooded with
light from a row of large arched windows.
The room has been featured in movies, described in novels, and
memorialized in poems by the likes of E. B. White and Lawrence
Ferlinghetti.
Almost as
famous are the two proud lions which flank the wide stairs to the
main entrance. Original names, Leo
Astor and Leo Lenox in honor of
two of the library’s principal founders, Mayor
Fiorello La Guardia dubbed them Patience
and Fortitude during the Great Depression when the great reading
rooms were filled with the out-of-work
passing the time away in self-improvement
and when some of the homeless reportedly
found ways to sleep in the stacks.
One of the Library's famed pair of guardian lions. |
It took until the 1970 for continual
acquisitions to fill up the generous space that had been included in the
original designs. In the 1980’s the building
was expanded by 125,000 square feet
and literally miles of new shelf space
by constructing an underground addition
below Bryant Park.
Work began in 2007 to clean and restore the begrimed and
damaged exterior of the building and remodeling continued inside. More work with Schwarzman’s—and other
donors—money continues to be done.
Meanwhile former Mayor Bloomberg slashed the operating budget of the
Library, closed many branches, and reduced hours open to the public. Money for
new acquisitions was cut to the
bone.
The grand and beloved edifice is in
danger of rotting from the inside by neglect.
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