COMMENTARY: Amazing historical find (with documents) – correspondence between British governor Hesketh Bell and Andrew Carnegie that birthed the Roseau Public Library

In an extraordinary historical discovery, correspondence between British Governor Sir Hesketh Bell and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie has revealed the origins of one of Dominica’s most transformative institutions—the Roseau Public Library. This early 20th century exchange, occurring during Carnegie’s global library-building campaign, resulted in one of the few Caribbean libraries funded by the steel magnate turned philanthropist.

The library, originally named the Roseau Free Library, emerged as an architectural gem—a wooden Caribbean bungalow perched above the Caribbean Sea with wide verandas and jalousie windows designed to capture cooling breezes. But beyond its physical beauty, it became an intellectual sanctuary that would fundamentally shape Dominican society.

During the 1950s-70s, the library served as an unparalleled gateway to global knowledge for Dominican youth. Its collections surpassed school libraries with encyclopedias, international literature, and periodicals like The Economist, Newsweek, and Time. This access cultivated critical thinking and intellectual independence during Dominica’s transition from colonial rule to self-governance.

The library’s most profound impact manifested through two particular visitors: Gabriel J. Christian and Irving W. André, who met in the research room around 1975. Both came from households filled with books and intellectual discussion—Christian’s father, a British Army veteran, maintained collections on Churchill and world affairs, while André’s father, a customs officer, returned from Curaçao with extensive libraries and jazz collections.

Their meeting sparked a friendship forged through shared Saturdays spent pursuing knowledge beyond the colonial curriculum. They studied African liberation movements, Caribbean history, and Marxist theory, using the library as their “university before university.” This intellectual partnership eventually evolved into Pont Casse Press, established in 1992, which has since published 44 books documenting Dominican history and culture.

The library’s current state tells a different story. Hurricane Maria’s devastation in 2017 left the institution in ruins, prompting calls for national mobilization. Authors Christian and André are leading efforts to form a bipartisan steering committee to rebuild the library, emphasizing that this must be a non-partisan national cause supported by Dominicans at home and throughout the diaspora.

Organizations like Rebuild Dominica Inc. have already demonstrated commitment through recent donations of $5,000 worth of books to Dominica State College. The reconstruction effort represents not just physical rebuilding but the reclamation of a vital space for future generations and honoring the legacy of Bell and Carnegie’s visionary investment in Dominican intellectual development.

The Roseau Public Library’s enduring legacy continues through every Dominican it educated and through the published works of Pont Casse Press that now contribute to the global archive of human knowledge. It stands as testament to how philanthropic vision and local advocacy can permanently shape a nation’s intellectual destiny.