Septimus Pitt


Septimus Albert Pitt was the second City Librarian of Glasgow, Lanarkshire, where he greatly extended the library services.

Early life

Septimus Albert Pitt was born on 19 November 1877 in Low Fell, Durham, England, the seventh-born son of Henry Pitt, a glass works manager, and Susan Harley. His maternal grandfather, Robert Henry Harley, was a bookseller and stationer. While his parents originated from Birmingham, they raised their large family in the counties of Durham and Northumberland.

Personal life

Pitt married Cecilia Philip Keir at Robinson’s Temperance Hotel and Restaurant, 31 Lothian Road, in the parish of St. George, Edinburgh, Midlothian, on 30 August 1899. The Pitts’ only child, daughter Cecilia Jessie Pitt, was born on 17 October 1900 at 18 Devonshire Road, Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire.

Public life

At the age of 14, Pitt began work as a junior assistant in the South Shields Public Library, County Durham. He began his professional career early, being appointed Sub-Librarian in 1894, just before the age of seventeen, and having charge of the complete reorganisation of the library.
In 1898, he went to Aberdeen and, after a spell of several years as Sub-Librarian in the city, he came to Glasgow in 1901 to open Gorbals Library, the city’s first public lending library. In 1903, he was appointed Superintendent of Glasgow’s District Libraries, supervising the scheme for establishing sixteen district libraries and two reading-rooms in the city.
For several years, Pitt and his family lived at 11 Bolton Drive, Mount Florida.. However, by 1908, Pitt had left Scotland to become City Librarian in Coventry, Warwickshire, where he remained for several years.
Following his appointment in December 1914, Pitt took up his duties as City Librarian for Glasgow on 15 March 1915, serving in this capacity for 22 years, based at The Mitchell Library, Glasgow. On his return to Glasgow, Pitt greatly extended the library services, organising the first municipal commercial library in the country in 1915. In the years immediately following the Great War, his attention was occupied largely with the expansion of the lending service and, during the nineteen-twenties, the opening of a number of new branch libraries.
Pitt published papers throughout his professional life, and contributed regularly to professional journals, and at Library Association meetings and conferences, his particular interests being the study of bibliography, library history, and languages. In 1919, Pitt spoke of his support for the idea of ‘open-access’ libraries, speaking against the ‘indicator system’, which was an adjunct of ‘closed-access’ libraries, in which access to books is not readily accessible for reading or browsing but tightly controlled by library staff, saying,
“Familiarity with books is the most important element in the education of the people and unrestricted access to a library power, because a book is power.”
In 1924, Pitt served on the Departmental Committee on Public Libraries, which reported in June 1927.
Pitt served the Library Association as a member of the Council from 1915, Vice-President in 1920, and as President in 1934. He was also, twice, a President of the Scottish Library Association.
In 1928, Pitt was one of two commissioners who, under the auspices of the Carnegie Corporation of New York, was sent to survey and report on the library services in South Africa and Kenya. A direct culmination of their visit was the 1928 Bloemfontein Conference, at which they discussed their findings and suggested proposals towards improved public library services in the country. This conference, is regarded as a watershed event in South African library development as it helped instigate the demise of the subscription system in favour of free libraries. In 1929, Pitt and Ferguson produced identically-titled but separate reports of their investigations.
Meanwhile, back in Scotland, in Glasgow's Mitchell Library, Pitt devised its first open access department, the Music Room, which opened in 1930. By 1935, Pitt was obliged to obtain further accommodation for the book stock of The Mitchell Library and to suggest that the Library be further extended. The sub-committee appointed to consider his report found that the Library, originally designed to accommodate 330,000 volumes, now held approximately 400,000, and that the number was increasing at a rate of 6-10,000 per annum, large numbers of books being stored in corridors as there was no room for additional shelving in which to accommodate them. The area suggested for an extension by Pitt was deemed suitable, and the project was approved. However, having initiated the project, Pitt did not, however, see its commencement in March 1939; he died, suddenly, on 27th August 1937 and was succeeded as City Librarian by Robert Bain.

Later life

By 1920, Pitt had moved to “Stourleigh”, 8 Montrose Gardens in Milngavie, Dunbartonshire, where he resided until his death on 27 August 1937 at "Holmleigh", Coldingham, Berwickshire, at the age of fifty-nine. Septimus Albert Pitt was laid to rest in the graveyard of Parish Church of Saint Aidan, in Bamburgh, Northumberland.

Posthumous reputation

Pitt is recognised as having organised the first municipal commercial library in the country, which opened in Glasgow 1915, and he was an ardent advocate for their development elsewhere.
J. M. Mitchell, Secretary of the Carnegie United Kingdom Trust Fund, described Pitt as follows:
“At all times he kept his singularly agile, though cautious, mind alert to assess the value and the possibility of new ideas."