The Corporation's headquarters at 437 Madison Avenue in New York 
 | |
| Formation | 9 June 1911 | 
|---|---|
| Founder | Andrew Carnegie | 
| Type | Foundation | 
| Legal status | Nonprofit organization | 
| Purpose | To promote the advancement and diffusion of knowledge and understanding | 
| Headquarters | New York, United States | 
Region  
 | Global | 
| Methods | Grant-giving | 
| Fields | Education, democracy, international peace, higher education in Africa | 
President 
 | Vartan Gregorian | 
Chair of the Board 
 | Thomas Kean | 
Revenue (2018)  
 | $253 million | 
| Expenses (2018) | $180 million | 
| Endowment (2018) | $3.5 billion | 
| Website | www | 
The Carnegie Corporation of New York MHL is a philanthropic fund established by Andrew Carnegie in 1911 to support education programs across the United States, and later the world. Carnegie Corporation has endowed or otherwise helped to establish institutions that include the United States National Research Council, what was then the Russian Research Center at Harvard University (now known as the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies), the Carnegie libraries and the Children's Television Workshop. It also for many years generously funded Carnegie's other philanthropic organizations, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (CEIP), the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching (CFAT), and the Carnegie Institution for Science (CIS).
History
Founding and early years
By 1911 Andrew Carnegie had endowed five organizations in the US and three in the United Kingdom, and given more than $43 million to build public libraries and given another almost $110 million elsewhere. But ten years after he sold the Carnegie Steel Company, more than $150 million remained in his accounts and at 76, he wearied of philanthropic choices. Long-time friend Elihu Root
 suggested he establish a trust. Carnegie transferred most of his 
remaining fortune into it, and made the trust responsible for 
distributing his wealth after he died. Carnegie's previous charitable 
giving had used conventional organizational structures, but he chose a corporation as the structure for his last and largest trust. Chartered by the State of New York as the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the corporation's capital fund, originally worth about $135 million, had a market value of $1.55 billion on March 31, 1999.
In 1911-1912, Carnegie gave the corporation $125 million. At that time the corporation was the largest single philanthropic charitable trust ever established. He also made it a residual legatee
 under his will so it therefore received an additional $10 million, the 
remainder of his estate after had paid his other bequests. Carnegie 
reserved a portion of the corporation's assets for philanthropy in 
Canada and the then-British Colonies,
 an allocation first referred to as the Special Fund, then the British 
Dominions and Colonies Fund, and later the Commonwealth Program. Charter
 amendments have allowed the corporation to use 7.4 percent of its 
income in countries that are or once were members of the British Commonwealth.
In its early years Carnegie served as both president and trustee. His private secretary James Bertram
 and his financial agent, Robert A. Franks, acted as trustees as well 
and, respectively, corporation secretary and treasurer. This first 
executive committee made most of the funding decisions. Other seats on 
the board were held ex officio by presidents of five previously-established US Carnegie organizations:
- Carnegie Institute (of Pittsburgh) (1896),
 - Carnegie Institution of Washington (1902),
 - Carnegie Hero Fund Commission (1904),
 - Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching (CFAT) (1905),
 - Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (CEIP) (1910).
 
After Carnegie died in 1919, the trustees elected a full-time salaried president as the trust's chief executive officer and ex officio
 trustee. For a time the corporation's gifts followed the patterns 
Carnegie had already established. Grants for public libraries and church
 organs continued until 1917, and also went to other Carnegie 
organizations, and universities, colleges, schools, and educational 
agencies. Carnegie's letter of gift to the original trustees making the 
endowment said that the trustees would "best conform to my wishes by 
using their own judgement. "Corporation strategies changed over the years but remained focused on 
education, although the trust did also increasingly fund scientific 
research, convinced that the nation needed more scientific expertise and
 "scientific management". It also worked to build research facilities 
for the natural and social sciences. The corporation made large grants 
to the National Academy of Sciences/National Research Council, the Carnegie Institution of Washington, the National Bureau of Economic Research, Stanford University's now-defunct Food Research Institute and the Brookings Institution, then became interested in adult education and lifelong learning,
 an obvious follow-on to Carnegie's vision for libraries as "the 
university of the people". In 1919 it initiated the Americanization 
Study to explore educational opportunities for adults, primarily for new
 immigrants.
Frederick P. Keppel
With Frederick P. Keppel
 as president (1923-1941), the Carnegie Corporation shifted from 
creating public libraries to strengthening library infrastructure and 
services, developing adult education, and adding arts education to the 
programs of colleges and universities. The foundation's grants in this 
period have a certain eclectic quality and remarkable perseverance in 
its chosen causes.
Keppel initiated a famous 1944 study of race relations in the United States by the Swedish social economist Gunnar Myrdal
 in 1937 by naming a non-American outsider as manager of the study. His 
theory that this task should be done by someone unencumbered by 
traditional attitudes or earlier conclusions led to Myrdal's widely 
heralded book American Dilemma
 (1944). The book had no immediate effect on public policy, but was 
later much cited in legal challenges to segregation. Keppel believed 
foundations should make facts available and let them facts speak for 
themselves. His cogent writings on philanthropy made a lasting 
impression on field and influenced the organization and leadership of 
many new foundations.
In 1927 Keppel toured sub-Saharan Africa
 and recommended a first set of grants to establish public schools in 
eastern and southern Africa. Other grants went to for municipal library 
development in South Africa. During 1928 the corporation initiated the 
Carnegie Commission on the Poor White Problem in South Africa. Better 
known as the "Carnegie Poor White Study",
 it promoted strategies to improve the lives of rural Afrikaner whites 
and other poor whites in general. A memorandum sent to Keppel said there
 was "little doubt that if the natives were given full economic 
opportunity, the more competent among them would soon outstrip the less 
competent whites"  Keppel endorsed the project that produced the report, motivated by his concern with maintaining existing racial boundaries.{{unclear
 if this means he wants to keep them and that is why he is concerned, or
 he is concerned that they exist and sees their existence as the 
problem. The corporation's concern for the so-called "poor white 
problem"  in South Africa stemmed at least in part from similar 
misgivings about poor whites in the American South.
White poverty contradicted notions of racial superiority and 
hence it became the emphasis of "scientific" study.  The report 
recommended that "employment sanctuaries" be established for poor white 
workers and that poor white workers should replace "native" black 
workers in most skilled aspects of the economy. The authors of the report suggested that racial deterioration and miscegenation would be the outcome
 unless something was done to help poor whites, and endorsed the idea 
that maintaining white superiority would require help from social 
institutions. The report expressed fear of a loss of white racial pride, and that poor whites would not be able to resist "Africanisation."
 Seeking to prevent a class-based movement uniting the poor of all 
races, the report advised increasing race as opposed to class 
differences in order to make race the social criterion of status, not 
class.
Charles Dollard
World
 War II and its immediate aftermath were a relatively inactive period 
for the Carnegie Corporation. Charles Dollard had joined the staff in 
1939 as Keppel's assistant and became president in 1948. The foundation 
took greater interest in the social sciences, and particularly the study
 of human behavior. The trust also entered into international affairs. 
Dollard urged it to fund quantitative, "objective" social science 
research like research in physical sciences, and help to diffuse the 
results through major universities. The corporation advocated for standardized testing
 in schools to determine academic merit regardless of the student's 
socio-economic background. Its initiatives have also included helping to
 broker the creation of the Educational Testing Service in 1947.
The corporation determined that the US increasingly needed policy
 and scholarly expertise in international affairs, and so tied into area studies programs at colleges and universities as well as the Ford Foundation. In 1948 the trust also provided the seed money
 to establish the Russian Research Center at Harvard University, today 
known as the Davis Center for Russia and Eurasian Studies, as an organization that could address large-scale research from both a policy and educational points of view.
In 1951 the Group Areas Act took effect in South Africa and effectively put the apartheid
 system into place, leading to political ascendancy for Afrikaners and 
dispossession for many Africans and colored people suddenly required to 
live in certain areas of the country only, on pain of imprisonment for 
remaining in possession of homes in areas designated for whites. The 
Carnegie corporation pulled its philanthropic endeavors from South 
Africa for more than two decades after this political change, turning 
its attention from South Africa to developing East African and West African universities instead.
John Gardner
John W. Gardner
 was promoted from a staff position to the presidency in 1955. Gardner 
simultaneously became president of the CFAT, which was housed at the 
corporation. During Gardner's time in office the Carnegie Corporation 
worked to upgrade academic competence in foreign area studies and 
strengthened its liberal arts education program. In the early 1960s it inaugurated a continuing education program and funded development of new models for advanced and professional study by mature women. Gardner's interest in leadership development led to the White House Fellows program in 1964. 
Notable grant projects in higher education in sub-Saharan Africa include the 1959-60 Ashby Commission study of Nigerian needs in postsecondary education.
 This study stimulated aid increases from the United Kingdom, Europe, 
and the United States to African nations' systems of higher and 
professional education. Gardner had a strong interest in education, but 
as a psychologist he believed in the behavioral sciences
 and urged the corporation to funded much of the US' basic research on 
cognition, creativity, and the learning process, particularly among 
young children, associating psychology and education. Perhaps its most 
important contribution to reform of pre-college education at this time 
was the series of education studies done by James B. Conant, former president of Harvard University;
 in particular, Conant's study of comprehensive American high schools 
(1959) resolved public controversy concerning the purpose of public 
secondary education, and made the case that schools could adequately 
educate both average students and the academically gifted.
Under Gardner, the corporation embraced strategic 
philanthropy—planned, organized, and deliberately constructed to attain 
stated ends. Funding criteria no longer required just a socially 
desirable project. The corporation sought out projects that would 
produce knowledge leading to useful results, communicated to 
decision-makers, the public, and the media, in order to foster policy 
debate. Developing programs that larger organizations, especially 
governments, could implement and scale in size became a major objective.
 The policy shift to institutional knowledge transfer came in part as a 
response to relatively diminished resources that made it necessary to 
leverage assets and "multiplier effects" to have any effect at all.
 The corporation considered itself a trendsetter in philanthropy, often 
funding research or providing seed money for ideas while others financed
 more costly operations. For example, ideas it advanced resulted in the National Assessment of Educational Progress, later adopted by the federal government. A foundation's most precious asset was its sense of direction, Gardner said,
 gathering a competent professional staff of generalists that he called 
his "cabinet of strategy," and regarded as a resource as important to 
the corporation as its endowment.
Alan Pifer
While
 Gardner's opinion of educational equality was to multiply the channels 
through which an individual could pursue opportunity, it was during the 
term of long-time staff member Alan Pifer,
 who became acting president during 1965 and president during 1967 
(again of both Carnegie Corporation and the CFAT), that the foundation 
began to respond to claims by various groups, including women, for 
increased power and wealth. The corporation developed three interlocking
 objectives: prevention of educational disadvantage; equality of 
educational opportunity in the schools; and broadened opportunities in 
higher education. A fourth objective cutting across these programs was 
to improve the democratic performance of government. Grants were made to
 reform state government as the laboratories of democracy, underwrite voter education drives, and mobilize youth to vote, among other measures.
 Use of the legal system became a method for achieving equal opportunity
 in education, as well as redress of grievance, and the corporation 
joined the Ford and Rockefeller foundations and others in funding 
educational litigation by civil rights organizations. It also initiated a
 multifaceted program to train black lawyers in the South for the 
practice of public interest law and to increase the legal representation
 of black people.
Maintaining its commitment to early childhood education, the 
corporation endorsed the application of research knowledge in 
experimental and demonstration programs, which subsequently provided 
strong evidence of the long-term positive effects of high-quality early 
education, particularly for the disadvantaged. A 1980 report on an 
influential study, the Perry Preschool Project of the HighScope 
Educational Research Foundation, on the outcomes for sixteen-year-olds 
enrolled in the experimental preschool programs provided crucial 
evidence that safeguarded Project Head Start
 in a time of deep cuts to federal social programs. The foundation also 
promoted educational children's television and initiated the Children's Television Workshop, producer of Sesame Street and other noted children's programs. Growing belief in the power of educational television prompted creation of the Carnegie Commission on Educational Televisio n, whose recommendations were adopted into the Public Broadcasting Act
 of 1968 that established a public broadcasting system. Many other 
reports on US education the corporation financed at this time, included Charles E. Silberman's acclaimed Crisis in the Classroom (1971), and the controversial Inequality: A Reassessment of the Effect of Family and Schooling in America by Christopher Jencks (1973). This report confirmed quantitative research, e.g. the Coleman Report,
 showed that in public schools resources only weakly correlated with 
educational outcomes, which coincided with the foundation's burgeoning 
interest in improved school effectiveness.
Becoming involved with South Africa again during the mid-1970s, 
the corporation worked through universities to increase the legal 
representation of black people and increase the practice of public 
interest law. At the University of Cape Town,
 it established the Second Carnegie Inquiry into Poverty and Development
 in Southern Africa, this time to examine the legacies of apartheid
 and make recommendations to nongovernmental organizations for actions 
commensurate with the long-run goal of achieving a democratic, 
interracial society.
The influx of nontraditional students and "baby boomers"
 into higher education prompted formation of the Carnegie Commission on 
Higher Education (1967), funded by the CFAT. (During 1972, the CFAT 
became an independent institution after experiencing three decades of 
restricted control over its own affairs.) In its more than ninety 
reports, the commission made detailed suggestions for introducing more 
flexibility into the structure and financing of higher education. One 
outgrowth of the commission's work was creation of the federal Pell 
grants program offering tuition assistance for needy college students. 
The corporation promoted the Doctor of Arts "teaching" degree as well as
 various off-campus undergraduate degree programs, including the Regents
 Degree of the State of New York and Empire State College.
 The foundation's combined interest in testing and higher education 
resulted in establishment of a national system of college credit by 
examination (College-Level Entrance Examination Program of the College Entrance Examination Board).
 Building on its past programs to promote the continuing education of 
women, the foundation made a series of grants for the advancement of 
women in academic life. Two other study groups formed to examine 
critical problems in American life were the Carnegie Council on Children
 (1972) and the Carnegie Commission on the Future of Public Broadcasting
 (1977), the latter formed almost ten years after the first commission.
David A. Hamburg
David A. Hamburg,
 a physician, educator, and scientist with a public health background, 
became president in 1982 intending to mobilize the best scientific and 
scholarly talent and thinking on "prevention of rotten outcomes" - from 
early childhood to international relations. The corporation pivoted from
 higher education to the education and healthy development of children 
and adolescents, and the preparation of youth for a scientific and 
technological, knowledge-driven world. In 1984 the corporation 
established the Carnegie Commission on Education and the Economy. Its 
major publication, A Nation Prepared (1986), reaffirmed the role of the teacher as the "best hope" for quality in elementary and secondary education.
 That report led to the establishment a year later of the National Board
 for Professional Teaching Standards, to consider ways to attract able 
candidates to teaching and recognize and retain them. At the 
corporation's initiative, the American Association for the Advancement of Science issued two reports, Science for All Americans (1989) and Benchmarks for Science Literacy
 (1993), which recommended a common core of learning in science, 
mathematics, and technology for all citizens and helped set national 
standards of achievement.
A new emphasis for the corporation was the danger to world peace posed by the superpower confrontation and weapons of mass destruction. The foundation underwrote scientific study of the feasibility of the proposed federal Strategic Defense Initiative and joined the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation to support the analytic work of a new generation of arms control and nuclear nonproliferation experts. After the end of the USSR,
 corporation grants helped promote the concept of cooperative security 
among erstwhile adversaries and projects to build democratic 
institutions in the former Soviet Union and Central Europe. The Prevention of Proliferation Task Force, coordinated by a grant to the Brookings Institution,
 inspired the Nunn-Lugar Amendment to the Soviet Threat Reduction Act of
 1991, intended to help dismantle Soviet nuclear weapons and reduce 
proliferation risks.
 More recently, the corporation addressed interethnic and regional 
conflict and funded projects seeking to diminish the risks of a wider 
war resulting from civil strife. Two Carnegie commissions, Reducing the 
Nuclear Danger (1990), the other Preventing Deadly Conflict (1994), 
addressed the dangers of human conflict and the use of weapons of mass 
destruction. The corporation's emphasis in Commonwealth Africa, 
meanwhile, shifted to women's health and political development and the 
application of science and technology, including new information 
systems, to foster research and expertise in indigenous scientific 
institutions and universities. 
During Hamburg's tenure, dissemination achieved even greater primacy with respect to strategic philanthropy.
 Consolidation and diffusion of the best available knowledge from social
 science and education research was used to improve social policy and 
practice, as partner with major institutions with the capability to 
influence public thought and action. If "change agent" was a major term 
during Pifer's time, "linkage" became a byword in Hamburg's. The 
corporation increasingly used its convening powers to bring together 
experts across disciplinary and sectoral boundaries to create policy 
consensus and promote collaboration. 
Continuing tradition, the foundation established several other 
major study groups, often directed by the president and managed by a 
special staff. Three groups covered the educational and developmental 
needs of children and youth from birth to age fifteen: the Carnegie 
Council on Adolescent Development (1986), the Carnegie Task Force on 
Meeting the Needs of Young Children (1991), and the Carnegie Task Force 
on Learning in the Primary Grades (1994). Another, the Carnegie 
Commission on Science, Technology, and Government (1988), recommended 
ways that government at all levels could make more effective use of 
science and technology in their operations and policies. Jointly with 
the Rockefeller Foundation, the corporation financed the National Commission on Teaching & America's Future, whose report, What Matters Most
 (1996), provided a framework and agenda for teacher education reform 
across the country. These study groups drew on knowledge generated by grant programs and inspired follow-up grantmaking to implement their recommendations.
Vartan Gregorian
During the presidency of Vartan Gregorian the corporation reviewed its management structure and grants programs.
 In 1998 the corporation established four primary program headings: 
education, international peace and security, international development, 
and democracy. In these four main areas, the corporation continued to 
engage with major issues confronting higher education. Domestically, it 
emphasized reform of teacher education and examined the current status 
and future of liberal arts
 education in the United States. Abroad, the corporation sought to 
devise methods to strengthen higher education and public libraries in 
Commonwealth Africa. As a cross-program initiative, and in cooperation 
with other foundations and organizations, the corporation instituted a 
scholars program, offering funding to individual scholars, particularly 
in the social sciences and humanities, in the independent states of the former Soviet Union.
Honours
- Honorary-Member of the Order of Liberty, Portugal (5 April 2018)