In 1911, Andrew Carnegie's private secretary,
James Bertram, published a set of guidelines that he saw as ideal for library architecture. Since three years previously, he had required libraries to submit plans for his approval before releasing money, due to what he saw as overly ornate designs being built with his employer's money. The Paulding County Carnegie Library is one of the best examples of Bertram's guidelines: instead of ornate entryways and runaway detailing, its design maximizes the amount of space devoted to the interior, and the
floor plan is designed for maximum efficiency. The library board chose a design submitted by a Columbus company, Howard and Merriam, which had already produced the design for the
Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center. Although the main floor is elevated above ground level, the building is a single-
story structure; its full
basement is elevated partially above the surface of the ground. The brickwork is primarily built in a French fashion; the gray bricks are matched by details of similarly colored
limestone from
Bedford, Indiana. Patrons enter the library by climbing a stairway with a stone
balustrade to a central entrance that sits within a stone archway; small
Palladian windows with stone
pediments are placed on each side of the entrance. Among the details visible on the building's exterior are
pilasters on all of its corners,
string courses that parallel the
lintels, multiple
cartouches, and an elaborate
cornice. Inside, the library features six rooms: three large book rooms, a
vestibule, a lobby, and an office. The design of the interior includes elements such as
marble in the vestibule, oak panels and decorations in the reading rooms, fireplaces, and
Tuscan pilasters. Although its architecture is restrained, the library remains a fine example of
Neoclassical architecture with a
Beaux-Arts influence. ==Historic designation==