Skip to content
Jul 27 / admin

He was one of the first to do business in Japan where he adopted an orphan girl

He was one of the first to do business in Japan, where he adopted an orphan girl from Hiroshima, who has continued to regard him as a father- figure. When the Charter 77 movement was launched in Czechoslovakia, he was quick to help by conveying copies of the Charter across the frontier in his car, for which he was held for a day by the police and refused a visa until the time of the velvet revolution.He was a founding trustee of the Czechoslovak Jewish Aid Trust (CJAT) which benefits Jews of Czech origin, but his charitable trustee, the Adler Foundation, makes donations to ecumenical UK charitable associations.After 1989, Adler put much energy into reintroducing the Czechs to a modern entrepreneurial economic system: promoting industrial companies, assisting Jewish organisations, and encouraging education regarding the European Community and Union. For this, on his 80th birthday, he was awarded the silver medal of the Foundation of King George of Podebrady – who had, in the 15th century, been the first to put forward a proposal for a form of European union.Ota Adler’s energy found yet another outlet in sporting activities, playing for the Harrow Rugby Club into his forties, skiing into his seventies, and deep-sea diving in between. He also assembled a fine collection of modern paintings.Ota Adler, businessman: born Kraslice, Czechoslovakia 14 December 1911; CBE 1973; married 1954 Suzanne Biro (three daughters); died London 8 March 1995..

Herman Wardwell (“Fritz”) Liebert was a distinctive personality in Johnson and Boswell studies, but will be remembered even more as the first librarian of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale. He was responsible for the development of its collections from a firm base in Yale’s historic library, but even more he provided the buoyant link between the Beinecke brothers who funded the marvellous new building and the traditions of Yale bibliophily which it enshrined and developed. A New Yorker by birth, Fritz Liebert graduated in English at Yale in 1933. His pre-war career was as a newspaperman, gathering experience he was to put to good use during war work with the economics branch of the Office of Strategic Services, and later in well-judged public relations for his library and its collections. He belonged to one of those generations of pre-war Yale men whose intellectual and collecting instincts had been inspired by Chauncey Tinker’s Johnsonian scholarship. It was his 18th- century interests that brought him back to Yale when the war was over, first as a Research Associate in the Sterling Library but with an increasing involvement in library administration.
The later 1940s were a good time to be an 18th-century specialist in New Haven, for there was the probability that Yale would acquire the James Boswell archives, at last reunited in the United States in the possession of Colonel Ralph Isham.Liebert was one of the quayside party which deputised for Isham when the Boswell papers arrived in New York on the Queen Mary in 1948, and he acted as go-between during their purchase by Yale a year later.

He was involved with them for the rest of his life, as a member of the Boswell editorial committee from its inception, and he was for long chairman of the publication committee of the Yale Edition of Samuel Johnson, presiding over its stately progress He was specially attracted to Johnson. He collected his works and memorabilia with gusto, and as generously passed them on to Yale, published a number of articles, and encouraged many young Johnsonian scholars.At Yale he became Curator of the Rare Book Room at the Sterling Library from 1958 to 1963. It had become clear that the university’s rapidly growing rare book collections would need separate accommodation, which the three Beinecke brothers were willing to provide. Gordon Bunshaft of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill designed a fine, rectangular granite and marble construction, beautifully finished, which was opened in 1963.

Fritz Liebert then received the keys of this fine new building like the captain of a newly commissioned liner. He was intensely proud of the building he served as Librarian until 1972.There had been problems during its construction. He liked to tell of the architect’s disappointment when the books in the massive glazed internal stack did not all have blue spines as in his drawings: Liebert explained that a more practical colour scheme would be necessary. The building – “a source of learning and inspiration” unlike so many of its generation – has stood the test of time. During his curatorship its collections developed purposefully, in its special areas of German literature, Western Americana, and medieval manuscripts as well as Liebert’s own interests in English literature.He had a particular rapport with benefactors – from the Beinecke family downwards – and was much liked in the higher echelons of the rare-book trade.