Description:

Frankfurter Felix



Felix Frankfurter TLS Regarding Sisyphean Task of "keeping up … with literature"


1p TLS on "Harvard University" watermarked paper with "Law School of Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass." letterhead, signed by future Supreme Court Associate Justice Felix Frankfurter (1882-1965) as "Felix Frankfurter --" at bottom right. In near fine condition. Expected paper folds, a few wrinkles, and a light paperclip impression in upper left corner. Page measures  5.25" x 8".


Felix Frankfurter wrote this TLS on February 25, 1941 from Cambridge, Massachusetts, thanking New York lawyer Harold Roland Shapiro for sending him a copy of his book. "I hope to savor [the book] at least as soon as may be. I sometimes feel that the job of keeping up even with the literature in one's own immediate field is nowadays not less difficult than was that of Sisyphus".


Fellow lawyer Harold Roland Shapiro (active 1930-1970) was admitted to the New York bar in 1927. Shapiro served for many years as a New York City Assistant District Attorney dealing mainly with criminal cases. Although in 1938 his most recently published book was What Every Young Man Should Know About War (1937), he likely sent Frankfurter a copy of his Should Labor Unions Be Regulated by Law? (1935). This book discussing modern labor laws would have merited Frankfurter's comments about staying abreast with the "literature in one's own immediate field". Shapiro's scholarly interests were diverse: he also published a tribute to Lincoln historian and personal friend Emanuel Hertz in 1941.


Austrian Jewish immigrant Felix Frankfurter graduated from Harvard Law School in 1906 with a superb academic record. He soon joined the faculty of his alma mater, serving as a Professor of Law from 1914-1924, and as a Professor of Administrative Law from 1924-1939. The New York lawyer was appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court by 33rd U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, whose close advisor he later became. Frankfurter served on the bench from 1941 until retirement in 1962.


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