Hostname: page-component-84b7d79bbc-tsvsl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-30T22:37:21.073Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Felix Frankfurter and Reinhold Niebuhr: 1940-1964

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 April 2015

Extract

By the time the correspondence between Felix Frankfurter (1882-1965) and Reinhold Niebuhr (1892-1971) was underway, both men were well established in their respective careers. Frankfurter, coming from a prestigious post at the Harvard Law School, took the oath of office as Associate Justice of the Supreme Court on January 30, 1939. Niebuhr, occupying the Chair of Christian Ethics at Union Theological Seminary in New York, had recently returned from Edinburgh where he had delivered the highly regarded Gifford Lectures soon to be published in two significant volumes, The Nature and Destiny of Man (1941-1943).

During the period of their correspondence Frankfurter emerged as a major voice in American jurisprudence and came to fulfill the prognostication of Harold Ickes who once told Franklin Roosevelt; “If you appoint Frankfurter, his ability and learning are such that he will dominate the Supreme Court for fifteen or twenty years to come.” Niebuhr, meanwhile, experienced a meteoric rise to prominence in both theological and political circles and stood as one of the towering figures in American life. His contributions to American intellectual history were vast and varied, making him both the most important theologian in the American tradition since Jonathan Edwards, and, in the words of Hans Morgenthau, “the greatest living political philosopher of America, perhaps the only creative political philosopher since Calhoun.”

Type
Correspondence Essay
Copyright
Copyright © Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University 1983

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. 2 Ickes, H., The Secret Diary of Harold Ickes: 1936-39 540 (1954)Google Scholar.

2. Morgenthau, , The Influence of Reinhold Niebuhr in American Life and Thought, in H. Reinhold Niebuhr: A Prophetic Voice in Our Time 109 (Landon, H. ed. 1962)Google Scholar.

3. Frankfurter to his wife (Oct. 3, 1922) (Frankfurter Collection, Library of Congress) [hereinafter cited as FCLC]

4. Niebuhr, , Tribute to Felix Frankfurter, 76 Harv. L. Rev. 20 (1962)Google Scholar.

5. Id. at 21.

6. One example will suffice. American historian C. Van Woodward in writing of Niebuhr's concept of irony once commented: “I realize that Niebuhr's view of human strivings is based on theology, a subject definitely beyond my province. Whatever its theological implications—and I have frankly never explored them—the view has a validity apart from them that appeals to this historian.” Woodward, , The Burden of Southern History 173 (1960)Google Scholar.

7. Frankfurter, F., Felix Frankfurter Reminisces 291 (Phillips, H. ed. 1960)Google Scholar.

8. I have also taken the liberty of correcting typographical errors and occasional misspellings in the text of the Frankfurter-Niebuhr correspondence. In most cases the available letters are carbon copies, the originals of which we can assume underwent the necessary corrections. In addition, subsequent to the onset of his grave illness, Niebuhr laboriously worked one-handed at his own typewriter—a task which often resulted in understandable mistakes. One final word: Except where there is clear evidence that Frankfurter and Niebuhr signed their correspondence “Felix” or “Reinie”—which they often did—I have chosen to use their full names as signers of their respective letters.

9. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (Feb. 21, 1940) (Niebuhr Collection, Library of Congress), [hereinafter cited as NCLC].

10. For a brief account of Niebuhr's role in Tillich's move to the United States see Pauck, W. & Pauck, M., Paul Tillich: His Life and Thought 133ff (1976)Google Scholar.

11. See Bingham, J., Courage to Change: An Introduction to the Life and Thought of Reinhold Niebuhr 168ff (1961)Google Scholar.

12. Niebuhr to Frankfurter, (Nov. 17, 1940) (FCLC, supra note 3).

13. Burlingham to Frankfurter (Nov. 23, 1941) (FCLC, supra note 3).

14. Robbins to Frankfurter (Nov. 28, 1941) (FCLC, supra note 3).

15. Welles to Frankfurter (Dec. 3, 1941) (FCLC, supra note 3).

16. Frankfurter to Welles (Dec. 4, 1941) (FCLC, supra note 3).

17. Frankfurter to Burlingham (Dec. 4, 1941) (FCLC, supra note 3).

18. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (n.d.) (FCLC, supra note 3).

19. Niebuhr to MacLeish (Mar. 8, n.d.) (FCLC, supra note 3).

20. Niebuhr, R., Jews After the War: Parts I & II, in Love and Justice: Selections from the Shorter Writings of Reinhold Niebuhr (Robertson, D. ed. 1957)Google Scholar.

21. For an extended discussion of Niebuhr's relationship to Jewish life and thought see Rice, , Reinhold Niebuhr and Judaism, 45 J. Amer. Acad. Rel. 101–47 (1977)Google Scholar.

22. Niebuhr, R., The Relation of Christians and Jews in Western Civilization, Pious and Secular America 86112 (1958)Google Scholar; Niebuhr, , The Unsolved Religious Problems in Christrian-Jewish Relations, 26 Christianity and Crisis, 12 12, 1966 at 279–83Google Scholar.

23. Niebuhr, supra note 20, at 133-34, 138-39.

24. Frankfurter reminisced about the personal dynamics involved between himself, Brandeis, and Weizmann. See Frankfurter, supra note 7, at 178-88.

25. Frankfurter to Niebuhr, (Dec. 24, 1941) (FCLC, supra note 3).

26. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (Mar. 10, 1942) (FCLC, supra note 3).

27. Conant to Niebuhr (Aug. 1, 1942) (NCLC, supra note 9).

28. Lash, J., From the Diaries of Felix Frankfurter 184–85 (1975)Google Scholar.

29. Jefferson, for example, wrote: “Whatsoever is lawful in the Commonwealth, or permitted to the subject in ordinary way, cannot be forbidden to him for religious uses: and whatever is prejudicial to the Commonwealth in their ordinary uses and therefore prohibited by the laws, ought not to be permitted to churches in their social rites …. This is the true extent of toleration.” Jefferson, T., Notes on Religion (dated 10, 1776)Google Scholar, in The Complete Jefferson, Containing his Major Writings, Published and Unpublished, Except his Letters 945 (Padiver, S., ed. 1943)Google Scholar.

Franklin, on the other hand, put the matter this way in his Autobiography: “I never doubted, for instance, the existence of the Deity; that he made the world, and govern'd it by his Providence; that the most acceptable service of God was the doing of good to men; that our souls are immortal; and that all crime will be punished, and virtue rewarded, either here or hereafter. These I esteem'd the essentials of every religion; and, being to be found in all the religions we had in our country, I respected them all, tho' with different degrees of respect, as I found them more or less mix'd with other articles, which, without any tendency to inspire, promote, or confirm morality, serv'd principally to divide us, and make us unfriendly to one another.” Franklin, B., Representative Selections 6070 (Mott, F. and Jorgenson, C. eds. 1936)Google Scholar.

30. McCollum v. Board of Education, 333 U.S. 203, 216-17 (1948).

31. Reed, , McCollum v. Board of Education, dissenting opinion, 8 Christianity and Crisis, 03 29, 1948, at 39Google Scholar.

32. Konefsky, S., The Constitutional World of Mr. Justice Felix Frankfurter 180 (1949)Google Scholar.

33. Statement on Church and State, 8 Christianity and Crisis, 03 29, 1948, at 90Google Scholar.

34. Supra note 31, at 39.

35. Niebuhr, , Democracy as a Religion, 7 Christianity and Crisis, 08 4, 1947, at 1Google Scholar.

36. Frankfurter to Stone (May 27, 1940) (FCLC supra note 3).

37. Minersville District v. Gobitis, 310 U.S. 586, 594-96 (1940).

38. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Mar. 31, 1948) (FCLC supra note 3).

39. Niebuhr, , In Memorium: Felix Frankfurter, 25 Christianity and Crisis, 04 5, 1965 at 69Google Scholar.

40. The problem of “Civil Religion” in America has preoccupied scholars in theology, church history, and sociology of religion in recent years. See Herberg, W., Protestant, Catholic, Jew: An Essay in American Religious Sociology (1955)Google Scholar; Marty, M., The New Shape of American Religion (1959)Google Scholar; Mead, S., The Lively Experiment (1959)Google Scholar; Mead, S., The Nation with the Soul of a Church (1975)Google Scholar; S. Mead, The Old Religion in the Brave New World; Bellah, R., The Broken Covenant: American Civil Religion in time of Trial (1975)Google Scholar; Bellah, , Civil Religion in America, Daedalus (Winter, 1967)Google Scholar.

41. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (April 2, 1948) (FCLC supra note 3).

42. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (April 9, 1948) (FCLC supra note 3).

43. Bingham, supra note 11, at 317.

44. Niebuhr, , Ten Fateful Years, 11 Christianity and Crisis, 02 5, 1951, at 14Google Scholar.

45. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (Feb. 21, 1952) (FCLC supra note 3).

46. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (Oct. 1, 1951) (FCLC supra note 3).

47. Niebuhr, R., The Irony of American History 23, 29 (1952)Google Scholar.

48. Frankfurter to the Niebuhrs (Nov. 7, 1951) (FCLC, supra note 3).

49. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Nov. 10, 1951) (FCLC, supra note 3).

50. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (Nov. 20, 1951) (FCLC, supra note 3).

51. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (May 17, 1952) (FCLC, supra note 3).

52. Bennett, , Editorial Note, 12 Christianity and Crisis, 05 12, 1952, at 58Google Scholar.

53. Frankfurter, , New York Times (11 13, 1932)Google Scholar.

54. Baker, L., Felix Frankfurter 218 (1969)Google Scholar.

55. For a detailed picture of the course of Niebuhr's illness see Bingham, supra note 11, at 317-336.

56. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (May 19, 1952) (FCLC, supra note 3).

57. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Feb. 5, 1953) (FCLC, supra note 3).

58. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (Feb. 20, 1953) (FCLC, supra note 3).

59. Brown, , Confessions of a Political Neophyte, 12 Christianity and Crisis, 01 19, 1953, at 186191Google Scholar.

60. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Feb. 25, 1953) (FCLC, supra note 3).

61. Bolt, R., A Man for All Seasons 5556 (no date)Google Scholar.

62. Frankfurter, F., Of Law and Men: Papers and Addresses of Felix Frankfurter 1939-1956, 3940 (Elman, P. ed. 1956)Google Scholar.

63. Id. at 40-41.

64. Supra note 7, at 300-01.

65. Id. at 300.

66. Id. at 300-301.

67. Supra note 62, at 41.

68. Macleish, A. and Prichard, E. Jr., Law and Politics: Occasional Papers of Felix Frankfurter 1913-1938, 2324 (1971)Google Scholar.

69. Baker, supra note 54, at 222-223.

70. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (April 6, 1953) (FCLC, supra note 3).

71. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (April 10, 1953) (FCLC, supra note 3).

72. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (May 18, 1954) (FCLC, supra note 3).

73. Frankfurter, , Some Observations on the Nature of the Judicial Process of Supreme Court Litigation 98 Proc. of the Amer. Philosophical Soc. 233239 (1954)Google Scholar.

74. Id. at 234.

75. Id. at 237.

76. Baker, supra note 54, at 308.

77. Kurland, P., Mr. Justice Frankfurter and the Constitution 201 (1971)Google Scholar.

78. Id. 201-202.

79. Frankfurter, supra note 73, at 233.

80. Baker, supra note 54, at 318-19.

81. Christopher Niebuhr to the author (Nov. 20, 1978).

82. Baker, supra note 54, at 319.

83. Niebuhr, , Bad Days at Little Rock, 17 Christianity and Crisis, 10 14, 1957, at 131Google Scholar.

84. Baker, supra note 59, at 323-24.

85. Niebuhr, , Winston Churchill and Great Britain, 15 Christianity and Crisis, 05 2, 1955, at 5152Google Scholar.

86. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (May 14, 1955) (FCLC, supra note 3).

87. Niebuhr to Eliot (Sept. 14, 1954) (NCLC supra note 9).

88. Eliot to Niebuhr (Sept. 27, 1954) (NCLC supra note 9).

89. Niebuhr to Eliot (Oct. 1, 1954) (NCLC supra note 9).

90. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (May 16, 1955) (NCLC supra note 9).

91. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (May 17, 1955) (FCLC supra note 3).

92. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (May 18, 1955) (FCLC supra note 3).

93. Frankfurter, supra note 62, at 190.

94. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (July 11, 1955) (FCLC supra note 3).

95. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (Dec. 28, 1956) (FCLC, supra note 3).

96. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Dec. 31, 1956) (FCLC, supra note 3).

97. Oppenheimer to Niebuhr (Dec. 17, 1956) (NCLC supra note 9).

98. Niebuhr to Oppenheimer (Dec. 21, 1956) (NCLC, supra note 9).

99. Oppenheimer to Niebuhr (Jan. 18, 1957) (NCLC, supra note 9).

100. Muse, B., Virginia's Massive Resistance 39 (1961)Google Scholar.

101. Maston, T., Segregation and Desegregation: A Christian Approach 34 (1959)Google Scholar.

102. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (Feb. 6, 1957) (FCLC, supra note 3).

103. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Feb. 8, 1957) (FCLC, supra note 3).

104. Niebuhr, , Our Stake in the State of Israel, 136 The New Republic, 02 4, 1957, at 912Google Scholar.

105. Id. at 11.

106. Id. at 12.

107. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (Feb. 15, 1957) (FCLC, supra note 3).

108. Niebuhr, supra note 104, at 12.

109. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Feb. 19, 1957) (FCLC, supra note 3).

110. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Mar. 11, 1957) (FCLC, supra note 3.)

111. United States v. Automobile Workers, 352 U.S. 567 (1957).

112. Id. at 590-91.

113. Id. at 585.

114. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (Mar. 27, 1957) (FCLC, supra note 3).

115. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Apr. 24, 1957) (FCLC, supra note 3).

116. Baker, supra note 54, at 179-91.

117. Frankfurter, supra note 62, at 206. Frankfurter's article first appeared in 104 U. PA. L. REV. (December, 1955).

118. Frankfurter, supra note 62, at 206.

119. Id. at 212.

120. Id. at 210, 212.

121. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (June 26, 1957) (FCLC, supra note 3).

122. Dennis v. United States, 341 U.S. 494, 555-56 (1951).

123. Yates v. United States, 354 U.S. 298, 318, 320-22 (1957).

124. Redford, E., American Government and the Economy 228 (1965)Google Scholar.

125. United States v. du Pont & Co., 353 U.S. 586, 610-11 (1957).

126. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Oct. 14, 1957) (FCLC, supra note 3).

127. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (Oct. 16, 1957) (FCLC, supra note 3).

128. Niebuhr, R., Why the Christian Church is Not Pacifist, in Christianity and Power Politics 2, 8 (1952)Google Scholar.

129. Id. at 14.

130. Harland, G., The Thought of Reinhold Niebuhr 219 (1960)Google Scholar.

131. Niebuhr, supra note 128, at 4, 5.

132. Id. at 31.

133. Id.

134. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Oct. 18, 1957) (FCLC, supra note 3).

135. Welsh v. United States, 398 U.S. 333 (1970).

136. Id. at 344.

137. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (Oct. 27, 1958) (FCLC, supra note 3).

138. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Oct. 30, 1958) (FCLC, supra note 3).

139. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Jan. 3, 1959) (FCLC, supra note 3).

140. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Feb. 13, 1959) (FCLC, supra note 3).

141. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (Mar. 10, 1960) (FCLC, supra note 3).

142. Frankfurter, supra note 7, at 68.

143. Id. at 75.

144. Frankfurter, , Of Law and Life and Other Things That Matter: The Papers and Addresses of Felix Frankfurter 1956-1963 64 (Kurland, P. ed. 1965)Google Scholar.

145. Id. at 67-68.

146. Niebuhr, , The Church and the South African Tragedy, 20 Christianity and Crisis, 05 2, 1960, at 53Google Scholar.

147. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (May 24, 1960) (FCLC, supra note 3).

148. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (May 26, 1960) (FCLC, supra note 3).

149. New York Times, 05 22, 1960, part 4, p. 12Google Scholar.

150. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (May 31, 1960) (FCLC supra note 3).

151. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (July 23, 1960) (FCLC, supra note 3).

152. Frankfurter to Niebuhr (Dec. 6, 1960) (FCLC, supra note 3).

153. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Feb. 3, 1961) (FCLC, supra note 3).

154. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Nov. 8, 1961) (FCLC, supra note 3).

155. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Jan. 2, 1962) (FCLC, supra note 3).

156. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Feb. 15, 1962) (FCLC, supra note 3).

157. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Mar. 29, 19620 (FCLC, supra note 3).

158. Frankfurter, supra note 144, at 246-47.

159. Id. at 247-48.

160. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Oct. 21, 1962) (FCLC, supra note 3).

161. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Nov. 15, 1962) (FCLC, supra note 3).

162. Niebuhr, supra note 4, at 20-21.

163. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Dec. 5, 1962) (FCLC, supra note 3).

164. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Oct. 7, 1963) (FCLC, supra note 3).

165. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Nov. 20, 1963) (FCLC, supra note 3).

166. Niebuhr to Frankfurter (Dec. 20, 1964) (FCLC, supra note 3).

167. Niebuhr, supra note 39, at 70.

168. Niebuhr, R., Man's Nature and His Communities 25 (1965)Google Scholar.

169. Id. at 24.

170. Niebuhr, supra note 39, at 69.