Subject File: Criminal Justice - Printed Items (Misc.)., 01/01/1943-12/31/1957
Collection-level Scope and Content Note
This collection consists of the personal papers of former U.S. attorney general Francis Biddle. It is one of three portions comprising the larger collection of the Biddle Family papers that include the papers of his wife, Katherine Biddle and a series of family correspondence (see separate finding aids).
Of interest are lengthy correspondence files relating to Biddle's appointments as judge of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (1939); U.S. attorney general (1941); and member-judge of the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg, Germany (1945-1946).
Notable correspondents include, among many others, Dean Acheson, Conrad Aiken, Thurman Arnold, Bernard Berenson, Henry Beston, Norman Birkett, Alain Bosquet, Van Wyck Brooks, Stimson Bullitt, Roy Basler, William Rose Benet, Richard Crowder, Agnes de Mille, Gertrude Ely, T.S. Eliot, Abe Fortas, Felix Frankfurter, Learned Hand, Oscar Hammerstein, August Heckscher, J. Edgar Hoover; Cordell Hull, Sturgis Ingersoll, Lyndon B. Johnson, John F. Kennedy, Jacqueline Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, Emmet Lavery, Frieda Lawrence, Robert Lowell, Clare Boothe Luce, Henry McCarter, Archibald MacLeish, Jacques Maritain, Gian Carlo Menotti, Marion Merrell, Nancy Mitford, Henry Morgenthau, Lewis Mumford, L. Quincy Mumford, Charlton Ogburn, Boies Penrose, Eleanor and Franklin D. Roosevelt (particularly wartime memoranda, 1944-45), A.L. Rowse, Karl Shapiro, Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., Lisa Sergio, Edward R. Stettinius, Adlai Stevenson, Harry L. Stimson, Leopold and Olga Stokowski, Allen Tate, Virgil Thomson, Lionel Trilling, Harry S. Truman, Robert Wagner, Henry A. Wallace, Herbert Wechsler, Owen Wister, and Mark Van Doren.
Included are correspondence files and manuscripts relating to Biddle's major works including his two-volume autobiography, "A Casual Past" (1961), and "In Brief Authority," (1962); two works on Oliver Wendell Holmes, "Mr. Justice Holmes (1942), and "Justice Holmes, Natural Law, and the Supreme Court" (a series of lectures, 1961); "The World's Best Hope" (1949); and "The Fear of Freedom" (1952). There are also typescripts and reprints of many articles by Biddle, as well as correspondence and manuscripts relating to a play about the English Quaker and founder of Pennsylvania William Penn (1644-1718), written by Biddle and adapted for the stage by Richard Waters.
Note on the index to the original printed finding aid: An effort has been made to index as many individual correspondents as possible; however time constraints have made it necessary to index selectively for some folders. For a complete listing of correspondents, it is therefore advisable to consult the folder descriptions. If the names of individuals listed in a particular folder description are marked with an asterisk (*) it can be assumed that only those are indexed. If no asterisks mark any names for a given folder, it can be assumed that ALL names listed for that folder have been indexed. Also note that names appear as given or as signed, unless further information is available.
Dates
- 01/01/1943-12/31/1957
Collection-level Access Restrictions
Permission of the Biddle Family is required before accessing this collection. The Booth Family Center for Special Collections can provide information on the permission process.
Collections stored off site require a minimum of three days for retrieval. For use of all manuscripts collections, researchers are advised to contact the Booth Family Center for Special Collections in advance of any visit.
Extent
From the Collection: 22.25 Linear Feet (14 archival boxes)
Language of Materials
From the Collection: English
Container Summary
Printed items relating to the U.S. Department of Justice and criminal law issues, as follows: - Department of Justice news release re the indictment of corporations that violated the Sherman Antitrust Act. Dated 1/6/1943. - Address by Wendell Berge, entitled, "Civil Liberties after a Year of War," delivered at the annual meeting of the Chicago Civil Liberties Committee, 1/23/1943. - c.1943/44, Democratic National Committee pamphlet, "Justice for All: a Report on what the Democratic Administration has done to provide justice for all Americans." - Printed statement regarding the upholding by the Supreme Court of Section 20 of the Criminal Code which "penalizes any person, who under color of any law or custom, willfully subjects any inhabitant to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured or protected by the Constitution and laws of the United States, on account of such inhabitant being an alien, or by reason of his color, or race..." Dated 6/25/1945. - Reprint of "Civil Liberties and Law Enforcement: the Role of the FBI," by J. Edgar Hoover, 1952. - Newspaper clipping, "Firm Hiring Ex-convicts Finds They Make Good" (New York Herald Tribune, 3/27/1956). - Reprint of "The Supreme Court Must Be Curbed," by James F. Byrnes, 5/18/1956. - Reprint of "Prisons Will Turn Them Out," by Martin Merson, March 1957. - Government document H.R. 8923, re a bill "to amend the definition of a youth offender under the Federal Youth Corrections Act to include persons under the age of twenty-six at the time of conviction." Dated 7/29/1957. - Government document H.J. Res. 424, re joint resolution "to improve the administration of justice by authorizing the establishment of institutes and joint councils on sentencing for the development of objectives, standards, procedures and policies to be followed in the sentencing of persons convcited of offenses against the United States..." Dated 7/29/1957. - Government document H.J. Res. 425, re joint resolution "to authorize the court in sentencing a prisoner to fix any earlier date when the prisoner shall become eligible for parole or to except such prisoner from the statuory limitation as to eligibility for parole when in the judgment of the court it might reasonably be expected to facilitate the rehabilitation of the prisoner." Dated 7/29/1957. - News release by Representative Emanuel Celler re introduction of legislation to revise federal sentencing procedures. Dated 7/29/1957. - Address by James V. Bennett, director of Bureau of Prisons, "Law and Corrections Open New Vistas for the Psychiatrist." Presented at the Forums Committtee, Menninger Foundation, 10/30/1957.
Subjects and Associated Physical Materials
CRIMINAL JUSTICE - PRINTED ARTICLES, REPORTS, ETC. 1943-57: Printed Item
SHERMAN ANTITRUST ACT - JUSTICE DEPARTMENT (U.S.) NEWS RELEASE 1943: Printed Item
JUSTICE DEPARTMENT (U.S.) - SHERMAN ANTITRUST ACT (NEWS RELEASE 1943): Printed Item
BERGE, WENDELL - ADDRESS: "CIVIL LIBERTIES AFTER A YEAR OF WAR" 1943: Printed Item
CIVIL LIBERTIES (U.S.) - ADDRESSES, ARTICLES, ETC. 1943-57: Printed Item
DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL COMMITTEE - PAMPHLET: "JUSTICE FOR ALL..." 1943/44: Printed Item
CRIMINAL CODE, SECTION 20 (U.S.) - REFERENCE 1945: Printed Item
HOOVER, J. EDGAR - ARTICLE: "CIVIL LIBERTIES...LAW ENFORCEMENT...FBI": Printed Item
SUPREME COURT (U.S.) - ARTICLES 1943-57: Printed Item
BYRNES, JAMES F. - ARTICLE: "SUPREME COURT MUST BE CURBED" 1956: Printed Item
CRIMINAL SENTENCING LEGISLATION (U.S.) - BILL, RESOLUTIONS 1957: Printed Item
MERSON, MARTIN - ARTICLE: "PRISONS WILL TURN THEM OUT" 1957: Printed Item
CELLER, EMANUEL - REFERENCE RE FEDERAL SENTENCING PROCEDURES 1957: Printed Item
BENNETT, JAMES V. - ADDRESS: "LAW AND CORRECTIONS...THE PSYCHIATRIST": Printed Item
Repository Details
Part of the Georgetown University Manuscripts Repository
Lauinger Library, 5th Floor
37th and O Streets, N.W.
Washington DC 20057
speccoll@georgetown.edu