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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.”
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- Copyright © Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University 1983
References
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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.
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