archives.nypl.org -- Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. papers (original) (raw)

The Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. papers, dating from 1922-2007, document the historian's life and work through extensive correspondence, journals, writings, research material, office files, and personal records. The papers provide insight into Schlesinger's philosophical, political, and historical thinking, while offering a glimpse of his daily activities. The collection represents Schlesinger's vocation as a popular and academic historian, as well as his life as a political activist and advisor. Every era of Schlesinger's life and career appear in the collection; however, much of the material generated by Schlesinger as part of the Kennedy Administration is held by the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum. The holdings of the Kennedy Library include correspondence, subject files, speech files, and telephone logs from Schlesinger's tenure at the White House. Research material for A Thousand Days, as well as various drafts of the book, can also be found among the Schlesinger papers at the Kennedy Library. Nineteen boxes of alphabetical correspondence unrelated to the Kennedy Administration, spanning the years 1945-1960, are held by the Kennedy Library; researchers seeking a complete record of Schlesinger's personal and professional correspondence should be prepared to search the Kennedy Library's collection also.

Schlesinger's correspondence spans almost his entire life, beginning when he was first learning to write, and continuing to his death. He corresponded with friends, acquaintances, colleagues, readers, publishers, editors, and relatives. The collection illustrates the often fluid nature of those categories, as Schlesinger often combined friendship with professional and political association. Schlesinger maintained his correspondence according to a variety of filing systems kept in separate offices, and the collection contains letters organized alphabetically, chronologically, and by subject. Since Schlesinger did not use a single consistent means of filing, researchers should consider all the correspondence subseries, as well as relevant writings (in Series III) and research files (in Series IV), when seeking out a particular subject, era, or individual.

The journals chronicle most of Schlesinger's adult life, spanning fifty years beginning in the early 1950s. The time between entries ranges from one day to several months, and the number of pages devoted to a given year ranges from sixty to over four hundred. Schlesinger used his journal to describe meetings, political events, and social engagements; he also frequently expressed his political insights and opinions when writing. An edited compilation of the journals was published posthumously. (Journals, 1952-2000 by Arthur M. Schlesinger; edited by Andrew Schlesinger and Stephen Schlesinger. New York: Penguin Press, 2007.)

The collection includes many unpublished writings, such as lectures, speeches, eulogies, and commencement addresses; drafts of published writings include those of Robert Kennedy and His Times (see Series IV), as well as some article drafts with related correspondence in Series IV.

As a historian and political commentator, Schlesinger was a careful and prodigious researcher. He maintained research files on his full-length works (The Age of Roosevelt, The Age of Jackson and Robert Kennedy and His Times included here), as well as subject files for other writings. The files include clippings, research notes, interviews, correspondence, and student papers.

The collection includes files on Schlesinger's family and various eras of his own life. These include schoolwork, scrapbooks, photographs, legal documents, and documentation from his service in World War II. There is also a box of political campaign buttons (Box 573). The papers also contain copies of Schlesinger's F.B.I. files, obtained via the Freedom of Information Act., found in Series V.

Finally, the collection contains appointment books and phone message logs, illustrating the details of Schlesinger's daily activities from the early 1950s onward.

The Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. papers are arranged in six series: