TABLE OF CONTENTS


Introduction

Biographical Sketch

Scope and Content Note

Arrangement Note

Conditions of Access and Use

Related Material

Administrative Information

Search Terms

Box and Folder Listing

Series A. Correspondence and Reports. 1939-1984.

Series B. Oral History Interview. 1974.

Series C. Writings. 1914-1984(bulk 1949-1954).

A Finding Aid to the Solomon Andhil Fineberg Papers. 1914-1984.

Manuscript Collection No. 149


Introduction

Repository: The Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives
Creator: Fineberg, Solomon Andhil, 1896-1990
Title: Solomon Andhil Fineberg Papers
Dates: 1914-1984
Quantity: 2.8 linear feet (7 Hollinger boxes)
Abstract: The Solomon Andhil Fineberg papers describe the career of Solomon A. Fineberg as an organizational executive for the American Jewish Committee with interests in promoting human relations and preventing anti-Semitism and prejudice. The collection includes correspondence, writings, and an oral history transcript.
Collection Number: MS-149
Language: Collection material in English.

Biographical Sketch

Solomon Andhil Fineberg was born on November 29, 1896, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He studied at the University of Cincinnati, graduating in 1917 with a Bachelor of Arts degree. After a stint in the U.S. Marine Corps (from 1917-1919) during World War I (later he was designated as the National Chaplain for the Jewish War Veterans), Fineberg returned to Cincinnati to study at Hebrew Union College. He was ordained a rabbi in 1920 and received a Doctor of Divinity degree in 1958 from Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion. In 1932 he was awarded a Ph.D. from Columbia University.

After ordination Fineberg accepted the pulpit at Temple Beth El in Niagara Falls, N.Y., remaining there from 1920 to 1924. In 1925 he was assistant rabbi of Rodef Shalom in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. From 1926-1929 he served at the Jewish Community Center at White Plains, N.Y. From 1929-1937 he was rabbi at Sinai Temple in Mount Vernon, N.Y. Rabbi Fineberg also served Temple Judea, Manhasset, N.Y., and Temple Emanu El of Westchester in Harrison, N.Y., in their earliest years.

In 1939 Fineberg joined the staff of the American Jewish Committee (AJC) as national community relations director. He was a pioneer in Jewish community relations and in developing techniques for combatting anti-Semitism. He was known among professional colleagues as "the Dean of Jewish Community Relations." From 1950-1954 Fineberg served as president of the national association of Jewish Community Relations Workers. After retiring from the AJC in 1964 Fineberg continued to further human relations efforts as a consultant to the president and director of the Commitment to Brotherhood program of the National Conference of Christians and Jews until 1981.

Fineberg was also the author of five books and many articles and was a prolific lecturer. The majority of his writings dealt with conquering anti-Semitism and prejudice. One of his books, Overcoming Anti-Semitism (1943) was considered a standard work on that subject and won him the Annisfield-Wolf Literary Award in 1945. His other books included Punishment Without Crime (1949), describing techniques for preventing prejudice and strengthening positive human relations; Checkmate for Rabble-rousers and Deflating the Professional Bigot, in which he promotes the "quarantine treatment" to deal with mass protestors such as Gerald L.K. Smith and George Lincoln Rockwell; and The Rosenberg Case, discussing the evidence against the spies.

In 1925 Fineberg married Hilda Cohen of Baltimore, Maryland. Solomon Andhil Fineberg died in February 1990 at the age of 93.


Scope and Content Note

The Solomon Andhil Fineberg papers describe the career of Solomon Andhil Fineberg as an organizational executive for the American Jewish Committee with interests in promoting human relations and preventing anti-Semitism and prejudice. The collection includes correspondence, reports, writings, and an oral history transcript.


Arrangement Note

This collection is arranged in three (3) series:

Series A. Correspondence and Reports. 1939-1984.
Series B. Oral History Transcript. 1974.
Series C. Writings. 1914-1984.

Conditions of Access and Use

Terms of Access and Use

The Solomon Andhil Fineberg Papers are open to all users. The original manuscript collection is available in the Barrows-Loebelson Reading Room of the Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives.

Property and Literary Rights

Solomon Andhil Fineberg, by the act of donating the Solomon Andhil Fineberg Papers to the American Jewish Archives, assigned all property rights to the American Jewish Archives. Literary rights are retained by the Solomon Andhil Fineberg heirs. Literary rights may also be retained by specific creators of materials.

Questions concerning rights should be addressed to the Executive Director of the American Jewish Archives. For more information see the American Jewish Archives copyright information webpage.


Related Material

Separated Material

Nearprint material was removed to Fineberg, Solomon Andhil, 1896-1990. Nearprint Biographies.


Administrative Information

Preferred Citation

Footnotes and bibliographic references should refer to the Solomon Andhil Fineberg Papers and the American Jewish Archives. A suggestion for at least the first citation is as follows:

[Description], [Date], Box #, Folder #. MS-149. Solomon Andhil Fineberg Papers. American Jewish Archives, Cincinnati, Ohio.

Provenance

The Solomon Andhil Fineberg Papers were received from Dr. Solomon Andhil Fineberg, Mt. Vernon, New York, in 1973 and 1974. Additioanl materials were received from the Jewish Museum of Maryland in 2000 and 2010.

Processing Information

Processed by Kevin Proffitt. Additional processing by Michelle Wirth Detroit, December, 2011.


Box and Folder Listing

Series A. Correspondence and Reports. 1939-1984. [5 Hollinger boxes]
Scope and Content Note: Consists of correspondence and reports. The majority of the materials in this series pertain to Fineberg's work for the American Jewish Committee, but also includes materials concerning his activities with other organizations associated with Jewish community relations.
Box Folder
1 1 All-American Conference to Combat Communism. 1951-1973, undated.
1 2 American Council for Judaism. 1950-1957.
1 3 American Jewish Committee. Advertising solicited. 1952-1972.
1 4 American Jewish Committee. Anti-Semitic canards. 1939-1963, undated.
1 5 American Jewish Committee. Anti-Semitic vandalism. 1951-1960.
1 6 American Jewish Committee. Cemetery desecration. 1958; 1972.
1 7 American Jewish Committee. Committee on Communism. 1947-1964, undated.
1 8 American Jewish Committee. Community Service Department. 1947-1974.
1 9 American Jewish Committee. Desegregation in Washington, D.C. 1953-1973.
1 10 American Jewish Committee. Eichmann, Adolph, trial. 1961-1972.
Box Folder
2 1 American Jewish Committee. Election bigotry. 1952-1972.
2 2 American Jewish Committee. Germany. 1951-1973.
2 3 American Jewish Committee. Group voting. 1953-1972.
2 4 American Jewish Committee. Israel. 1948-1973.
2 5-6 American Jewish Committee. MacIver Report. 1951-1953, undated. (2 folders)
2 7 American Jewish Committee. Passion plays. 1949-1972.
2 8 American Jewish Committee. Quarantine of anti-Semitic agitators. 1946-1972.
2 9 American Jewish Committee. Quarantine - Beaty and Crommelin. 1952-1972.
2 10 American Jewish Committee. Quarantine - group libel laws. 1947-1972.
Box Folder
3 1 American Jewish Committee. Quarantine - Jewish War Veterans. 1953-1972.
3 2-4 American Jewish Committee. Quarantine - Rockwell, George Lincoln. 1959-1966. (3 folders)
3 5 American Jewish Committee. Quarantine - Smith, Gerald L.K. 1944-1972.
3 6 American Jewish Committee. Religion in the public schools. 1955-1973.
3 7 American Jewish Committee. Research reports. 1959.
3 8 American Jewish Committee. Rosenberg, Julius and Ethel - case. 1952-1956.
Box Folder
4 1 American Jewish Committee. Ruby, Jack. 1963-1973.
4 2 American Jewish Committee. Southern anti-Semitism. 1956-1973.
4 3-5 American Jewish Committee. Soviet anti-Semitism. 1949-1965, undated. (3 folders)
4 6 American Jewish Committee. Sunday blue laws. 1952-1960.
4 7 American League Against Communism. 1949-1972, undated.
4 8 Association of Jewish Community Relations Workers. 1948-1972, undated.
4 9 Central Conference of American Rabbis. Soviet Jewry. 1959-1973.
4 10 Schwartz, Fred. Communism. 1957-1964.
Box Folder
6 1-5 American Jewish Committee. Various subjects. 1947-1964.
6 6 Association of Jewish Community Relations Workers. 1950-1959.
6 7 Jewish Community Relations. 1968-1978.
6 8 Jewish War Veterans and American Legion. 1963-1967.
6 9 Marcus, Jacob Rader. 1967-1984.
6 10 Miscellaneous. 1943-1959.
6 11-12 National Conference of Christians and Jews. 1966-1977.
Series B. Oral History Interview. 1974. [0.5 Hollinger box]
Scope and Content Note: Consists of a typed transcript of an oral history interview of Fineberg. The transcript is a copy of a taped interview (1974) located at the William E. Weiner Oral History Library of the American Jewish Committee, New York, N.Y.
Box Folder
5 1-2 Oral history interview. 1974. [2 folders]
Series C. Writings. 1914-1984 (bulk 1949-1954). [1.5 Hollinger boxes]
Scope and Content Note: Consists of correspondence and reviews pertaining to two of Fineberg's books, Punishment Without Crime and The Rosenberg Case - Fact and Fiction. Along with press releases and addresses, and papers and course work from Fineberg's years at the University of Cincinnati.
Box Folder
5 3 Punishment Without Crime. Correspondence and reviews. 1949-1951; 1972, and undated.
5 4 The Rosenberg Case - Fact and Fiction. Correspondence and reviews. 1953-1954; 1973.
Box Folder
7 1 The Rosenberg Case - Fact and Fiction. Correspondence and miscellaneous. 1950-1984.
7 2 The Rosenberg Case - Fact and Fiction. Correspondence: Lehrman, Nathaniel. 1983.
7 3 Press releases and addresses. 1926-1979.
7 4 University of Cincinnati. Papers and course work. 1914-1916.
7 5 Autobiographical writings. undated.

Search Terms

The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the AJA's online catalog.

Persons and Families

Fineberg, Solomon Andhil, 1896-1990

Institutions

American Jewish Committee

Subjects

Jews -- New York (N.Y.)

Genres and Forms

Interviews -- New York (N.Y.)

Occupations

Rabbis -- New York (N.Y.)