David K. Niles Papers
Dates: 1909-1983. Bulk Date Span: 1933-1952
Administrative Assistant to the President, 1942-1951.
The papers of David K. Niles relate to his career of
government service in the White House as Administrative Assistant to
Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman from 1942 to 1951.
They include correspondence, newspaper clippings, invitations, memoranda,
reports, and speeches concerning Niles's work with Jewish affairs, the
Democratic Party, and civil rights. The collection also has a large
amount of material documenting Niles's activities before he joined the
White House staff, his involvement in Democratic and Progressive Party
politics, and his tenure as an official with the Works Progress Administration.
[Administrative Information | Biographical Sketch | Collection Description
| Series Descriptions | Folder
Title List]
ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION
Size: 14.4 linear feet (about 28,800 pages).
Access: Open, with the exception of a few documents that are closed because they contain classified national security information.
Copyright: Abram L. Sachar, as trustee of Niles's estate, donated Niles's literary property rights in any of his unpublished writings in this collection to the United States government. Documents created by U.S. government officials in the course of their official duties are in the public domain. Copyright interest in other writings in this collection is assumed to remain with the authors of the documents or their heirs.
Processed by: Harry Clark, Jr., C. Warren Ohrvall, and Erwin J. Mueller (1968-1976); Carol Briley, Sharie Simon, and Janice Davis (2003).
[ Top of the page | Administrative Information | Biographical Sketch
| Collection Description | Series
Descriptions | Folder Title List ]
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
| 1890 (November 26) |
|
Born, Boston, Massachusetts (some sources say in 1888
or 1892) |
| 1921-1952 |
|
Associate Director, and later Director, of Boston's
Ford Hall Forum |
| 1933-1934 |
|
Director of American Business Census in the Commonwealth
of Massachusetts for the Department of Commerce |
| 1936-1937 |
|
Consultant and later Director of Information, Works
Progress Administration |
| 1937-1939 |
|
Assistant Administrator, Works Progress Administration |
| 1939-1940 |
|
Special Assistant to the Secretary of Commerce |
| 1941-1942 |
|
Head Consultant, Office of Production Management; Head
Consultant, War Production Board; Principal Adviser, War Production
Board |
| 1942-1951 |
|
Administrative Assistant to the President |
| 1947 |
|
Received Medal for Merit from the President |
| 1952 (September 28) |
|
Died, Boston, Massachusetts |
[ Top of the page | Administrative Information | Biographical Sketch
| Collection Description | Series
Descriptions | Folder Title List ]
COLLECTION DESCRIPTION
The David K. Niles Papers relate to his service as Administrative Assistant to the President during the administrations of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman, from August 1, 1942 to May 31, 1951. Of particular interest in the collection are materials concerning minority affairs, civil rights, and the establishment of the state of Israel. The Niles Papers also contain information about Niles's life and career before he joined the White House staff and his involvement in various political campaigns.
The Niles Papers are divided into eight series and multiple subseries.
The first series, the Personal Correspondence File,
contains letters, notes, invitations, flyers, telegrams, newspaper clippings,
brochures, cards, broadcast excerpts, agendas, lists, and financial records.
Most of this material is personal and routine in nature. However, the
series does include a copy of Congressman Fred Bradley's April 1, 1943
speech attacking Niles for having communist connections. This charge was
based in part on Niles's earlier career as Director of the Ford Hall Forum
in Boston, and his close connections with such individuals as Harry Hopkins
and Felix Frankfurter. Also of interest are condolence letters written
to Niles in April 1945, expressing sorrow over the death of President
Roosevelt.
The next series, the Political File, contains
seven subseries: Congressional Elections; Democratic Party; General Politics;
Massachusetts Politics; National Progressive League; Political Favors;
and Progressive Party and the Progressive Movement. The Political File
is comprised of letters, notes, press releases, reports, newspaper clippings,
magazine articles, memoranda, speeches, telegrams, flyers, campaign literature,
political biographies, voting records of Congressmen, political platforms,
political polls, speeches, radio addresses, and election analyses. Niles
had close ties to Democratic Party politics, and this series documents
his relationships with many prominent New Dealers. The Democratic Party
subseries includes campaign literature from the 1936 campaign and letters
congratulating Niles on his exhaustive work during the 1940 campaign.
(In 1940, Niles headed the National Committee of Independent Voters for
Roosevelt and Wallace.) The Political Favors subseries provides documentation
of individuals seeking political patronage. The Progressive Party and
the Progressive Movement subseries documents Niles's associations with
such Progressive stalwarts as Senator Robert M. LaFollette, Jr. and Senator
Burton K. Wheeler. Niles was Director of both the Progressive League for
Alfred E. Smith and the Progressive Committee for Joseph B. Ely (Democratic
candidate for reelection as Governor of Massachusetts in 1932).
The Works Progress Administration File, the
largest series in the collection, is comprised of six subseries: Job Files;
Internal Affairs; Invitations; Job Requests-Political Favors; Job Requests-General;
and Political Affairs. The series includes letters, memoranda, reports,
newspaper clippings, invitations, press releases, and other items. This
material documents Niles's activities as an official with the Works Progress
Administration (WPA) from 1936 to 1939, requests for employment with the
WPA, and the activities of WPA Administrator Harry L. Hopkins. Included
in the series is a substantial amount of correspondence with Hopkins and
James Roosevelt (the President's son and secretary), as well as a significant
amount of material that predates Niles's employment with the WPA in 1936.
The first subseries, Job Files, contains information about specific individuals
who were seeking employment or reinstatement with the WPA, and about WPA
jobs in the town of Norwood, Massachusetts. The Internal Affairs subseries
contains information about the administration of the WPA and the agencies
that preceded it, the Civil Works Administration and the Federal Emergency
Relief Administration. The Invitations subseries includes messages inviting
Hopkins and other officials to appear at various public events. The Job
Requests-Political Favors subseries documents the efforts of political
figures to obtain New Deal jobs for their supporters. In contrast, the
Job Requests-General subseries mostly pertains to requests for WPA jobs
from citizens without special political influence. The last subseries,
Political Affairs, contains correspondence from prominent politicians
and others detailing various issues, problems, and complaints. Included
in this subseries is correspondence from Governor Herbert Lehman of New
York, Governor Philip La Follette of Wisconsin, Mayor Fiorello La Guardia
of New York City, Senator Sherman Minton of Indiana, Senator Theodore
Bilbo of Mississippi, and Congressman Jerry Voorhis of California.
The fourth series, Administrative Files, contains
three subseries: Major Administrative Affairs, Minor Administrative Affairs,
and Personal Administrative Affairs. This series includes letters, memoranda,
reports, opinion poll results, press releases, invitations, newspaper
clippings, telegrams, speeches, transcripts of telephone conversations,
and other items, dating mostly from Niles's years of government service,
from 1936 to 1951, at the WPA, the Department of Commerce, the Office
of Production Management, the War Production Board, and the White House.
The first subseries, Major Administrative Affairs, documents such issues
as the "court-packing" controversy during Roosevelt's second term, the
struggle among Senators for patronage in the selection of Bureau of the
Census employees, the effect of World War II on commerce, the voting behavior
of various groups, and the dismissal of General Douglas MacArthur. The
Minor Administrative Affairs subseries includes information concerning
the Presidential Inaugurations of 1945 and 1949, and a wide variety of
other subjects. The Personal Administrative Affairs subseries includes
friendly messages to Niles from such people as President Truman, Margaret
Truman, Dean Acheson, and Fred Vinson.
The Civil Rights and Minorities File has two
subseries. The first, Civil Rights and Negro Affairs, documents Niles's
contacts with civil rights organizations such as the NAACP and with African
American leaders such as Walter White and Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. As
an important civil rights advocate within the Truman White House, Niles
helped bring about the creation of the President's Committee on Civil
Rights and the desegregation of the armed forces. The second subseries,
Jewish Affairs, documents his contacts with American Jewish leaders and
groups, as well as his role in shaping U.S. policy toward Palestine and
Israel. The Civil Rights and Minorities File contains reports, correspondence
(including hate mail), newspaper clippings, memoranda, and other items,
mostly relating to Niles's official role as a liaison between the White
House and minority groups. The series also contains some material that
predates his appointment as Administrative Assistant to the President
in 1942.
The next series, the Displaced Persons and Immigration
File, contains letters, memoranda, telegrams, press releases, reports,
and other items. Some of this material documents Niles's efforts in behalf
of individuals who were seeking to escape from Europe to the United States
before the outbreak of World War II. The series also contains information
concerning refugee problems, the status of displaced persons after the
war, Jewish immigration to Palestine, and the efforts of the Truman administration
to obtain new immigration legislation from Congress.
The Israel File is the seventh series in the
collection. It includes letters, reports, memoranda, opinion poll results,
telegrams, newspaper clippings, and press releases. Most of this material
concerns U.S. policy toward Palestine and Israel after World War II. Niles
was involved in the Zionist movement and in such issues as Jewish immigration,
the proposed partition of Palestine, U.S. diplomatic recognition of the
new state of Israel, and U.S. relations with Israel after 1948. This series
also documents anti-Semitic attacks on Niles for his alleged Communist
connections.
The last series, the General File, contains
correspondence, memoranda, reports, printed material, and other items
relating to various aspects of Niles's life and career in government.
Included is information about his long association with the Ford Hall
Forum in Boston; his extensive correspondence with Felix Frankfurter;
FBI reports sent to him by J. Edgar Hoover; and further material relating
to his charitable and political activities, his work with the WPA, and
his involvement in the early history of Israel. The General File also
contains some useful biographical information about Niles.
After Niles died in 1952, his papers were given to Dr. Abram L. Sachar,
the president of Brandeis University (an institution Niles had helped
to establish.) Dr. Sachar and his staff arranged and organized the papers,
some of which he used in his book, The Redemption of the Unwanted:
From the Liberation of the Death Camps to the Founding of Israel (New
York: St. Martin's, 1983). In 1985, Dr. Sachar, in his legal capacity
as trustee of the Niles estate, donated the papers to the Truman Library.
A collection of Niles Papers at Brandeis University consists mostly of
photocopies of original documents that are now at the Truman Library.
More information regarding David K. Niles can be found in the papers
of Harry S. Truman (especially in the Official File,
the President's Personal File, and the President's
Secretary's Files.) These same series also contain more information
about Israel and civil rights during the Truman administration. Concerning
U.S. policy toward Palestine and Israel, some other relevant collections
at the Truman Library include the papers of A. J.
Granoff, Bernard Bernstein, Philleo
Nash, Clark M. Clifford, Edward
Jacobson, and George M. Elsey. The papers
of Nash, Clifford, and Elsey are also important sources of information
on civil rights and minority relations during the Truman years, as are
the records of the President's Committee on Civil Rights
and the President's Committee on Equality of Treatment
and Opportunity in the Armed Services (both in Record Group 220).
The Library's oral history interviews with Granoff,
Nash, Clifford,
Elsey, Loy
Henderson, Matthew J. Connelly,
and Stephen J. Spingarn also contain
relevant information.
[ Top of the page | Administrative Information | Biographical Sketch
| Collection Description | Series
Descriptions | Folder Title List ]
SERIES DESCRIPTIONS
| Container Nos. |
|
Series |
| 1-3 |
|
PERSONAL CORRESPONDENCE FILE, 1919-1952 |
|
|
Invitations, telegrams, flyers, notes, cards, newspaper clippings, lists, reports, agendas and personal correspondence documenting the activities of David Niles. Arranged chronologically. |
| 4-11 |
|
POLITICAL FILE, 1924-1952 |
|
|
Seven Subseries: |
|
|
CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS, 1934-1950. Correspondence, newspaper clippings, speeches, printed material, memoranda, and other items relating to Niles's involvement in Congressional elections. Arranged chronologically. (Box 4)
|
|
|
DEMOCRATIC PARTY, 1933-1952. Correspondence, printed material, memoranda, newspaper clippings, and other items relating to Niles's involvement in Democratic Party politics
and presidential campaigns. Arranged chronologically. (Boxes 4-7)
|
|
|
GENERAL POLITICS, 1925-1952. Correspondence, memoranda, and other items relating to Niles's involvement in politics. Arranged chronologically. (Boxes 7-8)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
POLITICAL FAVORS, 1933-1952. Correspondence and other items relating to requests for political favors and patronage received by Niles. Arranged chronologically. (Boxes 8-10)
|
|
|
|
| 11-22 |
|
WORKS PROGRESS ADMINISTRATION FILE, 1933-1941 |
|
|
Six Subseries: |
|
|
JOB FILES, 1935-1938. Correspondence, memoranda, and other items mostly relating to individuals seeking employment with the WPA. Arranged alphabetically. (Boxes 11-12)
|
|
|
INTERNAL AFFAIRS, 1933-1941. Correspondence, memoranda, and other items concerning the administration of the WPA and its predecessor agencies. Arranged chronologically. (Boxes 12-14)
|
|
|
INVITATIONS, 1936-1938. Correspondence and other items regarding invitations received by Harry Hopkins and others. Arranged chronologically. (Box 14)
|
|
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JOB REQUESTS-GENERAL, 1934-1938. Correspondence, memoranda, and other documents concerning requests for jobs and questions concerning employment with the WPA. Arranged chronologically. (Boxes 15-21)
|
|
|
POLITICAL AFFAIRS, 1933-1939. Correspondence, memoranda, and other items mostly relating to political issues that involved the WPA. Arranged chronologically. (Boxes 21-22)
|
| 22-25 |
|
ADMINISTRATIVE FILES, 1931-1952 |
|
|
Three Subseries: |
|
|
MAJOR ADMINITRATIVE AFFAIRS, 1937-1952. Correspondence, memoranda printed material, transcripts of telephone conversations, press releases, and other items mostly relating to political issues and Niles's work at the Commerce Department and the White House. Arranged chronologically. (Boxes 22-23)
|
|
|
MINOR AADMINISTRATIVE AFFAIRS, 1936-1952. Correspondence, memoranda, speeches, and other items mostly concerning political issues connected with Niles's work as a government official. Arranged chronologically. (Boxes 23-24)
|
|
|
PERSONAL ADMINISTRATIVE AFFAIRS, 1931-1952. Correspondence, invitations, programs, and other items relating to Niles's personal associations during his years in government. Arranged chronologically. (Boxes 24-25)
|
| 26-27 |
|
CIVIL RIGHTS AND MINORITIES FILE, 1927-1952 |
|
|
Two Subseries: |
|
|
CIVIL RIGHTS AND NEGRO AFFAIRS, 1936-1952. Correspondence, memoranda, printed material, and other items concerning Niles's relations with civil rights leaders groups, and the civil rights policies of the Truman administration. Arranged chronologically. (Box 26)
|
|
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JEWISH AFFAIRS, 1927-1952. Correspondence, printed material, and other items pertaining to Niles's relations with Jewish leaders and groups, and issues of interest to
American Jewish community, including Palestine and Israel. Arranged chronologically. (Box 27)
|
| 28 |
|
DISPLACED PERSONS AND IMMIGRATION FILE, 1937-1952 |
|
|
Correspondence, memoranda, press releases, reports, and other documents relating to the problem of displaced persons, the immigration policies of the Truman administration, and Niles's involvement in individual immigration cases. Arranged chronologically.
|
| 29-30 |
|
ISRAEL FILE, 1940-1952 |
|
|
Correspondence, reports, memoranda, press releases, printed material, and other items relating to Niles's association with the Zionist movement and his role in U.S. policy regarding Palestine and Israel. Arranged chronologically.
|
| 31-36 |
|
GENERAL FILE, 1909-1983 |
|
|
Correspondence, memoranda, reports, printed material, press releases, and other items pertaining to various aspects of Niles's life and career. Arranged alphabetically. |
[ Top of the page | Administrative Information | Biographical Sketch
| Collection Description |
Series Descriptions | Folder Title List ]
FOLDER TITLE LIST
Box 1
- 1919-1927 [1929]
- 1930
- 1931
- 1932-1933
- 1933
- 1934
- 1934-1952 [1937-1952, undated]
- 1935
- 1936
- 1937
- 1938
- 1939
- 1940
- 1941
Box 2
- 1942
- 1943 [1944]
- 1943-1944
- 1945-1947
- 1945 (April) [regarding Roosevelt's death]
- 1945 (July) [congratulatory letters]
- 1948-1949
- 1949-1950
Box 3
- 1951-1952
- Get Well Cards, 1952
- Personal Financial Matters, 1937-1952
- Personal Undated Cards and Notes
- Undated Correspondence
Box 4
- 1934-[David I.] Walsh for Senator
- 1938, January-August
- 1938, September-December
- 1938-W.P.A. [Works Progress Administration] Concerns
- 1938-General
- 1942
- 1950
Box 5
- Patronage-Undated
- Democratic Party Affairs, 1934-1936
- Presidential Campaign, 1936
- Presidential Campaign, 1940
- Presidential Campaign, 1940-Congratulations
- General, 1938-1944
- Harry Hopkins [1938]
- Opinion Polls/Campaign [etc.], 1942-1944
- Presidential Campaign, January-July, 1944
Box 6
- Presidential Campaign, July-September, 1944
- Presidential Campaign, October-November, 1944
- Presidential Campaign-Congratulations
- Presidential Campaign-Miscellaneous
- General, 1945-1948
- Presidential Campaign, 1948
[1 of 3]
[2 of 3]
[3 of 3]
Box 7
- Presidential Campaign, 1948-Campaign Contributions
- Presidential Campaign, 1948-Truman/Barkley Club [of Oregon]
- General, 1949-1952
- Presidential Campaign, 1952
- Letters and Documents, 1925-1937
- Letters and Documents, 1938
- Letters and Documents, 1939-1943
- Letters and Documents, 1944-1948
Box 8
- Letters and Documents, 1949-1950
- Letters and Documents, 1951-1952
- Letters and Documents, Undated
- 1933-1936
- 1937-1940
- 1941-1943
- National Progressive League, 1932-1934
Box 9
- 1938, January-July
- 1938, August-December
- 1939
- 1940
- 1941
- 1942
- 1943-1944
- 1945-1946
Box 10
- 1947-1948
- 1949-1950
- 1951
- 1952
- Progressive Party-La Follette Campaign, 1924
- Progressive Affairs-Smith Campaign, 1928
- Progressive Affairs-Roosevelt Campaign, 1932
- Progressive Affairs-Ely Campaign (Mass.), 1932
- Progressive Affairs-Walsh Campaign (Mass.), 1934-1936
Box 11
- Progressive Affairs-General, 1937-1939
- Progressive Affairs-FDR Campaign, 1940
- Progressive Affairs-Conservatives vs. Liberals, 1940-1942
- Progressive Affairs-Independent Voters for FDR, 1944
- Cashman, William F.
- Hayes, Helen
- La Plante, Sadie
- Latoof, Joseph
- Lyman, Mrs. W. E.
- Margulis, Max
- Murphy, Charles
- Norwood, Massachusetts
Box 12
- Runestrom, Elmer E.
- Uritsky, Harry
Box 13
- 1937
- 1938 (January-July)
- 1938 (August)
- 1938 (September)
- 1938 (October)
Box 14
- 1938 (November-December)
- 1939-1941
- Undated
- Harry Hopkins (1936-1937)
- Harry Hopkins (January-August, 1938)
- Harry Hopkins and Others (1938)
Box 15
- 1938, January-June
- 1938, July-August
- 1938, September-December
- 1939-1941 [and undated]
- 1934-1936
- 1937, January-June
Box 16
- 1937, July-August
- 1937, September
- 1937, October-December
- 1938, January-February
Box 17
- 1938, March
- 1938, April
- 1938, May 1-13
- 1938, May 14-19
Box 18
- 1938, May 20-30
- 1938, June 1-10
- 1938, June 12-18
- 1938, June 19-30
Box 19
- 1938, July 1-13
- 1938, July 14-30
- 1938, August 1-12
- 1938, August 13-24
Box 20
- 1938, August 25-31
- 1938, September 1-10
- 1938, September 11-30
- 1938, October 1-13
- 1938, October 14-31
Box 21
- 1938, November
- 1938, December
- 1933-1934
- 1935-1936
- 1937
- 1938, January-May
Box 22
- 1938, June-August
- 1938, September-December [1939]
- Undated
- 1937-1938
- 1939
- 1940
- 1941-1942
Box 23
- 1941-1943 (Opinion Polls)
- 1944-1945 (Opinion Polls)
- 1943-1948
- 1949-1950
- 1951 (MacArthur Case)
- 1951-1952
- [1936] 1937-1940
- 1937-1940 (Attacks and Propaganda)
- 1941-1944
- 1945-1948
Box 24
- 1945 (Presidential Inauguration)
- 1949-1952
- 1949 (Presidential Inauguration)
- 1949-1952 (Speeches)
- [1931] 1937-1940
- 1941-1944
- 1945-1947
- 1948
- 1949, January-June
Box 25
- 1949, June-December
- 1949-1952 (Roosevelt Memorial Committee)
- 1949-1950 (Steinberg Article)
- 1950-1951 (Attacks on Niles and Dawson)
- 1950
- 1951
- 1952
Box 26
- [1936] 1937-1944
- 1945-June, 1947
- July, 1947-1948
- [1948] 1949-1952
- Report of the President's Committee on Civil Rights (1947)
- National Defense Congress on Negro Affairs (1948)
Box 27
- [1927] 1933-1940
- 1941-1944
- 1945-1947
- 1948
- 1949
- 1950
- 1951-1952
Box 28
- 1937-1944
- 1945-June, 1947
- July, 1947-1948
- 1949-1952
- Report-Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry (1946)
Box 29
- 1940-1945
- 1946, January-June
- 1946, July-December
- 1947
- 1948, January-April
- 1948, May
- 1948, June-July
Box 30
- 1948, August-December
- 1949, January-June
- 1949, July-December
- 1950
- 1951
- 1952
Box 31
- Administrative Affairs-General, 1932-1951
- Administrative-Personal, 1939-1951
- Baldwin, Roger
- Boston Ford Hall Forum, 1912-1932
- Boston Ford Hall Forum, 1933-1936
- Boston Ford Hall Forum, 1937-1940
- Boston Ford Hall Forum, 1941-1945
- Boston Ford Hall Forum, 1948
- Boston Ford Hall Forum, 1949-1952
- Brandeis University, 1947-1952
Box 32
- Cross Reference Sheet
- Democratic Party-Memoranda, 1939-1944
- Dies Committee
- Federal Bureau of Investigation-Reports
- Feinberg, Abraham-Correspondence
- Foundations and Funds
[1 of 4]
[2 of 4]
[3 of 4]
[4 of 4]
- Frankfurter, Felix
Box 33
- General Correspondence
- Immigration
- Israeli Affairs, 1943-1947 [1949]
- Israeli Affairs, 1948
- Israeli Affairs, 1949
- Israeli Affairs, 1950-1952
Box 34
- Jewish Matters [1933-1951]
- Labor Affairs [1933-1952]
- Medal of Merit [Medal for Merit received by Niles, August 1947]
- Miscellaneous Correspondence-Memoranda, 1926-1983
- Niles, David K.-Biographical Information
Box 35
- Personal Affairs [1909-1952]
- Political Activities
- Progressive Politics [1927-1944]
- Publications
[1 of 4]
[2 of 4]
[3 of 4]
[4 of 4]
Box 36
- Requests for Jobs and Favors
- Research-Political Information [memoranda]
- Sachar, Abram L.
- WPA [Works Progress Administration]-Correspondence
[ Top of the page | Administrative Information | Biographical Sketch
| Collection Description | Series
Descriptions | Folder Title List ]
|