+ Photos Only + Advanced Search
Printer-friendly Printer-friendly


Guide to the Papers of William Edlin (1878-1947) RG 251

Processed by David Wolfson. Additional processing by Rachel S. Harrison as part of the Leon Levy Archival Processing Initiative, made possible by the Leon Levy Foundation.

YIVO Institute for Jewish Research
15 West 16th Street
New York, NY 10011
Email: archives@yivo.cjh.org
URL: http://www.yivo.org

©2012 YIVO Institute for Jewish Research. All rights reserved.<

Electronic finding aid was encoded in EAD 2002 by Rachel S. Harrison in July 2012. Description is in English.

Collection Overview

Title: Guide to the Papers of William Edlin (1878-1947) RG 251

ID: RG 251 FA

Extent: 7.5 Linear Feet

Arrangement:

David Wolfson originally processed the collection in 1974. Additional processing was completed in 2012.

David Wolfson arranged the collection and created an index, which he divided into three sections representing more of an intellectual arrangement rather than a physical arrangement. These sections were: correspondence with individuals; correspondence with organizations, institutions, schools, publishers, and correspondence by subject; and personal materials, including manuscripts and articles. Materials in the index are often cross-listed by both organization and by individual. The index lists the language of the materials as Y for Yiddish, E for English and R for Russian.

The physical arrangement of the collection is in five series and an addendum, which is not represented in David Wolfson’s index, and is arranged by subject. The correspondence is arranged in a general alphabetical order, as is the addendum.

Languages: English, Yiddish, Russian, French, German, Hebrew, Czech

Abstract

This collection contains the personal and professional papers of William Edlin, editor of The Day and a prominent Socialist. It includes correspondence with individuals and with organizations, newspaper clippings, manuscripts of works by Edlin and by others as well as translations done by Edlin, and some of Edlin’s personal documents. These materials relate to Edlin’s involvement with The Day, with the Socialist Party, the Workmen’s Circle, various labor and Zionist organizations, literary clubs and activities, and with music, art and drama.

Scope and Contents of the Materials

This collection relates to Edlin’s position as the editor of The Day as well as his work with various Socialist, labor and Zionist organizations. It contains correspondence and other materials pertaining to individuals including Jacob P. Adler, Nathan Ausubel, Joseph Barondess, Herman Bernstein, Menachem Boraisha, Reuben Brainin, Abraham Cahan, Abraham Coralnick, Jacob de Haas, Eugene Debs, Celia Dropkin, Isadora Duncan, Ossip Dymow, Ilya Ehrenburg, Samuel Gompers, Moshe Leib Halpern, Alexander Harkavy, Peretz Hirschbein, Isaac Hourwich, Sol Hurok, Harold Ickes, Vladimir Jabotinsky, Yefim Jeshurin, Bertha and Jacob Kalich, Leon Kobrin, Herbert H. Lehman, Jack London, Joseph Margoshes, Louis Marshall, Henry Morgenthau, Sr., Paul Muni, Moshe Nadir, Shmuel Niger, M. Olgin, Mendel Osherowitch, Molly Picon, David de Sola Pool, Joseph Proskauer, John D. Rockefeller, Hillel Rogoff, Ludwig Satz, Jacob Schiff, Maurice Schwartz, Yente Serdatzky, Sholem Aleichem, Upton Sinclair, Alfred E. Smith, Rabbi Chaim Soloveitchik, Nathan Straus, Jr., Samuel Untermeyer, Baruch Charney Vladeck, Felix Warburg, Chaim Weizmann, President Woodrow Wilson, Rabbi Stephen Wise, Aaron Zeitlin, and Dr. Chaim Zhitlowsky.

There is also correspondence and other materials relating to the Socialist Party and other organizations, among them the American Association for Jewish Colonization in the Soviet Union (ICOR), American Jewish Congress, American Labor Party, American ORT Federation, Columbia University, The Day, Educational Alliance, Folksbiene, Morning Freiheit, Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS), Jewish Agency, Jewish National Workers’ Alliance, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Joint Distribution Committee, Keren Hayesod, New York City Board of Education, New York Times, Social Democratic League, Workmen’s Circle, World Zionist Organization, Yiddish Culture Society, Yiddish Writers Union, Zionist Organization of America, and Zukunft.

There are also manuscripts by Edlin, including Edlin's translations into Yiddish of literary works, manuscripts of other writers, such as Peretz Hirschbein and Pinchas Friedlander, newspaper clippings of Edlin's writings, including his column "What is New in the Socialist World" and other articles, financial records, notices of meetings, photographs, a metal printing template for a business card, autobiographical materials, birthday greetings, visiting cards, family correspondence, fundraising appeals, programs, resolutions, minutes, announcements for lectures, reports, bulletins, and speeches. The addendum contains materials from many of the same organizations and individuals found elsewhere in the collection.

This collection would be particularly helpful for those interested in the history of The Day and Yiddish newspaper publishing, Yiddish theater in America, the history and development of various communal institutions, and WWI-era Socialism and Zionism. The collection dates from 1894-1948, with three items from 1960-1969.

Historical Note

William Edlin was born in Priluki, Poltawa Province, Ukraine on May 3, 1878 to Paltiel Nochim and Miriam (Borodinsky) Edlin. He attended cheder until he was 12, at which point his family immigrated to the United States, settling in San Francisco in 1891. Edlin attended public evening school for two years and then enrolled at Stanford University, where he was greatly influenced by Socialist ideas.

At the end of 1896, he came to New York and began writing articles for English and Yiddish Socialist publications, including Abend Blatt (Evening Paper), as well as writing a book, The Coming Social Struggle (1897). He also was involved in the Socialist Labor Party, and was the assistant editor of The People in 1900. He became the manager of the Folks Tsaytung (Peoples Paper) in 1899 and later helped to found the weekly Social Democrat, for which he was the first editor, along with several other break-away members of the Socialist Labor Party, including B. Feigenbaum, Leon Kobrin, B. Weinstein, A. Kaspe, Morris Hillquit, as well as Abe Cahan and Morris Winchevsky. After the Social Democrat ceased publication, Edlin began working at The Jewish Daily Forward, where he was the editor from 1902-1903 and also wrote a weekly column about drama and music. He edited the Haverhill Social Democrat in Haverhill, MA, 1901, was the editor of the Capmakers’ Journal in Yiddish and English from 1902-1905, wrote for the Abendpost (Evening Post), the Jewish Daily Herald, 1903-1904, and the Morgn Zhurnal (Jewish Morning Journal), 1904-1913, for which he was also the drama and music editor.

Edlin helped to found the Workmen's Circle and was the General Secretary in 1913-1914. He supported Yiddish cultural activities and more widespread labor education through lecture tours and publications. He was later involved in the educational commission of the Workmen's Circle and served as the president. In late 1914, Mr. Edlin became city editor of Der Tog (The Day) newspaper and served as editor-in-chief from 1916 to 1925. He resigned from The Day in 1925 and became the National Executive Secretary of the Keren Hayesod in the U.S.A. from 1925-1928. He returned to The Day as editor-in-chief in 1929.

Edlin was also involved with music and theater. His book, Velt-Berimte Operas (World-Famous Operas) (1907) discusses and critiques popular Italian, French and German operas as well as music and opera in general. Der Yid (The Jew) was a four-act play, written with L. Cooperman in 1911, and was one of several plays Edlin wrote, including Mentshn in Keytn (Men in Chains), which was going to be performed in Jacob P. Adler’s People’s Theater with Adler playing a role in 1912, although this ultimately did not happen. Edlin was also president of the New York Foreign Film Critics, president of the I.L. Peretz Yiddish Writers Union, a prominent member of the Zionist Organization of America, and a translator of various works of fiction and history, including Ellen Thomas’ two-volume History of the United States (1912).

Edlin married Sarah Boudianoff in New York City in 1901 and they were divorced in 1912. He married Pauline (Polia) Zeltzer in 1912 and their daughter Charmian was born 1914. William Edlin died in New York November 30, 1947.

Subject/Index Terms

Administrative Information

Access Restrictions: Permission to use the collection must be obtained from the YIVO Archivist. For information write to archives@yivo.cjh.org

Use Restrictions: Permission to publish part or parts of the collection must be obtained from the YIVO Archives. For more information, contact:YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, Center for Jewish History, 15 West 16th Street, New York, NY 10011 email: archives@yivo.cjh.org

Acquisition Method: Donated to YIVO by Mrs. Charmian Cohn, daughter of William Edlin, in 1949.

Separated Materials: There is no information about materials that are associated by provenance to the described materials that have been physically separated or removed.

Original/Copies Note: There is an index created by David Wolfson in the front of the first box, which reflects an intellectual arrangement in three sections.

Related Materials: The YIVO Library has Edlin’s book about opera and his book The Coming Social Struggle as well as many books and other materials about Socialism, Zionism and labor. Edlin’s correspondence and records of his activities as well as the activities of organizations with which he was involved can be found in Records of the Day-Morning Journal, RG 639; Records of the Workmen’s Circle, RG 575; Records of the I.L. Peretz Yiddish Writers’ Union, RG 701; Papers of Abraham Coralnick, RG 321 and the personal collections of many Yiddish writers, particularly those who wrote for, or were otherwise connected with, The Day.

Preferred Citation: Published citations should take the following form:Identification of item, date (if known); Papers of William Edlin; RG 251; folder number; YIVO Institute for Jewish Research.


Box and Folder Listing


Browse by Series:

Series 1: Series I: Personal Materials, 1896-1948,
Series 2: Series II: Correspondence with Organizations, 1897-1947,
Series 3: Series III: Family Correspondence, 1896-1947, 1969,
Series 4: Series IV: Correspondence with Individuals, 1894-1943, 1960,
Series 5: Series V: Manuscripts, 1900-1938, undated,
Series 6: Series VI: Addendum, 1915-1948, 1962,
All

Series I: Personal Materials
1896-1948
The materials in this series are generally directly related to William Edlin’s personal life, including financial and legal records, materials from Stanford University, autobiographical materials, clippings of articles by and about Edlin, including his column from The Day and articles and reviews he wrote about music, theater, film, and art, photographs, speeches, and manuscripts of Edlin’s writings, including translations he made of world literature. There is also a great deal of material about various Socialist and labor groups and activities he was involved with, including the Socialist Labor Party, the Social Democratic Party, the Social Democratic League of America, the U.S. Socialist Party, and the American Labor Party, among others.
Folders: 66
Folder 1: Personal loans
1912-1940
Folder 2: Legal matters
1919-1935
Folder 3: Income and personal taxes
1918-1943
Folder 4: Stanford University Club
1921-1935
Folder 5: Miscellaneous personal papers
1901, 1917-1927, 1939-1944
Folder 6: Press cards-visiting cards
1909-1943
Folder 7: College papers
1896-1899
Folder 8: Insurance and leases
1913-1942
Folder 9: Receipts and business papers
1918-1947
Folder 10: Budgets
1932-1938
Folder 11: Autobiographical materials
1925-1941
Folder 12: 50th birthday jubilee
1928
Folder 13: Notes and outlines
1921-1943, undated
Folder 14: Clippings and circulars about Edlin
1903-1912
Folder 15: Clippings and circulars about Edlin
1907-1946
Folder 16: Condolences to Mrs. Edlin
1947-1948
Folder 17: Obituary clippings
1947-1948
Folder 18: Autographs of friends and relatives
1925-1940
Folder 19: Photographs
1915, undated
Folder 20: Talks and addresses
1944-1945, undated
Folder 21: Talks and addresses
1944, undated
Folder 22: Talks and addresses
1939-1945, undated
Folder 23: Talks and addresses
1899, 1946, undated
Folder 24: Talks and addresses
undated
Folder 25: Manuscript - Heldn in Kaytn (Heroes in Chains)
1910
Folder 26: Manuscripts - miscellaneous
1910, undated

includes: Geshmite Helden (Chained Heroes), 1910

Di Rusishe Revolutsie fun 1917 (The Russian Revolution in 1917)

Folder 27: Manuscripts - translations by Edlin
undated

includes: A Trip to Beethoven's Shrine, by James Faller

The Abyss, by Kazimerz Tetmajer and Stanislaw Przbyszewski

Bartel Turaser, by Philip Langman

A Victim from Russia, by S. Schiffman

Folder 27A: Manuscripts - translations by Edlin
1909
La Rencontre (The Meeting), by Pierre Berton, Paris, translated from French to Yiddish
Folder 28: Articles by Edlin - clippings
1897
Folder 29: Articles by Edlin - clippings
1900-1905
Folder 30: Articles by Edlin - clippings
1897-1905
Folder 31: Articles by Edlin - clippings
1909, 1920, 1936, undated
Folder 32: Articles by Edlin - clippings
1935-1937
column in Der Tog: Vos Tut zikh in der Sotsialistisher Velt (What's Happening in the Socialist World)
Folder 33: Articles by Edlin - clippings
1906-1907
music and opera, from Der Amerikaner
Folder 34: Articles by Edlin - clippings
1906-1944, undated
music and opera
Folder 35: Articles by Edlin - clippings
1907, undated
music and opera
Folder 36: Articles by Edlin - clippings
1907-1911, undated
music and opera
Folder 37: Articles by Edlin - clippings
1907-1912
Richard Wagner (English, German, Yiddish)
Folder 38: Articles by Edlin - clippings
1928-1933
Richard Wagner (English, Yiddish)
Folder 39: Articles by Edlin - clippings
1908-1910, 1929-1946
reviews of English theater and film (Yiddish, English)
Folder 40: Articles by Edlin - clippings
1933-1945
reviews of Yiddish theater and music
Folder 41: Articles by Edlin - clippings
1909-1915
Jewish music and art
Folder 42: Articles by Edlin - clippings
1910-1912, 1923-1933, 1946
Jewish music and art
Folder 43: Articles by Edlin - clippings
1908-1912
Jewish music and art
Folder 44: Project for a popular grand opera organization in New York City
1920, undated
Folder 44A: Project for a new kind of motion picture theater
undated
Folder 45: Yiddish (Jewish) press - clippings
1923-1946, undated
(Yiddish, English)
Folder 46: Yiddish literature - clippings
1910, undated
Folder 47: Picture postcards - art pictures
1908-1937, undated
(English, German)
Folder 48: Socialist Labor Party - clippings
1897-1899
Folder 49: Socialist Labor Party - Socialist Manifesto
1896-1899
Folder 50: Social Democratic Party
1899-1902
Folder 51: Social Democratic Party - election campaign
1901-1902
Folder 52: Social Democratic League of America
1918-1920
Folder 53: Social Democratic League of America - constitution and by-laws
1919
Folder 54: Socialist Party
1938-1939
Folder 55: Socialist Party
1935-1937
Folder 56: Socialist Party
1912-1917, 1930-1935
Folder 57: Socialist Party
1931-1935, undated
Folder 58: Socialist Party - election campaign
1932-1936
Folder 59: Socialist Party - press clippings
1933-1936
Folder 60: American Labor Party
1939-1943
Folder 61: Jewish Socialist organizations
1913-1918, 1940
Folder 62: Socialism - miscellaneous materials
1928-1931
Folder 63: Socialism - miscellaneous clippings
1900-1916, 1930-1947
Folder 64: Socialism - miscellaneous clippings
1900-1905, 1943-1945

Browse by Series:

Series 1: Series I: Personal Materials, 1896-1948,
Series 2: Series II: Correspondence with Organizations, 1897-1947,
Series 3: Series III: Family Correspondence, 1896-1947, 1969,
Series 4: Series IV: Correspondence with Individuals, 1894-1943, 1960,
Series 5: Series V: Manuscripts, 1900-1938, undated,
Series 6: Series VI: Addendum, 1915-1948, 1962,
All
© 2013 YIVO Institute for Jewish Research Terms of Use Privacy Policy

Archive powered by Archon Version 3.14
Copyright © 2011 The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign