|
|
Copyright © 2004 Law Library University of Louisville.
|
The Louis Dembitz Brandeis (1856-1941) Papers at the University of Louisville reflect the varied personal and professional interests of a Louisville native, Boston attorney, and Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. The papers generated by the Justice fall within the years, 1870-1941. They include
correspondence, drafts of speeches and publications, news clipping scrapbooks, reference files, pamphlets and reports,
and legal documents. Family letters, the earliest dated 1810, and biographical sketches as recent as 1976, are
also found. Brandeis' pre-court years as a reform-minded Boston attorney and his active role in the Zionist movement
are extensively documented in the papers. While Brandeis was on the Supreme Court, he wrote most of his letters
in long-hand and kept no copies. As a result, the correspondence between the years 1916 and 1941 is primarily incoming. Series I, Nutter, McClennen, & Fish (NMF), 1881-1927; Series II, Supreme Court (SC), 1907-1938; Series III, Savings Bank Life Insurance (I), 1905-1906, 1929-1938; Series IV, World War (WW), 1916-1920, 1926; Series V, Government (G), 1916, 1924-1937; Series VI, Zionism/Palestine (Z/P), 1905, 1913-1938; Series VII, Miscellaneous (M), 1810, 1844-1939; Series VIII, Clipping Scrapbooks; Series IX, Addendum (A), 1871-1941, 1956-1976; and Series X, Warren & Brandeis/Brandeis, Dunbar & Nutter (WB), 1881-1947. This final series is a 1978 accretion to the Brandeis papers from the Justice's former law firm. Most printed materials that were not authored by Brandeis nor annotated by him, were not filmed. These items remain in place in the collection and are available to researchers.
Keyword searching of the Brandeis Collection web pages is now available. Property Rights of the Collection. Chronology of the Life of Louis Dembitz Brandeis. Brandeis University Libraries exhibit on Louis Dembitz Brandeis. How to Request Inter-Library Loan Copies of the Collection Microfilm Reels. This is an electronic edition by the University of Louisville School of Law Library of a guide published in book form in 1980 by the University Archives and Records Center. |