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Harold R. Medina papers
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Held at: Princeton University Library: Public Policy Papers [Contact Us]
This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the Princeton University Library: Public Policy Papers. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.
Overview and metadata sections
Harold Raymond Medina was born in Brooklyn, New York on February 16, 1888, the son of Joaquin A. and Elizabeth M. Medina. He attended Princeton University, where he graduated in 1909 with highest honors in French. Medina continued to be an engaged alumnus for the rest of his life; he was Princeton's oldest living alumnus for many years.
Medina earned his law degree (LL.B.) from Columbia in 1912, and was eventually awarded honorary degrees from Columbia, St. Johns, Dartmouth, Williams, Bates, Princeton, Northeastern, and many others.
After graduating Columbia, Medina was admitted to the New York bar in 1912 and was an associate with the firm Davies, Auerbach and Cornell from 1912-1918. He was a senior member of the firm Medina and Sherpick from 1918-1947, and taught law at Columbia from 1915-1940. Medina was appointed to the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York in 1947, and served until 1951, at which time he was appointed to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals.
Beginning in 1912, and throughout the course of his career as a lawyer, Medina led a New York Bar preparation course. At its peak, there were 1,600 students in the course.
Medina first gained widespread public attention (culminating with his face on the cover of Time Magazine in October 1949), when from January through October of that year, he presided over United States v. Foster (known, on appeal, as United States v. Dennis), the trial of eleven Communist Party, USA leaders under the Smith Act.
A second spike of public attention came in 1952, when he presided over United States v. Morgan et al., more commonly known as the Investment Bankers Case. In this case, the antitrust division of the Department of Justice charged 17 of the biggest U.S. investment banking firms -- and the Investment Bankers' Association of America -- with conspiracy to monopolize the securities business. The complaint said that the defendants had managed the sales of nearly 69% of some $20 billion worth of securities issued by the syndicate method (several houses working together) in the last ten years. They did so, the Government charged, by eliminating competition among themselves and preventing the use of competitive bidding for new issues. However, the Justice Department failed to make a compelling case. Medina sharply criticized Justice Department attorneys for failing to be clear in their explanation of how the defendants violated the Sherman antitrust act, and in the end, ruled in favor of the investment banking firms.
Medina was well-known for his passion for books, particularly classical languages and literatures. He was instrumental in the founding of a public library in Westhampton, New York, where he lived.
Medina died in 1990 at the age of 102.
This collection includes legal records, personal and professional correspondence, photographs, audio recordings, and teaching materials; in aggregate, they offer a substantial record of Medina's life and work. The bulk of the records in this collection is legal records, collected by Medina at a time when such resources were not widely distributed. They provide an almost-comprehensive record of Medina's career as a lawyer and judge.
Correspondence is usually kept in chronological rather than subject order. Researchers looking for correspondence will find it in the correspondence series, as well as the subject files series and his personal files.
The box numbers assigned at the beginning of this collection's custody at Princeton have been maintained, although in some cases they have been re-ordered throughout the finding aid for intellectual coherence. Boxes 23 and 75-82 are currently missing from the collection. Boxes 95-98, 179-180, 284-287, 297-298 and 301 have been removed from the collection.
Before coming to Princeton in the 1960s, this collection was divided between Medina's home and office. Parts of the collection spent time in the custody of Medina's official biographer at Johns Hopkins University during the 1970s-1990s, and limited documentation of what was sent and returned is available. A small number of boxes regarding Medina's work with the Southern District Court of New York remain unaccounted for to this day.
A very small part of the collection is available on microfilm (1 reel, 35 mm.): (MuddF) Micro-Film 6, (FilmM) Micro-Film 5635, and (FilmP) Micro-Film 2616, from Princeton University Library, One Washington Rd., Princeton, NJ 08544. FilmM (master printing negative) and FilmP (master preservation negative) available for reproduction only.
Gift of Harold R. Medina in October 1963. Additional material was received between 1990 and 2007. The accession numbers associated with these subsequent gifts are ML.1990-13, ML.2001.004, ML.2001.013, and ML.2007.002.
For preservation reasons, original analog and digital media may not be read or played back in the reading room. Users may visually inspect physical media but may not remove it from its enclosure. All analog audiovisual media must be digitized to preservation-quality standards prior to use. Audiovisual digitization requests are processed by an approved third-party vendor. Please note, the transfer time required can be as little as several weeks to as long as several months and there may be financial costs associated with the process. Requests should be directed through the Ask Us Form.
Series 11 is composed of audiovisual materials in various formats.
This collection was processed by Maureen Callahan in summer 2011, with help from Matt Allen '12 and Alec Egan '13. At this time, materials were moved into series, file lists were created, descriptive notes were written, materials were separated from the collection, and the finding aid was updated. Finding aid written by Maureen Callahan in 2011.
Documentation of Medina's memberships to professional, civic and religious organizations has been separated from the collection, as has documentation from a membership drive of the New York Bar Association. Personal financial documentation has also been destroyed. Documentation of Medina's role as a trustee and advisor to Princeton University has been separated and made into its own collection, AC392.
Organization
- Columbia University. School of Law.
- United States. Court of Appeals (2nd Circuit)
- Princeton University. Class of 1909
Subject
- Publisher
- Public Policy Papers
- Finding Aid Author
- Maureen Callahan
- Finding Aid Date
- 2011
- Access Restrictions
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The collection is open for research.
- Use Restrictions
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Single copies may be made for research purposes. To cite or publish quotations that fall within Fair Use, as defined under U. S. Copyright Law, no permission is required. For instances beyond Fair Use, it is the responsibility of the researcher to determine whether any permissions related to copyright, privacy, publicity, or any other rights are necessary for their intended use of the Library's materials, and to obtain all required permissions from any existing rights holders, if they have not already done so. Princeton University Library's Special Collections does not charge any permission or use fees for the publication of images of materials from our collections, nor does it require researchers to obtain its permission for said use. The department does request that its collections be properly cited and images credited. More detailed information can be found on the Copyright, Credit and Citations Guidelines page on our website. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us through the Ask Us! form.
Collection Inventory
These records document Medina's writings about law, religion, politics and literature. This series includes introductions to others' books, book reviews, and the texts of articles, speeches and memorials authored by Medina. Information about when and where Judge Medina gave these speeches can be found in the correspondence series.
The order in which these files came to Princeton has been maintained.
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The correspondence in this series includes discussion of both personal and professional matters.
Medina's extensive correspondence is arranged first thematically (general correspondence, correspondence with family, etc.), then chronologically, then alphabetically by correspondent. From 1958 forward, there are no folders for correspondence. Material is divided alphabetically by dividers from letter boxes, often for six month periods rather than yearly.
Physical Description56 boxes
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These files of correspondence, relating to Judge Medina's adjudication of the Smith Act trials (United States v. Foster, later known as United States v. Dennis), mostly consist of fan mail from Americans supportive of the Smith Act.
Physical Description3 boxes
Includes correspondence regarding Local Board 143, Stockbridge, St. Luke's, Law Observation and Enforcement
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These scrapbooks include press clippings, texts of speeches, correspondence, awards, and miscellaneous records of Judge Medina's life and career.
Scrapbooks are arranged chronologically, and a card subject index is available in the first box of the series.
Physical Description13 boxes
These card files were prepared by Princeton University archivists and librarians in the 1960s, when the collection first came to Princeton.
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Contains congratulations on elevation to United States Circuit Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
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Retirement from court.
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This scrapbook includes correspondence regarding Requests for: Articles, Statements, Prefaces, Quotations, Comments, Letters for Testimonial Volumes for "Special Birthdays", Book Reviews, Essays, Forwards, and Profiles.
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These records document Harold Medina's work as a law professor and with the "Medina Course," an independent venture to help students study for the New York bar. Records include notes (mostly from current events in the world of jurisprudence), some financial records, correspondence, and copies of bar exams.
Medina began teaching at Columbia Law School in 1914, and remained there until 1940. Concurrently, he started a bar examination course one year after having graduated from Columbia. He maintained the course for twenty-nine years, and was responsible for helping a generation of New York lawyers prepare for the bar. The work of this "cram course" resulted in significant personal financial resources.
The order in which these files came to Princeton has been maintained.
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Medina had the work he had done as an attorney bound into volumes. These volumes are listed by number, and include a list of the major cases contained within.
His professional organizational records document Medina's active professional involvement throughout his career, including committee and membership work with the New York City Bar, the New York State Bar, and the American Bar Association.
The order in which these files came to Princeton has been maintained.
Physical Description80 boxes
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These records document Medina's work on the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, to which he was nominated by Harry S. Truman in 1947 and where he served until 1953. Records document two major cases -- United States v. Foster and United States v. Morgan, in addition to smaller, less-known cases. Cases are listed by both name and case number whenever available.
The two major cases of Medina's career, United States v. Foster and United States v. Morgan, have been arranged into their own subseries, followed by the remaining records of Medina's work with the Southern District of New York.
Physical Description71 boxes
In February 1948 the United States Attorney General moved against the Communist Party USA (CPUSA) with the Smith Act, leading to a nine-month trial at the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. The CPUSA took this opportunity to put the United States legal system on trial, spending the first five weeks challenging jury selection procedures, claiming systematic discrimination against marginalized groups, including working-class people. The defense argued that this being so, the CPUSA leaders could not therefore be judged by a jury of their peers. Judge Medina dismissed these concerns.
The trial was accompanied by a measure of theatrics not usually found in Medina's courtroom, ending in October 1949 with the conviction of all defendants. Judge Harold Medina sentenced them to prison and also jailed their lawyers (along with Dennis, who had acted as his own attorney) for contempt because of disruptive behavior.
The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and the U.S. Supreme Court upheld both the convictions and the contempt citations. The defendants were charged with violation of the Smith Act, a sedition statute that proscribed conspiring to teach and advocate the violent overthrow of the government and setting up an organization to do so. They had allegedly violated that law by reconstituting the CPUSA (which had dissolved briefly during World War II) in order to promote Marxism-Leninism. As was widely noted, CPUSA leaders and their defendants were not prosecuted for any active plan or violence against the United States; rather, according to the Smith Act and Judge Medina's opinion, their political beliefs were tantamount to violence.
Originally known as United States v. Foster, the case was restyled United States v. Dennis (for General Secretary Eugene Dennis) after Foster was severed prior to trial because of heart trouble.
This subseries includes court transcripts, memoranda, exhibits, motions, and other material associated with United States v. Foster.
The order in which these materials were sent to Princeton has been maintained.
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This subseries documents the case United States v. Morgan (1952-1953), over which Judge Medina presided during his time at the Southern District of New York. During this case, the Justice Department of the United States brought anti-trust claims against seventeen Wall Street investment banking firms: Morgan Stanley and Company, Kidder Peabody, Goldman Sachs, White Weld and Company, Dillon Read and Company, Drexel and Company, First Boston Corporation, Smith Barney and Company, Kuhn, Loeb and Company, Lehman Brothers, Blyth and Company, Eastman Dillon and Company, Harriman Ripley, Stone and Webster Securities Corporation, Harris, Hall and Company 16. Glore, Forgan and Company, and Union Securities Corporation
Judge Medina eventually ruled in the defendants' favor with a 424-page opinion.
This subseries includes procedural and evidential documentation, as well as the court stenographer's minutes of the entire case
The order in which these materials were sent to Princeton has been maintained.
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The records in this subseries are mostly Judge Medina's copies of public judicial records, although some unpublished draft opinions are also available.
The order in which these materials were sent to Princeton has been maintained.
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The cases in this series include a docket or case number which such a designation was available. These public records were bound by a media service at Medina's request and contain very little unpublished content, other than correspondence with clerks and other judges.
The order in which these files came to Princeton has been maintained.
Physical Description24 boxes
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Microfilm of Docket Book, United States Second Circuit Court of Appeals, 1953-1960, is also in Box 287.
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These files were retrieved from Medina's filing cabinets at his Foley Square office in 1986. Much of it may complement other series but is from later in his life; personal and professional files are interspersed.
The order in which these files came to Princeton has been maintained.
Physical Description48 boxes
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