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Pepper Hamilton LLP Harry Gold Records
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Held at: Temple University Libraries: Special Collections Research Center [Contact Us]
This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the Temple University Libraries: Special Collections Research Center. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.
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Harry Gold (nee Heinrich Golodnitsky) was born in Switzerland December 12, 1910 and moved to the United States in 1914, with his parents and younger brother Joseph. His parents ultimately settled in South Philadelphia where Gold went to school and from there went to college where he was trained as a biochemist. He worked at the Pennsylvania Sugar Company between the years 1929-1946 off and on, taking time off to attend college. In 1935, he met his first contact and began his life as a spy, passing information regarding the atomic bomb and how to build it to various agents working for Russia. He was caught in 1950, and after initially denying any involvement he gave a full confession to the F.B.I., naming among others, the Rosenbergs. When he went before Judge Granery, he was granted free representation based on lack of funds, and asked for a lawyer who would accept his guilty plea, "would not make a show...and had no radical connections, no leftist or pinkish background whatsoever." Granery asked John D.M. Hamilton, of Pepper, Bodine, Stokes & Hamilton to represent Gold. After being convicted of violating the Espionage Act of 1917, he was sentenced to 30 years in prison to be served at the Federal Penitentiary in Lewisburg, PA. He was granted clemency after serving 16 years of his sentence and was released in 1966. Soon after his release he became employed at J.F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital as a biochemist. In 1972, Gold died while undergoing heart surgery at the age of 60.
Harry Gold, convicted atomic spy, was represented by John D. M. Hamilton of Pepper, Bodine, Stokes & Hamilton, (currently Pepper Hamilton LLP) in the summer of 1950. Gold confessed to and was convicted of violating the Espionage Act of 1917 by passing information relating to the atomic bomb to Russian agents. He was sentenced to 30 years in prison and served approximately 16 years before being granted clemency and was released in 1966. Because of Gold's testimony Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were also convicted of violating the Espionage Act of 1917 and were sentenced to death. Their sentence was carried out in June of 1953. His testimony also helped convict Morton Sobell who was also sentenced to 30 years. During his life, Gold invented two things: a thermal diffusion technique and a blood sugar test. The blood sugar test he invented dramatically decreased the amount of time it took to determine a patient's glucose level, and it assuredly has saved countless lives. The collection primarily consists of documents relating to his trial and his petition for executive clemency. There are court documents, a large amount of correspondence regarding the trial (which includes two letters from J. Edgar Hoover addressed to Hamilton), material regarding his patented blood sugar test, transcripts from some Soundscriber tapes that document Gold's confession and a large amount of newspaper clippings documenting the trial, sentencing and then his release from prison. In addition, there is some material regarding Walter and Miriam Schneir's Invitation to an Inquest which documents Julius and Ethel Rosenberg's trial and history. The Schneir's used the Soundscriber transcripts for their book which makes claims that Gold was not truthful when accusing the Rosenberg's and playing a large role in their death sentence conviction; claims that Gold contested.
Series 2: Correspondence, 1950-1965, undated
Series 3: Publicity, 1950-1974
Series 4: Inventions, 1954-1970, undated
Series 5: Papers: "Do Not Give to Anyone Without Permission of A.S. Ballard" (RESTRICTED), 1950-1951, undated
Donated by Pepper Hamilton LLP in January 2008.
Collection processed and finding aid prepared in April 2010 by Holly Beth Wilson. Finding aid revised according to contemporary archival standards June 2017 by Sarah Lerner, Student Worker.
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Subject
- Publisher
- Temple University Libraries: Special Collections Research Center
- Finding Aid Author
- Machine-readable finding aid created by: Rajkumar Natarajan, Sky Global Services India (P) Ltd.
- Finding Aid Date
- April 2024
- Access Restrictions
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Collection is open for research. Materials in Series 5 are restricted. Contact the Special Collections Research Center for more information.
- Use Restrictions
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The Pepper Hamilton LLP Harry Gold Records are the physical property of the Special Collections Research Center, Temple University Libraries. Intellectual property rights, including copyright, belong to the authors or their legal heirs and assigns. Researchers are responsible for determining the identity of rights holders and obtaining their permission for publication and for other purposes where stated.
Collection Inventory
This series consists of the papers related to Gold's trial and includes his petition for clemency. Box 2 includes the Schneir transcripts.
Correspondence includes some hate mail and letters to and from J. Edgar Hoover.
Along with newspaper clippings covering the trial, Box 5 includes a folder "International News Service" which consists of mostly correspondence regarding an attempt by the publication to secure rights to Harry Gold's life story, to be published in a five part series. Initially, it was to be published before the Rosenberg trial, but due to the nature of his testimony, Gold refused until after the trial based on the fact that it could hurt the government's case. After the Rosenberg trial, the public's fascination with Harry diminished, the publisher was not interested anymore, and the matter was dropped. Folder 5 in this same box consists of correspondence and memos regarding the Schneir's successful attempt at listening to and transcribing the Soundscriber tapes to be used for their book. The Schneir's insinuated to Gold and Hamilton that they were mostly interested in Harry's confession to include as background information in their book about the Rosenberg trial, but it turned out they were just looking for any inconsistency in his confession to shed doubt on his accusation of the Rosenberg's.
Includes all the paperwork for Gold's two inventions: thermal diffusion and the blood sugar test.
This series includes folders that were placed in a larger folder with the following notation on the front "Material to be put in safe for Mr. Ballard/Delivered by Miss Lind 8-26-65/DO NOT GIVE TO ANYONE WITHOUT PERMISSION OF A.S. BALLARD."