ASSOCIATE JUSTICE FELIX FRANKFURTER - AUTOGRAPH NOTE ON SUPREME COURT CARD SIGNED 05/27/1958 - HFSID 86008
Price: $400.00
FELIX FRANKFURTER
Frankfurter handwrote, signed and dated this noet on a Supreme Court
card to a Bill in 1958. He apologizes for missing Bill, explaining: "Under
the pressure of the last weeks of a term, I work at home to have as few
interruptions as possible."
Autograph Note on Supreme Court Card signed:"F F",
4½x3½ Supreme Court card. 1958 May 27. Captioned: "Supreme Court
of the United States/Washington, D. C." In full: "My dear Bill: You
were thoughtful to drop in and I'm sorry to have missed you. Better luck for me
next time. Under the pressure of the last weeks of a term, I work at home to
have as few interruptions as possible. Very cordially,". A renowned
legal scholar, Frankfurter (1882-1965, born in Vienna, Austria)
influenced Supreme Court decisions for more than 20 years (1939-1962). A
former advisor to the NAACP and co-founder of the American Civil
Liberties Union, Frankfurter had affirmed that any form of discrimination
against Blacks violated the 15th Amendment (Lane vs. Wilson,1939). Believing that the Court should not interfere with laws established
by the people's elected officials, he upheld President Franklin D.
Roosevelt's New Deal legislation. In the realm of civil liberties,
Frankfurter would play a pivotal role in deciding the famous school
desegregation case Brown vs. the Board of Education (1954), ensuring
its historic importance by securing a unanimous decision. He dissented
when the Court overturned Minersville West Virginia State Board of Education
vs. Barnette(1943) and when it ruled in favor of legislative
reapportionment (Baker vs. Carr, 1962), which he felt was strictly
a political problem to be solved by the legislature, not the judiciary.
Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, the staunch advocate of judicial self-restraint
stabilized the liberal Earl Warren Court and promoted "procedural
fairness" in criminal cases. Frankfurter was presented the Medal of
Freedom by John F. Kennedy in 1963. Lightly toned, otherwise fine
condition.
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