Guide to the Papers of Louis Weinstock
1910-1994
(Bulk 1930-1980)



Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives
Elmer Holmes Bobst Library
70 Washington Square South
New York, NY 10012

Phone: (212) 998-2630
Fax: (212) 995-4225
E-mail: gail.malmgreen@nyu.edu

© 2004 Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives. All rights reserved.
New York University Libraries, Publisher

Processed by Keri A. Myers


Machine-readable finding aid derived from a MS Word document dated: 2004. Machine-readable finding aid created by Keri A. Myers. Description is in English.

Descriptive Summary

Creator: Weinstock, Louis, 1903-1994.
Title: Papers
Dates: 1910-1994, (Bulk 1930-1980)
Quantity: 3 linear feet (3 boxes)
Abstract: Louis Weinstock was born in Hungary in 1903 and emigrated to the United States in 1923. He settled in New York City and in 1925 joined the Painters’ Union, Local 499. Weinstock became one of the leaders of the “Rank and File” movement in District Council 9 of the International Painters and Paperhangers. Weinstock fought for Social Security and initiated the drive for unemployment insurance. Weinstock also led the Rank-and-File painters caucus in a fight against corruption in the union. Weinstock defeated the corrupt leadership of the infamous Lepke-Gurrah racketeer gang and was elected to the office of Secretary-Treasurer. In 1951, Weinstock was charged with conspiring to violate the Smith Act while teaching a trade union class; he was found guilty and sentenced to three years in jail. Weinstock retired from the union in 1963 and died in 1994 from heart failure.
Call Phrase: Wagner 013

Arrangement

Arranged chronological within each series.
Organized into 6 series:
I, Personal
II, Correspondence
III, Writings
IV, Subject Files
V, Resource Materials
VI, Ancillary Materials


Historical/Biographical Note

Louis Weinstock was born in Hungary in 1903 and emigrated to the United States in 1923. He settled in New York City and in 1925 joined the Painters' Union, Local 499. Weinstock became one of the leaders of the "Rank and File" movement in District Council 9 of the International Painters and Paperhangers. In 1926 Louis married Rose, also from Hungary and an activist in the International Ladies Garment Workers Union. During the Depression, Weinstock fought for Social Security and initiated the drive for unemployment insurance even though the American Federation of Labor (AFL) leadership was opposed to such policies. Weinstock, with the help of Harry Bridges of the West Coast Longshoremen (ILWU) and Elmer Brown of the Typographers Union (ITU) headed a committee to rally support from 3,000 AFL local unions and ultimately forced the reversal of the position of William Green, then head of the AFL Executive Council who was opposed to such reforms. During the struggle for the unemployed, Weinstock participated in hunger marches and led delegations to city councils, state capitols, and was part of the National Hunger March to Washington, DC in the early 1930s.

Weinstock also led the Rank-and-File painters caucus in a fight against corruption in the union. Weinstock defeated the corrupt leadership of the infamous Lepke-Gurrah racketeer gang and was elected to the office of Secretary-Treasurer, the highest office in District Council 9. He was elected Secretary-Treasurer in 1926 and for 11 years he was either Secretary-Treasurer or President of the District Council 9. Under the renewed democratic leadership the union initiation fee was reduced from $75 to $5 which increased membership, especially amongst minority and immigrant groups, and particularly amongst Blacks and Puerto Ricans. Additional benefits followed: increases in wages, better safety conditions, and shorter working hours.

Weinstock participated in numerous activities for both social change and for the Rank and File movement in the District Council 9. His activism included attending the founding convention of the World Federation of Trade Unions in 1945. He was a delegate to the first World Peace Congress, held in Paris in 1949. He continued to work throughout his life on the important issues facing international trade unions. In 1950 Weinstock became the secretary of the May Day planning committee. In 1953 the permit for the parade was canceled because the U.S. Subversive Activities Control Board declared that the group must register under the McCarran Act for operating a "Communist front" organization. At this point in Weinstock's life he was defending himself against three separate federal prosecutions: the May Day charge of perjury for allegedly lying about the name of the organizing committee; the Smith Act charge of teaching anti- American labor history, and the McCarran Act for being branded a Communist.

On June 20, 1951 the FBI showed up to take Weinstock to jail. He was charged with conspiring to violate the Smith Act while teaching a course on trade unionism in 1950. The Justice Department argued that some issues being taught could be viewed as advocating a violent overthrow of the U.S. government. In 1953 Weinstock was found guilty and sentenced to three years in jail and $6,000 fine. He was finally released from prison in May 1957 and continued to pay off the $6,000 fine in monthly installments for the next 19 years. After his release from prison in 1957, he was reinstated back into the District Council 9 and continued his trade as a house painter until a massive heart attack in 1963 forced him to retire.

After retirement, Louis and Rose moved to Los Angeles where they remained active by working with the Los Angeles Committee for Trade Union Action and Democracy (TUAD) and also coordinated a Senior Citizens Organization. During the 1980s he was active with senior citizens' organizations and was a delegate to the World Conference on Aging, organized by the United Nations, held in Vienna, Austria. Louis Weinstock died on November 26, 1994 at the age of 91 from heart failure.

Sources:

Gersh, Adolph B., Occupational Hazards and the Painter. New York: New York District Council No. 9, B. of P. D. & P. of A., 1937.

Hall, Burton H., editor. Autocracy and Insurgency in Organized Labor. New Brunswick: Transaction Books, 1972.

Montgomery, John Flournoy. Hungary: The Unwilling Satellite. New York: The Devin-Adair Company, 1947.

The Struggle of the New York Painters for Human Conditions. New York: District Council 9, Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators, and Paperhangers of America, No Date.

Zausner, Philip. Unvarnished: The Autobiography of a Labor Leader. New York: Brotherhood Publishers, 1941.


Scope and Content Note

The papers of Louis Weinstock document his life from the early 1930s to his death in 1994. The collection includes personal artifacts as well as an extensive amount of material from his involvement with the Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators, and Paperhangers. The collection is organized into six separate series: personal, correspondence, writings, subject files, resource materials, and ancillary materials.


Restrictions

Access Restrictions

Open for research without restrictions.

Use Restrictions

Permission to publish materials must be obtained in writing from the:
Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives
Elmer Holmes Bobst Library
70 Washington Square South
New York, NY 10012
Phone: (212) 998-2630
Fax: (212) 995-4225
E-mail: gail.malmgreen@nyu.edu


Access Points

Subject Names:
French, Daniel.
Weinstock, Louis, 1903-1994.
Winn, Sam.
Subject Organizations:
International Brotherhood of Painters and Allied Trades. Painters District Council 9 of New York City.
National Hunger March.
World Peace Congress.
Subject Topics:
Collective bargaining -- United States.
Insurance, Unemployment.
Labor unions -- United States .
May Day (Labor holiday) -- United States -- History.
Social security.
Unemployed.
Document Types:
Articles.
Clippings.
Correspondence.
Photographs.


Related Material at the Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives

Sam Winn, Local 490 IBPAT; Burton Hall Esq., Union Democracy Attorney; Carl Blum, IBPAT; Frank Schonfeld, Secretary- Treasurer District Council #9 IBPAT; and Daniel French, IBPAT. Separate folders contain over-size materials from Painters, D.C. 9, including campaign and election materials, drawings, etc.


Separated Material

Over 300 photographs, stickers, passports, magazines and newsletters.


Administrative Information

Provenance

These papers were donated in agreement with Dr. John Weinstock, son of Louis Weinstock and Susan Gould, Weinstock’s daughter. They were shipped from California to the Archives in October 1995.

Preferred Citation

Published citations should take the following form:

Identification of item, date (if known); The Papers of Louis Weinstock; Wagner 013; box number; folder number;
Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives
Elmer Holmes Bobst Library
70 Washington Square South
New York, NY 10012, New York University Libraries.


Container List

[The following section contains a detailed listing of the materials in the collection.]

 

Series I: Personal

Box Folder Title Date
1 1 Biographical file undated
1 2 Scrapbook 1930-1939
1 3 Awards and Invitations 1942-1992
1 4 Rose Weinstock file (wife) 1951-1959
1 5 Attorneys' Records: Sacher, Abt, Forer, & Rein 1953-1956
1 6 Birthday Celebrations 1973, 1983, 1988
1 7 Financial Records/Receipts 1986-1991
1 8 Causes & Issues 1989-1993
1 9 Memorials, Obituaries 1994

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Series II: Correspondence

Box Folder Title Date
1 10 Letters from Elizabeth Gurley Flynn 1961
1 11 Correspondence 1932-1947
1 12 Correspondence 1950-1969
1 13 Correspondence 1970-1989
1 14 Correspondence 1990-1993
1 15 Correspondence (orphan) undated

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Series III: Writings

Box Folder Title Date
1 16 Speeches ca.1943
1 17 Draft of Memoir undated
1 18 Notes for Memoir 1989
1 19 Weinstock Memoirs Publishing Committee 1989-1992
1 20 Margaret S. Mahler Institute, Grant for Memoir 1992

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Series IV: Subject Files

Box Folder Title Date
1 21 C.P.U.S.A. 1920-1939
1 22 Communist Party USA: "The Economic Crisis 1930
1 23 C.P.U.S. A. articles 1980
1 24 C.P.U.S.A. undated
1 25 Hunger March Materials-news clips, press releases 1931
1 26 Hunger March-originals undated
1 27 National Hunger March to Washington-Analysis 1932
1 28 Cincinnati Rank & File Conference-Proceedings 1932
1 29 Unemployed Organizer Newsletters 1933
1 30 AF of L Trade Union Committee for Unemployment Insurance and Relief 1932-1933, 1935
1 31 Tom Mooney articles 1932
1 32 Workers Alliance of America 1930-1949
1 33 American Labor Party 1944-1946
1 34 US Dept. of Labor-Painters Vacation Hearing 1945
1 35 Painters Vacation Hearing, Local 186 New Haven, Connecticut 1945
1 36 May Day materials 1950-1989
1 37 Supreme Court Opinions-Smith Act 1951
1 38 Smith Act-Defense Committee 1951-1954
Box Folder Title Date
2 1 Smith Act Support for Weinstock-Correspondence 1952
2 2 Smith Act Trial Report 1952-1953
2 3 Smith Act-Court Proceedings 1953
2 4 Federal Correctional Institution-Danbury, Rand Connecticut 1955-1957
2 5 Correspondence in Prison-Danbury, Connecticut 1955-1957
2 6 Record of Smith Act Cases 1956
2 7 Receipts of Payment to the Dept. of Justice 1950-1959
2 8 Smith Act Materials 1951-1976
2 9 U.S. Court of Appeals Re: Smith Act undated
2 10 Walter- McCarran Law 1954
2 11 American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born 1956-1957
2 12 District Council #9 1932-1988
2 13 Examination of DC #9's Accounts, Stuart Chase, CPA 1925-1927
2 14 Local Union 499, Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators, & Paperhangers 1934
2 15 New York District Council 1936, 1946, 1947
2 16 NYS Conference Buffalo, New York 1938
2 17 Rank & File" Program 1938-1940
2 18 Local Union 848, (Weinstock's Home Local) 1940-1949
2 19 CIO-PAC 1944
2 20 NC-PAC undated
2 21 Union Insurance Policies 1944-1946
2 22 Lemkin v Weinstock, Rarback v Weinstock 1945-1946
2 23 Expulsion from the Painters' Union 1945-1950, 1967
2 24 Local Union 442, Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators, & Paperhangers 1946
2 25 DC #9, Re: Dan French 1978, 1990-1991
2 26 IBPAT Pension Plan 1988
2 27 4th District Western Conference of Painters & Tapers 1988-1991
2 28 26th General Convention Reporter 1989
2 29 News Clips- Corruption DC #9 1990-1991
2 30 Painters Local Union 913 v Monroe, etc. 1991
2 31 William Duva, Int.'l Rep-personal papers 1992
2 32 Social Security, Medicare, & Healthcare 1980-1999
2 33 Senior Citizens-materials 1986-1991
2 34 Health Care Reform 1990

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Series V: Resource Materials

Box Folder Title Date
2 35 Articles and Journals 1930-1955
2 36 Corruption Sources 1930-1991
2 37 National Committee Minutes 1932, 1934
2 38 Unemployment Sources 1932-1945
2 39 Flyers 1933-1981
2 40 News and Opinion: NYC Building Trades 1944, 1946
2 41 International Sources 1945-1990
2 42 Rank and File Painter, Painters' Rank and File, The Voice etc… 1946-1970
2 43 UAW-CIO Report on Racketeering and Gangsteriism 1949
2 44 NY Law Journal, Labor Union Expulsion of Communist Party Member 1950
2 45 Daily News 1951
2 46 10th World Trade Union Congress, Havana, Cuba 1982
2 47 Retirement Sources 1983-1989
2 48 Joe Hill News 1989
2 49 Issues of Boomerang, United Electrical Workers of Chicago undated
2 50 Programme of Economic and Social Demands, WFTU-Draft undated
2 51 Fact Sheet on Senator McCarthy undated
Box Folder Title Date
3 1 Myerson Notes undated
3 2 MyersonNotes undated
3 3 Myerson Notes undated
3 4 Myerson Notes undated
3 5 Myerson Notes undated
3 6 Myerson Notes undated
3 7 Myerson Notes undated
3 8 Myerson Notes undated
3 9 Myerson Notes-Cold War undated
3 10 Myerson printed material- Research undated
3 11 Myerson bibliography undated
3 12 Myerson correspondence Re: Abt 1977-1990
3 13 ACTWU Archives 1986, 1987, 1990
3 14 Myerson Contacts for Interviews 1990
3 15 Myerson Correspondence with Weinstock 1991-1992
3 16 Orphan Documents 1932-1991
3 17 Articles/News Clips, Communist Pary 1929-1990
3 18 Press Releases, Hunger March & Work Sharing 1931-1970
3 19 Clips and Newspaper Articles, Hunger March & Work Sharing 1931-1970
3 20 Articles on Painters, News Clips, & Press Releases 1931-1966
3 21 Articles on Racketeering, News Clips, & Press Releases 1937-1947
3 22 Articles on Hungary-News Clips 1946-1994
3 23 News Clips/Articles 1981-1992
3 24 News Clips (Orphan) undated

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Series VI: Ancillary Materials

Box Folder Title Date
3 25 Committee on Un-American Activities, House of Representatives, 80th Congress 1948
3 26 Subversive Activities Control Board 1950-1959
3 27 Legal Documents, US Court of Appeals undated
3 28 Legal Documents, US Supreme Court 1950-1959

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