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Oscar Shaftel Papers

 Collection — Multiple Containers
Identifier: SCA-0052

Scope and Content Note

The Oscar Shaftel Collection documents Professor Shaftel’s tenure as a professor at Queens College, including his dismissal due to alleged communist affiliation during the McCarthy era and his efforts to reinstate his pension. The bulk of the collection is from 1948 to 1982 and includes correspondence, flyers, printed materials, and hearing transcripts. The collection provides evidence of Oscar Shaftel’s personal experience at Queens College, as well as student activism on campus in the late 1940s and early 1950s. More broadly, the collection provides documentation of the McCarthyism and its effect on the New York City education system.

Dates

  • 1932 - 2009

Access

Collection is open for research. Staff may restrict access at its discretion on the basis of physical condition.

Copyright

The Oscar Shaftel Collection is the property of the Queens College Libraries. Literary rights, including copyright, belong to the authors or their legal heirs and assignees. The collection is subject to all copyright laws. Queens College assumes no responsibility for the infringement of copyrights held by the original authors, creators, or producers of materials

Biographical and Historical Note

McCarthyism, named after Senator Joseph McCarthy, was a period of intense anti-communism in the United States (roughly 1948 to 1956) when the government of the United States actively persecuted the Communist Party USA, its leadership, and others suspected of being communists. As chair of the Senate Permanent Investigations Subcommittee from 1953–1954, McCarthy conducted a series of wide-ranging and controversial investigations. Members of the State Department, the armed services, civil service, Hollywood, academia, and many others were persecuted. National television coverage of McCarthy's aggressive behavior led to his censure by the Senate in 1954, but many continued to be investigated after that date.

In 1949, the New York Legislature passed the statute known as the Feinberg Law, which authorized employers to dismiss anyone who taught or advocated the subversion of government, or was knowingly a member of an organization which taught or advocated the overthrow of the government. In a Supreme Court case challenging the constitutionality of the Feinberg Law, the Supreme Court first mentioned the term “academic freedom” in Adler v. Board of Education (1952), in the dissent of Justice Douglas.

Oscar Shaftel was one of the original faculty members when Queens College first opened its doors in 1937, hired to teach English. He served in the United States Air Force from 1942-1946, and was awarded the PCS Award for meritorious service. He served as chairman of the Queens Chapter of the College Teachers Union, an affiliate of the American Federation of Teachers. As a faculty member at Queens College, he served as an advisor to the student newspaper The Crown.

Along with professors Dudley Straus and Vera Shlakman, Shaftel was fired in 1953 after he cited the Fifth Amendment and refused to answer questions about Communist affiliation in academia before the Senate Internal Security Committee. The Board of Higher Education (now Board of Trustees of CUNY) cited New York City Charter, § 903 – which was adopted in 1936 and took effect in 1938 – as grounds for dismissal. The charter was designed to eliminate from public employment individuals who refused to answer legally authorized inquiries as to the "official conduct of any officer or employee of the city . . . on the ground that his answer would tend to incriminate him." Shaftel appealed the decision in 1959, but was unsuccessful.

After he was fired from Queens College in 1953, Shaftel worked as a freelance writer until he was hired by the Pratt Institute in 1963. He returned to Queens College in 1973 as an adjunct professor. In 1982, he and several other teachers won a settlement against CUNY to reinstate their pensions. Dr. Shaftel continued as an adjunct at Queens College until 1994. He passed away on May 10, 2000 at the age of 88.

The Supreme Court found the Feinberg Law unconstitutional in 1967 in Keyishian v. Board of Regents. Section 903 of New York City Charter was declared unconstitutional in 1969.

Extent

2.5 Linear Feet (3 document cases; 2 half sized document cases; one small flat box.)

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

The Oscar Shaftel papers contains correspondence, flyers, press clippings, memos, press releases, transcripts of testimony, and subject files documenting student activism at Queens College in the late 1940s and early 1950s and the effect of McCarthyism on academic freedom in New York State. Oscar Shaftel, one of the original faculty members at Queens College, was fired in 1953 under Section 903 of the New York City Charter for refusing to testify in front of the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee about Communism in academia. Shaftel’s pension was reinstated by the New York City Board of Education in 1982.

Arrangement Note

Arranged in the following series: Queens College; Dismissal; Reinstatement of Pension; Subject Files on Academic Freedom; Correspondence; Personal; Video; and Secondary Materials.

Source

Donated by Oscar Shaftel in 1987 and 1994 and Anne Shaftel in 2023.

Materials in the Queens College, Dismissal, Reinstatement of Pension, and Subject Files donated by Oscar Shaftel. Materials in the Correspondence, Personal, and Video series donated by Ann Shaftel.

Related Collections

Queens College Special Collections and Archives created a digital exhibit, "Oscar Shaftel and the Menace of McCarthyism", to explore and present the Oscar Shaftel story at Queens College.

Additionally, there is a collection of Oscar Shaftel Papers at New York University, Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives.

Source

Title
Oscar Shaftel Collection
Status
Completed
Author
This collection was processed by Special Collection Fellow Caity Selleck during the fall 2010 semester. Machine readable formatted by Stephanie McEvoy, Spring 2014. Updated with new accretions by Annie Tummino in fall 2024.
Date
2010;Updated in 2024
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Part of the Queens College (New York, N.Y.) Special Collections and Archives Repository

Contact:
Queens College Library, CUNY
Benjamin Rosenthal Library RO317
65-30 Kissena Boulevard
Flushing 11367 USA us