Guide to the Papers of Henry Roth (1906-1995),
n.d., 1918-2000
P-702

Processed by Michelle R. Sampson



American Jewish Historical Society
Center for Jewish History
15 West 16th Street
New York, NY 10011

Phone: (212) 294-6160
Fax: (212) 294-6161
Email: info@ajhs.org

URL: http://www.ajhs.org

© December 2001. American Jewish Historical Society at the Center for Jewish History . All rights reserved.
Center for Jewish History, Publisher.

Machine-readable finding aid created by Rachel Keegan as MS Word document.May 2001. Electronic finding aid converted to EAD 1.0 by Dianne Ritchey Oummia, December 2001.Description is in English.

Descriptive Summary

Title: Papers of Henry Roth (1906-1995)
Dates: n.d., 1918-2000
Abstract: This collection contains personal papers of the writer Henry Roth. It is comprised of extensive correspondence, journals and notebooks of his writing, and published and unpublished manuscripts of his work. There are also papers concerning Roth's interests in Israel, Judaism, and Leftist politics, publications by and about him, and volumes of his works. In addition, the papers also include a postcard and art print collection, photographs, biographical material, and a list of monographs once housed in Roth’s personal library.
Quantity: 41.95 linear feet
Identification: P-702

Biographical Note

Henry Roth was born February 8, 1906 in Tyszmenicz, Galitzia (now the Ukraine). He immigrated with his mother Leah (Farb) to the United States in 1908; Roth’s father, Herman, had arrived in New York City in 1907 and had found work and a home for his family. The Roths lived for a short time in Brownsville before moving in 1910, with Henry's newly born sister Rose (later Broder), to the Lower East Side, then a predominantly Jewish neighborhood. For the next few years, before relocating to Harlem in 1914, young Henry soaked in the sights and sounds of an immigrant culture that would eventually be immortalized in his first novel, Call it Sleep. While still a child, Roth identified himself as a rebel by declaring his atheist beliefs at the age of fourteen. Later in his life he would embrace and discard the Communist Party, become involved in political events and causes, rediscover Judaism, and reveal family shames and secrets cloaked in fiction in the Mercy of a Rude Stream series. But in 1934, at the mere age of twenty-eight, Roth accomplished what some critics call his greatest achievement—he wrote a decidedly sensual novel describing the experiences of a newly arrived immigrant child—Call it Sleep.

In 1924, Roth graduated from De Witt Clinton High School and enrolled in the City College of New York with hopes of becoming a biology teacher. His journals reveal that he won a scholarship to Cornell but “lacked the enterprise to go.” 1 It was at City College that he first encountered literature professor and poet Eda Lou Walton, whom he met through a mutual friend. A professor at New York University and more than a decade older than Roth, Walton captivated the young man and soon the two were living together. She supported Roth both emotionally and financially while he completed his degree in 1928 and wrote Call it Sleep. She continued to do so for another decade until he met his future wife Muriel Parker, and ended his relationship with Walton; unfortunately the relationship ended on a sour note and tensions continued between the two until Walton's death.

Having joined the Communist Party after graduating college, Roth was disillusioned and disappointed when his comrades criticized his work for not being proletarian enough. Despite some favorable reviews of Call it Sleep, Roth continued to write, but virtually abandoned his aspirations to be an author. During the summer of 1938, he met Muriel, a composer, at Yaddo Artists’ Colony in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. They married on October 7, 1939, and Henry began building a resume filled with odd jobs. In the 1940s, he became a precision metal grinder in both New York and New England. Next, he moved to Montville, Maine with his wife and their two sons, Jeremy and Hugh, and began working as an orderly in the Augusta State Hospital—a psychiatric institution—for the next four years. Later he established a waterfowl farming business and tutored Latin and math, lifelong passions, on the side. It was Muriel who supported the family through teaching in a nearby elementary school. Roth’s short stories, such as “Broker” and “Somebody Always Grabs the Purple,” continued to appear in prominent magazines such as The New Yorker. But in the 1940s, despite glowing remarks about his novel in progress, If We Had Bacon, whose opening chapters had been accepted by Scribner’s and printed in Signatures, Roth burned nearly all of his journals and manuscripts in a storm of discontent and discouragement. He proceeded to publish a few short stories in the coming years, but remained successful in dissuading himself of his own writing capabilities.

The1960s brought great change to Roth’s personal life. He grudgingly relinquished his self-imposed anonymity when Call it Sleep was rediscovered and hailed as “The Great American Novel” by literary critics. He also discarded his long-held Communist ideals and rediscovered his allegiance to Judaism during the Arab Israeli War. And while he had never ceased to write, he began to commit himself more seriously to the art when he accepted the D.H. Lawrence Fellowship in 1968 at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. Henry and Muriel Roth moved into the Frieda Lawrence ranch in Taos, New Mexico and the sleeping author awakened. The Roths remained in New Mexico for the remainder of their lives, living in spartan, but comfortable conditions. Roth began to publish short stories and memoirs such as “Itinerant Ithican” and “Kaddish” more frequently. His manuscripts and journals from the 1970s and 1980s indicate the seedlings of the various volumes of Mercy of a Rude Stream and the as yet unpublished Maine Sampler.

The 1970s also saw Roth embracing Zionism and traveling to Israel. His topical files and journals indicate a growing interest in the state of Israel and the Zionist cause. In one such entry, Roth writes, “…the [Six Day] war completed his liberation from the Soviet mystique [and] …since moving away from the East Side and its homogeneity…spun a…fresh strand…of affinity…with his people.” 2 He began writing more in his journals about racial tensions both in his neighborhood of Albuquerque and the world at large. Furthermore, the correspondence series contains drafts of letters to President Jimmy Carter as well as an exchange of letters between Roth and Black Panther and ardent Zionist Eldridge Cleaver that documents Roth’s growing concern for political issues.

The once reclusive author also began to grant more and more interviews—especially after he gained world renown with Italy’s 1985 Premio Nonnino prize for Mario Materassi’s translation of Call it Sleep. There is a great deal of correspondence between Roth and Materassi that documents not only their working relationship, but also the father-son relationship which eventually blossomed from it. Roth spent most of his life trying to recapture the inspiration and state of mind that resulted in his first novel, but many of his journal entries ruminate on the writer’s block and depression that plagued him for much of his life. Several of the journal entries throughout the years focus on the same event or chain of events, as if by constantly recreating them he could finally reach a catharsis. Roth addresses these issues and many more in his 1987 monograph Shifting Landscape, which contains both essays and short stories.

Indeed Roth did recreate, to an extent, the inspiration that resulted in his first novel. The first two volumes of the Mercy of a Rude Stream series ( A Star Shines Over Mt. Morris Park and A Diving Rock on the Hudson), as largely autobiographical as Call it Sleep, received mixed reviews from critics surprised to discover its author was still alive. The series caused many readers to reread Sleep—or read it for the first time—and to write the author about the effect his work had on their lives. It also prompted old acquaintances from his Lower East Side days to write him and reminisce. Several of these letters exist in the correspondence series and serve as a touching monument to Roth’s legacy.

Henry Roth died October 13, 1995 at Lovelace Hospital in Albuquerque, New Mexico, at the age of 89. His wife Muriel preceded him in death in 1990. The Henry Roth Papers document the lifetime of one man, but as friend Ted Bookey cynically writes, Like it or not, ‘enry, you are going to be a remembered episode in American and world literature. How interesting it will be to see your anonymity grow…. Imagine the crap, the falsifying, deluging crap, that’s going to be written about you by industrious Ph.D.’s [sic] and tender-loving critics;...think of the bull market for Roth’s discarded [sic] shoes and socks and the relics that will be sold. On a thousand typewriters the myths are raining. 3


Scope and Content Note

The bulk of the Henry Roth Papers document the author’s personal and professional life from the 1960s until his death in 1995. The papers encompass a wide range of material, including hundreds of fan letters; correspondence with Roth family members and significant figures in Roth’s life; a large number of journals and notebooks containing rough drafts of Roth’s work as well as his inmost thoughts; unpublished and published manuscripts by Roth; topical items documenting Roth’s interests in Israel, Judaism, and Leftist politics; publications by and about Roth; and books of various editions of his works. The papers also include a postcard and art print collection, photographs, biographical material, and a list of monographs once housed in Roth’s personal library. The bulk of the Roth’s manuscripts contained in this collection pertain to the Mercy of a Rude Stream series, but also consists of many short stories and a manuscript by Herman Roth, Henry’s father. Manuscripts relevant to Call it Sleep are located at the New York Public Library. Listed among the correspondents are President Jimmy Carter, Eldridge Cleaver, Luther Cressman, David Greenhood, Chaim Herzog, Mario Materassi, Harold Ribalow, Bill and Roslyn Targ, Stuyvesant Van Veen, and Eda Lou Walton.

The original order and folder titles were retained wherever possible.


Organization

The collection is arranged in eight series:
Series I: Correspondence, n.d., ca. 1925-1995
Series II: Journals and Notebooks, n.d., ca. 1925-1992
Series III: Manuscripts by Roth, n.d., 1925-2000
Series IV: Publications by Roth, n.d., 1925-1990
Series V: Manuscripts on Roth, n.d., 1966-1995
Series VI: Publications on Roth, n.d., 1935-1956-1995
Series VII: Topical, and Series, n.d., 1918-1995
Series VIII: Books, 1960-1985


Arrangement

Most series are arranged alphabetically. Exceptions are Subseries B in Series II, which is arranged chronologically, and Series VIII, which is arranged by title.

See individual series descriptions for further information on arrangement.


Restrictions

Access Restrictions

The collection is open to all researchers by permission of the Executive Director of the American Jewish Historical Society.

Use Restrictions

Information concerning the literary rights may be obtained from the Executive Director of the American Jewish Historical Society. Users must apply in writing for permission to quote, reproduce or otherwise publish manuscript materials found in this collection. For more information contact:
American Jewish Historical Society
Center for Jewish History
15 West 16th Street
New York, NY 10011


Related Material

Related materials can be found in the Henry Roth Collection of the American Jewish Historical Society. Other Henry Roth manuscripts can be found at Boston University’s Mugar Library and the New York Public Library.


Administrative Information

Provenance

The Henry Roth Papers are on deposit at the Society from the Henry Roth Literary Trust.

Preferred Citation

Published citations should take the following form:

Description of item; date of item; Henry Roth Papers; P-702; box number; folder number; American Jewish Historical Society at the Center for Jewish History .


Footnotes

1 Journal. July 8, 1971.

2 Journal. August, 1971.

3 Correspondence. Bookey, Ted and Eve, n.d., 1964.


Container List

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

 

Series I: Correspondence, n.d., ca. 1925-1995  4.5 linear feet

Arrangement:

Arranged alphabetically.

Scope and Content:

Series I includes Roth’s alphabetical files and includes both incoming and outgoing correspondence. Researchers should note that while Roth mostly maintained an alphabetical system for his letters, for a short time he utilized a separate “fan mail” section. Therefore, one should search for correspondence both in the alphabetical files as well as within the “fan mail” series. “Fan mail” is organized alphabetically and likewise appears alphabetically within the Correspondence series. Names of particular interest to researchers within the series include President Jimmy Carter (Box 1, folder 29), political activist and author Eldridge Cleaver (Box 1, folders 31-32), childhood friend and first husband of Margaret Mead, Luther Cressman (Box 2, folders 1-3), friend David Greenhood (Box 3, folders 9-12), Zionist Chaim Herzog (Box 3, folders 20-21), Italian editor Mario Materassi (Box 5, folders 9-11), literary promoter and critic Harold Ribalow (Box 7, folders 2-4), literary agents Bill and Roslyn Targ, New York City painter and muralist, Stuyvesant Van Veen (Box 8, folders 24-25), poet and muse Eda Lou Walton (Box 9, folders 1-5), and letters to and from Roth family members (Box 7, folders 12-20 and Box 8, folders 1-4).

Box Folder Title Date
1 1 A n.d., 1961-1995
1 2 Adams, Stephen from Henry Roth 1987
1 3 Alexander, Edward from Henry Roth 1978
1 4 Altenbernd, Lynn n.d., 1986-1994
1 5 Arion Press 1994 -1995
1 6 Avon Books 1964-1986
1 7 B n.d., 1964-1995
1 8 Bader, Dorothy and Charles n.d., 1981, 1990-1994
1 9 Barnini, Edward 1965-1971
1 10 Belitt, Ben ca. 1930, 1938, 1987
1 11 Bell, Don n.d., 1965-1969, 1987, 1990
1 12 Berger, Yves from Henry Roth 1968
1 13 Berman, Jimmy ca. 1989-1990
1 14 Bernard Grasset Publishers 1968
1 15 de Basio, Giordano n.d., 1984, 1990
1 16 Biernoff n.d., 1991-1995
1 17 Bookey, Ted and Eve n.d., 1964
1 18 Bookey, Ted and Eve: from Henry Roth n.d., 1964
1 19 Broder, Rose n.d., ca. 1960-1995
1 20 Broder, Rose: from Henry Roth n.d., 1964, 1968
1 21 Bronsen, David 1967-1972
1 22 Bronsen, David: from Henry Roth 1968
1 23 Brown Agency (Russell F.) 1969, 1972
1 24 Brown, General 1974
1 25 Burke, Kenneth from Henry Roth 1989
1 26 Burnshaw, Stanley 1982-1992
1 27 Burnshaw, Stanley: from Henry Roth 1982
1 28 C n.d., 1964-1995
1 29 Carter, President Jimmy from Henry Roth n.d., 1978
1 30 City College of New York 1965-ca. 1980
1 31 Cleaver, Eldridge 1976
1 32 Cleaver, Eldridge: from Henry Roth 1976
1 33 Commentary 1965-1984
1 34 Committee on New Alternatives in the Middle East ca. 1970-1971
Box Folder Title Date
2 1 Cressman, Luther 1963, 1970-1978
2 2 Cressman, Luther 1979-1994
2 3 Cressman, Luther: from Henry Roth 1934, 1971-1978
2 4 D n.d., 1965-1995
2 5 Daleski, Bill 1978-1979
2 6 Daleski, Bill: from Henry Roth 1978
2 7 Dickstein, Morris 1987-1988
2 8 Domenici, (Senator) 1978
2 9 E 1965-1995
2 10 Fan Mail n.d., 1959-1969
2 11 Fan Mail ca. 1970-1989
2 12 Fan Mail 1993-1995
2 13 F n.d., 1962-1994
2 14 Farb, Morris and Ida c1960-1962, 1975
2 15 Farb, Ida from Henry Roth 1979
2 16 Farb, Morris from Sam Farb c1960s
2 17 Farb, Sam 1970
2 18 Field, Mildred and George n.d., 1968-1995
2 19 Fox, Larry n.d.
2 20 Fox, Larry: from Henry Roth 1992
2 21 Franzen, Byron 1968-ca. 1969
2 22 Franzen, Byron: from Henry Roth 1968
2 23 Freedman, Bill 1972-1980
2 24 Friedman, John 1975-1978
2 25 G n.d., 1964-1994
2 26 Gamzue, Boris 1970-1977
2 27 Gamzue, Boris 1981-1990
Box Folder Title Date
3 1 Gamzue, Boris from Henry Roth ca. 1970-1991
3 2 Geismar, Maxwell from Henry Roth 1964-1965
3 3 Gentry, Bruce (“Billy”) ca. 1965-1988
3 4 Gillman, Richard 1984-1995
3 5 Gillman, Richard: from Henry Roth 1984, 1988
3 6 Goldsmith, Margie 1983-1986
3 7 Gotleib, Howard n.d., 1964-1983
3 8 Gotleib, Howard: from Henry Roth 1974
3 9 Greenhood, David (“Clink”) ca. 1965-1974
3 10 Greenhood, David and Adolph Anderson in re Roth 1966-1967, 1987
3 11 Greenhood, David and Sue Henig in re Roth 1964-1976, 1988
3 12 Greenhood, David from Henry Roth n.d., 1952, 1965-1967
3 13 Greenstone, Maryann ca. 1969-c1971
3 14 H n.d., 1963-1995
3 15 Hageman, Florence n.d., 1990
3 16 Halban, Peter from Henry Roth 1979
3 17 Hamilton, James 1969-1992
3 18 Hebrew Union College 1994
3 19 Henig, Sue n.d., 1965-1974, 1978
3 20 Herzog, Chaim 1973-1975, 1980
3 21 Herzog, Chaim: from Henry Roth 1973
3 22 Hill, Christopher from Henry Roth 1989
3 23 Hollander, Herbert 1964-1966
3 24 Hood, Frances n.d., 1990
3 25 Hopson, Julie 1989-1990
3 26 Horch Associates (Franz J.) 1964-1968
3 27 Horch Associates (Franz J.) 1969-1970, 1975
3 28 Horowitz, Mervin 1988-1990
3 29 Howard, Jane ca. 1960, 1965
3 30 Howard, Jane: from Henry Roth 1964
3 31 Howe, Irving 1965-1979
3 32 Howe, Irving: from Henry Roth 1965
Box Folder Title Date
4 1 Hurlinger, Iven and Fannie 1959-1981
4 2 Hurlinger, Iven and Fannie: from Henry Roth 1927-1977
4 3 Hurlinger, Iven and Fannie: from Eda Lou Walton ca. 1930-1932
4 4 Husband, Anna n.d., 1995
4 5 I 1966-1995
4 6 J 1972-1989
4 7 Jewish Community Council of Albuquerque ca. 1973
4 8 Jewish Federation of Greater Albuquerque 1987-1989
4 9 Jewish Publication Society n.d., 1986-1990
4 10 Jones Davis, Georgia n.d., 1984, ca. 1990
4 11 Jones Davis, Georgia: from Henry Roth 1989
4 12 K n.d., 1960-1995
4 13 Kahana, Tamara 1964-1980
4 14 Kahana, Tamara 1977-1978
4 15 Kamber, Gerald n.d., 1968-1978
4 16 Kanter and Everage, P.A. 1975, 1987-1990
4 17 Kerell, Walter 1994
4 18 Keyes, Tom 1990
4 19 Kingisberg, Lillian Quat 1965-1983
4 20 Kisch, Alice and Suzy 1980-1995
4 21 Kleederman, Frances 1971-1977
4 22 Klinger family n.d., 1981-1995
4 23 Kubik, Maraline 1994
4 24 L n.d., 1964-1995
4 25 Lataster, Petra 1994-1995
4 26 Ledbetter, Kenneth 1965-1966
4 27 Lesser, Wayne n.d., 1975
4 28 Linea d’Ombra 1984-1985
4 29 Lujan, Representative Manuel from Henry Roth n.d.
4 30 Lyons, Bonnie and Grant n.d., 1972-1990
4 31 Lyons, Bonnie and Grant: from Henry Roth 1975-1979
Box Folder Title Date
5 1a M n.d.
5 1b M n.d., ca. 1960-1995
5 2 Makowsky, Irit Manskleid 1978, 1980
5 3 Makowsky, Irit Manskleid: from Henry Roth 1978-1979
5 4 Mandel, Dave n.d., ca. 1960-c1972
5 5 Mandel, Dave: from Henry Roth 1964
5 6 Markle, Melanie n.d., 1993-1995
5 7 Marquez, Maria Teresa and Antonio n.d., 1978-1990
5 8 Marquez, Maria Teresa and Antonio: from Henry Roth 1979
5 9 Materassi, Mario 1961-1985
5 10 Materassi, Mario 1986-1993
5 11 Materassi, Mario: from Henry Roth 1964-1993
5 12 Mayer, Peter ca. 1960-1991
5 13 Meyer, Marian from Henry Roth 1974
5 14 Midstream 1962-1976
5 15 Miles, Valerie 1995
5 16 Mills, Elisabeth and John n.d., 1973, 1990
5 17 Mills, John and Suzanne n.d., ca. 1980-1995
5 18 Montemarano, Dan 1993-1995
5 19 Montesi, Ennio 1990-1995
5 20 Morse, Kent ca. 1964-1980
5 21 Muchwitsch, William 1967
Box Folder Title Date
6 1 N ca. 1965-1995
6 2 National Institute of Arts and Letters 1965
6 3 National Public Radio 1980-1981
6 4 Nelson, Kenneth from Henry Roth 1965
6 5 Newman, Sadie Ruth 1994-1995
6 6 New Mexico, University of 1967-1994
6 7 New Orleans Review 1977
6 8 New York Times, 1971-1974
6 9 New Yorker 1966, 1993
6 10 Nohl, Andreas 1987-1995
6 11 Nohl, Andreas: from Henry Roth 1987
6 12 O 1964-1981
6 13 Opperman, Joseph and Helen 1988-1995
6 14 Orion House 1994
6 15 P n.d., 1966-1994
6 16 Parker, Doris, Kent, and Margaret 1963-1986, 1993
6 17 Parker, Richard from Henry Roth 1977
6 18 Paul Richards Autographs 1965
6 19 Perry, Gene and Lena n.d.,1965-1970, 1995
6 20 n.d., 1961-1962
6 21 Pollard, Jim 1963-1978, 1989
6 22 Pomerantz, Eddie 1963-1964, 1971
6 23 Portnow, Solomon and Evelyn 1964-1979
6 24 Portnow, Solomon and Evelyn: from Henry Roth 1964, 1967
6 25 Pulliam, Richard 1964
6 26 Q 1981
Box Folder Title Date
7 1 R n.d., 1965-1994
7 2 Ribalow, Harold 1959-1964
7 3 Ribalow, Harold 1965-1978, 1995
7 4 Ribalow, Harold: from Henry Roth 1964-1965
7 5 Richman, Martin 1986-1994
7 6 Roberts, Barbara n.d., 1974, 1994
7 7 Robson, Ernest ca. 1967
7 8 Rodney, Janet 1989-1992
7 9 Romero, Stella n.d., 1992-1993
7 10 Rose, Herman and Elia 1973, 1975
7 11 Roseman, William and Harriet 1963-1967
7 12 Roth Family (extended) n.d., 1961, 1965, 1994
7 13 Roth, Cecil 1966
7 14 Roth, Mrs. Herman from Hugh Roth ca. 1964
7 15 Roth, Herman n.d., 1957-1966
7 16 Roth, Herman 1966-1971
7 17 Roth, Herman:from Henry and Muriel Roth 1964-1969
7 18 Roth, Herman: from various 1968, 1970
7 19 Roth, Hugh and family n.d., 1962-1995
7 20 Roth, Hugh and family: from Henry Roth 1965, 1968
Box Folder Title Date
8 1 Roth, Jeb and family n.d., 1975-1995
8 2 Roth, Jeb and family: from Henry Roth n.d., 1964-1965
8 3 Roth, Muriel n.d., 1978-1990
8 4 Roth, Muriel: from Henry Roth 1978
8 5 S n.d., ca. 1960-1995
8 6 Samet, Tom from Henry Roth 1974, 1976
8 7 Savage, John 1973
8 8 Schippers, Jaap 1968
8 9 Solomon, Sidney and Shirley n.d., 1983, 1994-1995
8 10 Spector, Barbara from Henry Roth 1987
8 11 Steele, Felicia Jean 1991-1995
8 12 Steele, Felicia Jean: from Henry Roth 1995
8 13 Sutin, Judge Lewis R. 1991-c1992
8 14 Syrkin, Marie 1976-1988
8 15 Syrkin, Marie: from Henry Roth 1977-1981
8 16 T n.d., 1965-1994
8 17 Targ, Roslyn and Bill n.d., 1969-1995
8 18 Targ, Roslyn and Bill: from Henry Roth 1968, 1977-1984
8 19 Thomas, George B. 1961-1979
8 20 Thomas, George B.: from Henry Roth n.d., 1965, 1979
8 21 Thompson, Phyllis n.d., 1988, 1990
8 22 U 1980, 1995
8 23 V 1965-1988
8 24 Van Veen, Stuyvesant and Felicia n.d., 1970-1988
8 25 Van Veen, Stuyvesant from Eda Lou Walton n.d., 1931-ca. 1933
8 26 W n.d., 1962-1995
8 27 Wacks, Jerry 1986-1990
8 28 Walden, Daniel from Henry Roth 1979
8 29 Walker, Muriel 1991-1992
Box Folder Title Date
9 1 Walton, Eda Lou n.d., 1934-ca. 1938
9 2 Walton, Eda Lou: from Henry Roth n.d., 1936-ca. 1938
9 3 Walton, Eda Lou: from “Frank” 1934
9 4 from Lester Winter n.d.
9 5 Walton, Eda Lou: from Lester Winter ca. 1925-ca. 1934
9 6 Weil, Robert n.d., 1992-1993
9 7 White (O’Connel), Barbara n.d., 1962, ca. 1967
9 8 Wilson, (Judge) from Henry Roth 1976
9 9 Wirth Nesher, Hana n.d., 1991-1992
9 10 X, Y, Z 1966-1995
9 11-12 Unidentified n.d.
9 13 Unidentified 1931, 1965-1993
9 14 Unidentified 1994-1995
9 15 Unidentified and Miscellaneous from Henry Roth n.d., 1954-1966
9 16 Unidentified and Miscellaneous from Henry Roth 1966-1990, 1995
Return to the Top of Page 

Series II: Journals and Notebooks, n.d., ca. 1925-1992  6 linear feet

Arrangement:

Series II contains 2 subseries: Subseries A: Notebooks and Subseries B: Journals. Subseries A contains the notebooks that include account and address books, language primers, and calendars and is arranged alphabetically by type of notebook. Subseries B constitutes the journals and is arranged chronologically.

Scope and Content:

This series encompasses rough drafts of Roth’s work, as well as everyday musings throughout much of his life. It is important to note that Roth often begins writing in his journals in the first person, but progresses into the third person (referring to himself as R or HR) so that reading the journals is comparable to reading a narrative. Most individuals in his journals are also referred to by their initials. Researchers will note the number of journals covering the early years of Roth’s life is small in comparison to the middle and latter sections of the author’s life; indeed the 1940s are not documented at all. Roth also appeared to have kept many journals at the same time so there is overlap within much of the series. Furthermore, the author wrote most of his rough drafts and dialogue within his journals, so researchers should consult both the Journals and Notebooks series and the Manuscripts by Roth series when researching Roth’s writings. All ring binders and the like have been removed from the materials in the series for preservation reasons. Journals and notebooks have been numbered to facilitate original order. Some journals exist only as photocopies since Roth willed the originals to family and friends.

Subseries A: Notebooks

Box Folder Title Date
10 1 Accounts 1952
10 2-3 Accounts 1958
10 4 Accounts 1966-1968
10 5 Accounts ca. 1983-ca. 1989
10 6 Address Book ca. 1980s
10 7 Address Book ca. 1986
10 8-9 Augusta State Hospital ca. 1949
10 10-11 Augusta State Hospital ca. 1950
Calendars [oversized] 1957
Calendars [oversized] 1957
10 12 Calendars 1974-1979
10 13 Calendars 1980-1983
10 14 Calendars 1984-1987
Calendars [oversized] 1987-1988
Calendars [oversized] 1990, 1993
10 15 Calendars 1994
10 16 Donation Book 1987-1990
Box Folder Title Date
11 1 Engagement Calendars 1970-1971
11 2 Engagement Calendars 1979
11 3 Engagement Calendars 1990-1991
11 4-5 Engagement Calendars 1991
11 6 Greek Primer n.d.
11 7 Green “Idea Book” ca. 1925-1975
11 8 Hebrew Primers 1978
11 9 Hebrew Primers ca. 1980
11 10 Order Book ca. 1957
11 11 Ordering of Manuscript Sections ca. 1980
11 12 Muriel Roth’s Notes August 1977-September 1977
11 13 Miscellaneous Notes n.d.
11 14 Miscellaneous Notes 1957
11 15 Miscellaneous Notes 1959
11 16-17 Miscellaneous Notes ca. 1964
11 18 Miscellaneous Notes 1964-1965
11 19 Miscellaneous Notes 1974
11 20 Miscellaneous Notes 1975
11 21 Miscellaneous Notes 1993

Subseries B: Journals

Box Folder Title Date
12 1 Journals May 1925, October 1927
12 2 1937-1939
12 3 April 1937-June 1937
12 4 October 1938
12 5 October 1938-cMarch 1939
12 6 February 1939
12 7 February 1939
12 8-10 April 1939-October 1939
Box Folder Title Date
13 1 Journals 1951-1952
13 2 March 1956
13 3 February 1957-March 1957
13 4 March 1957
13 5 March 1957-July 1957
13 6 January 1958-November 1958
13 7 1959
13 8 (“black leather notebooks”) March 1960-March 1962
13 9 ca. 1961-1962
13 10 (“black leather notebooks”) April 1962-March 1963
13 11 September 1963
Box Folder Title Date
14 1 Journals October 1964
14 2 November 1964
14 3 February 1965-September 1965
14 4 ca. June 1965-ca. October 1965
14 5 ca. November 1965-September 1966
14 6 (“black leather notebooks”) 1966-ca. 1972
14 7 ca. September 1966-ca. July 1967
14 8 ca. November 1966-ca. January 1969
14 9 July 1967-August 1967
14 10 August 1967
14 11 August 1967-October 1967
14 12 October 1967-November 1967
Box Folder Title Date
15 1 Journals November 1967
15 2 November 1967-December 1967
15 3 December 1967
15 4 December 1967-January 1968
15 5 January 1968-February 1968
15 6 February 1968
15 7 February 1968-March 1968
15 8 March 1968-April 1968
15 9 April 1968-May 1968
15 10 June 1968
15 11 June 1968-July 1968
15 12 July 1968
15 13 July 1968-September 1968
15 14 September 1968-October 1968
Box Folder Title Date
16 1 Journals October 1968-November 1968
16 2 November 1968-December 1968
16 3-4 December 1968-February 1969
16 5 February 1969-March 1969
16 6 March 1969-April 1969
16 7 April 1969-cMay 1969
16 8 May 1969-ca. July 1969
16 9 July 1969-September 1969
16 10 September 1969-November 1969
16 11 September 1969-March 1970
16 12 November 1969-January 1970
16 13 1970
Box Folder Title Date
17 1 Journals ca. 1970-c1974
17 2 ca. February 1970-ca. August 1970
17 3 March 1970-May 1970
17 4 ca. May 1970
17 5 January 1971-March 1972
17 6 February 1971-May 1971
17 7 May 1971-July 1971
17 8 June 1971
17 9-10 July 1971-November 1971
17 11 1972
Box Folder Title Date
18 1 Journals February 1972-ca. March 1972
18 2 ca. April 1972-ca. November 1973
18 3-4 ca. August 1973-ca. October 1973
18 5 ca. 1973-ca. 1975
18 6 ca. 1974-ca. 1979
18 7 ca. January 1974-February 1974
18 8 ca. April 1974-ca. December 1974
18 9 December 1974-April 1975
18 10 ca. February 1975-ca. May 1976
18 11 April 1975-January 1976
Box Folder Title Date
19 1 Journals May 1976
19 2 May 1976-June 1976
19 3 May 1976-January 1977
19 4 ca. May 1976-ca. April 1977
19 5 ca. November 1976-ca. November 1977
19 6 January 1977-August 1977
19 7 ca. February 1977-ca. October 1977
19 8 July 1977-November 1977
19 9 July 1977-August 1977
19 10 August 1977-September 1977
19 11 November 1977-January 1978
19 12 January 1978
19 13 ca. January 1978-April 1978
19 14 February 1978-ca. July 1978
Box Folder Title Date
20 1 Journals March 1978-May 1978
20 2 May 1978-October 1978
20 3 August 1978-September 1978
20 4 ca. September 1978-ca. February 1979
20 5 ca. October 1978-ca. September 1979
20 6 November 1978-December 1978
20 7 1979
20 8 January 1979
20 9 March 1979-April 1979
20 10 June 1979-August 1979
20 11 August 1979-ca. September 1979
20 12 October 1979-ca. September 1980
20 13 April 1980, October 1980
20 14 ca. September 1980-ca. September 1981
20 15 ca. September 1980-ca. February 1988
20 16 March 1981-March 1984
20 17 ca. 1982-ca. 1985
20 18-19 ca. May 1983
Box Folder Title Date
21 1 Journals April 1984-January 1987
21 2 January 1985-March 1985
21 3 ca. June 1986
21 4 February 1987-March 1988
21 5 ca. September 1987-ca. July 1988
21 6 March 1988-April 1989
21 7 May 1988-ca. October 1989
21 8 ca. August 1988-ca. March 1989
21 9 August 1989-May 1990
21 10 ca. October 1989-ca. March 1991
21 11 February 1990
21 12 May 1990-February 1991
21 13 ca. 1991-ca. 1992
21 14 ca. February 1992-ca. September 1992
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Series III: Manuscripts by Roth, n.d., 1925-2000  16.75 linear feet

Arrangement:

In order to increase access to the materials in this series, the majority of drafts was separated into alphabetical order with copies of the actual folders included so that Roth’s numbering system could be reconstructed if the need arose.

Scope and Content:

Series III contains unpublished materials as well as the rough drafts to materials that appeared in print. Roth often kept drafts of his works in numbered folders. The numbering system did not correspond to any alphabetical or chronological organizational scheme.The particular strength of the series is the amount of material devoted to the first four volumes of Mercy of a Rude Stream, (A Star Shines Over Mt. Morris Park, A Diving Rock on the Hudson, From Bondage, and Requiem for Harlem), but many short stories are also well represented. Notably absent are materials on Call it Sleep, which can be found at the New York Public Library. The end of the series consists of those materials that could not easily be separated or that were unidentifiable. Of great interest is a Yiddish play by Herman Roth, Henry’s father. The play, Sin of Divorce, appears to have been translated into English by Henry Roth.

Box Folder Title Date
22 1 Journal Entry Lists / Summaries 1960, 1962, 1990, 1993
22 2 Poetry n.d.
22 3 “Things to Check” List 1993
22 4 “An Address on the Genesis and Vicissitudes of the Author’s Novel, Chains Like Morning Dew (from English for Foreigners)” and related materials 1976
22 5 “Antica Fiamma” n.d.
22 6 “The Cage” n.d.
22 7 Call it Sleep-Proposed Corrections 1987
22 8 “The Ceremony" n.d.
22 9 “The Ceremony” ca. 1964
22 10 “Dear NBR” 1978
22 11