DANIEL J. ELAZAR
An Inventory of His Papers at the Minnesota Historical
Society
| | |
|
|
| Creator: |
Elazar, Daniel Judah.
|
| Title: | Daniel J. Elazar
papers. |
| Date: | 1955-1999. |
| Abstract: | Articles, family memoirs, and miscellaneous
materials authored by a Minneapolis-born professor of political
science. |
| Quantity: | 0.7 cu. ft. (1
box). |
| Location: | See Detailed Description for shelf location.
|
Return to the Table of Contents
Daniel Judah Elazar was born August 25, 1934 in Minneapolis, the first
of two sons born to Albert and Nettie Elazar. While studying for his
baccalaureate degree at Wayne State University (1951-1954), Elazar worked as a
librarian for the United Hebrew Schools in Detroit where his father once served
as superintendent. He earned his master and doctorate degrees in political
science from the University of Chicago (1957, 1959) and then served as an
assistant professor to the Institute of Government and Public Affairs at the
University of Illinois-Urbana (1959-1963). Elazar came back to Minneapolis as a
visiting professor at the University of Minnesota (1963-1964) before accepting
a professorship at Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. While at
Temple University, Elazar was also director of the Center for the Study of
Federalism, president of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, and editor of
the Jerusalem Letter, a newsletter published by
the Center for Jewish Community Studies. Elazar died December 1999.
Return to the Table of Contents
The collection includes articles, a course outline, book project
materials, a U.S. Senate questionnaire, interviews with government officials,
family memoirs, and newsletters edited by a Minneapolis-born professor of
political science at Temple University who also became president of the
Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, and was associated with the Center for
Jewish Community Studies and the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs at Temple
University.
The papers, most of them essay-length articles and notes, reflect
Elazar's academic interest in politics and government, especially federal,
state, and municipal relationships. A portion of the collection relates to
research for Elazar's book Cities of the Prairie
(1970), especially his notes on interviews with the officials of Duluth
(Minn.) and Superior (Wis.). His other interests were Israeli politics and
foreign relations, reflected in newsletters Elazar published through the Center
for Jewish Community Studies, and Jewish community life, reflected in memoirs
of his father (Albert Elazar), mother (Nettie Barzon Elazar), uncle (Samuel
Goldman), and aunt (Rose Barzon Elazar).
Return to the Table of Contents
| | |
|
|
| A variety of books authored by Elazar, including three editions of
Cities of the Prairie, are available in the
Minnesota Historical Society library. |
Return to the Table of Contents
| | |
|
|
| A printed version of this inventory is available in the repository,
filed in ALPHA notebooks under the heading: Elazar, Daniel Judah. |
Return to the Table of Contents
| | |
|
|
| This collection is indexed under the following headings in the catalog
of the Minnesota Historical Society. Researchers desiring materials about
related topics should search the catalog using these headings. |
| Topics: |
| | Federal-city relations -- United
States. |
| | Federal government -- United
States. |
| | Metropolitan government -- United
States. |
| | Municipal government -- Minnesota --
Duluth. |
| | Municipal government -- Wisconsin --
Superior. |
| | Municipal government -- Middle West --
Case studies. |
| | Metropolitan areas -- Middle
West. |
| | Jews -- United States -- Social life and
customs. |
| | Jews -- Minnesota -- Minneapolis --
Biography. |
| | Judaism -- Customs and
practices. |
| | Zionism -- United States. |
| | Jewish educators -- United
States. |
| | Social workers -- Minnesota --
Minneapolis. |
| Persons: |
| | Elazar, Albert,
1903-1993. |
| | Elazar, Nettie,
1905-1998. |
| | Goldman, Rose.
|
| | Goldman, Samuel,
1900-1977. |
| Organizations: |
| | Merkas ha-Yerushalmi
le-‘inyene tsibur u-medinah. |
| | Temple University. Center
for Jewish Community Studies. |
| | United States. Congress.
Senate. Committee on Government Operations. Subcommittee on Intergovernmental
Relations. |
| Places: |
| | Duluth (Minnesota) -- Politics and
government. |
| | Superior (Wis.) -- Politics and
government. |
| | Belleville (Ill.) -- Politics and
government. |
| | Near North Community (Minneapolis,
Minn.). |
| | Israel -- Politics and
government. |
| | Israel -- Foreign relations. |
| Titles: |
| | Jerusalem Letter. |
| | Cities of the Prairie. |
| Document Types: |
| | Political science
literature. |
| | Essays. |
| Occupations: |
| | Political scientists |
| | Jewish authors. |
Return to the Table of Contents
| | |
|
|
| Use Restrictions: |
| | Until Sept. 1, 2006, quotation or publication of anything in or
based on the papers requires written permission. Commonly available
publications, and like material of a public nature are excluded from this
restriction. For further information concerning copyright status and/or
permission to publish, please consult the reference staff. |
| Preferred Citation: |
| | [Indicate the cited item and/or series
here] Daniel J. Elazar Papers. Minnesota Historical Society. |
| | See the Chicago Manual of Style for additional
examples |
| Accession Information: |
| | Accession number: 9,465; 12,607; 12,693; 13,432; 14,024; 14,754;
15,060 |
| Processing Information: |
| | Processed by: Bonnie Palmquist, March 1995; Monica Manny Ralston,
January 2000 |
| | Catalog ID number: 09-00038039 |
Return to the Table of Contents
Note to Researchers: To request materials, please note both the
location and box numbers shown below.
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
|
Location
|
Box
|
| 149.A.1.4F | 1 |
Articles by Daniel J. Elazar:
|
| | |
"An Approach to Considering the General Needs of the
State," undated.
|
| | |
"Cities and Their Problems: A Realistic View,"
[ca. 196-].
|
| | |
"Commentary: Bureaucracy: A Modest Jacksonian Proposal,"
Rippon Forum13:4, February 15, 1977.
|
| | |
"Comments on 'The Ragtime Years' of Project Twenty
NBC-TV," [1960.]
|
| | |
"Compound Structure of Public Service Delivery Systems
in Israel," [ca. 1975].
|
| | |
"The Ends of Federalism: Notes Toward a Theory of
Federal Political Arrangements," undated.
|
| | |
"Impact of America on Russian Political Thought in the
Nineteenth Century," 1955.
|
| | |
"Land Space and Civil Society in America,"
The Western Historical Quarterly 5, July 1974.
|
| | |
"A New Golden Age for the States: Will They Have the
Will to Respond," Serving the States Since 1963.
[S.l.]: Council of State Governors, 1973.
|
| | |
"A Note on the Origins and Development of the Federal
Idea," undated.
|
| | |
"Political Culture on the Plains," undated.
|
| | |
"The Politics of Belleville: A Profile of the Civil
Community," 1966.
|
| | |
"State and Local Relations: Realigning Functions and
Actors," [ca. 1975].
|
|
Location
|
Box
|
| 149.A.1.4F | 1 | |
"United States of America: Overview,"
Yom Kippur War: Israel and the Jewish People.
[S.l.]: Arno Press, 1974. Reprint.
|
| | |
"Walt Whitman and the Midrashic Tradition: An Analysis
of One's Self I Sing," undated.
|
| | |
"Which Road to the Presidency?," 1960.
|
| |
Cities of the
Prairie:
|
| | |
Interview notes, 1960.
|
| | | | Elazar conducted interviews with officials of Duluth, Minnesota
and Superior, Wisconsin concerning the governmental operations of the cities,
as part of his research for the Cities of the
Prairie project. These officials included: city attorney, city auditor,
and city clerk, as well as officials of the city planning department, civil
service, housing and redevelopment authority, labor department, municipal
court, port authority, public health, public safety, and public schools. Notes
regarding interviews with the mayor of Superior and John Rutford, executive
secretary of the St. Louis County Republican Party (Minnesota) are also
included. |
| | |
Project materials, [196-].
|
| |
Course outline: The Jewish People and Western
Civilization, [ca. 1985?].
|
| |
Family memoirs:
|
| | |
Albert Elazar: A Personal Memoir
of My Father, 1994. 1 volume (305 leaves).
|
| | | | A book-length biography about Albert Elazar (1903-1993), a
native of Jerusalem who immigrated to the United States in the 1920s and came
to St. Paul in 1928, where he joined the faculty of the St. Paul Talmud Torah.
He married a Minneapolis woman, Rose Barzon, and remained there until 1936. The
memoir records his family's history from its Sephardic descent, to their life
in Jerusalem, the move to the United States, to St. Paul, and thence to
Chicago, Detroit, and Denver where Albert Elazar worked as a religious
educator. After retiring, Elazar and his wife moved back to Jerusalem where he
died in 1993. |
|
Location
|
Box
|
| 149.A.1.4F | 1 | |
"My Mother: A Memoir," December 29, 1999. 43 leaves.
|
| | | | Reminiscent biography about Nettie Barzon Elazar (1905-1998) who
was born in Minneapolis. The memoir records her childhood on the North side of
Minneapolis, her education at the Talmud Torah, her work as a Hebrew teacher,
her marriage to Albert Elazar, and subsequent moves to Chicago, Denver,
Detroit, and Israel. |
| | |
"Aunt Rose: A Memoir," March 5, 1975. 22 leaves.
|
| | | | Reminiscent sketch about Rose Barzon Goldman (ca. 1901-1975),
wife of Samuel Goldman and sister of Nettie Barzon Elazar, who came from
Bessarabia (Rumania) to Minneapolis in 1903. The memoir records her activities
in the Jewish community as a Zionist and Socialist, in the Minneapolis Talmud
Torah, in Minnesota politics, and on summer vacations at Lake Minnetonka's Big
Island Camp for World War I veterans. |
| | |
"Uncle Sam: A Memoir," March 11, 1977. 53 leaves.
|
| | | | Reminiscent sketch of Samuel Goldman (1900-1977), his activities
in the Jewish community of Minneapolis, as a social worker, a Minnesota
veterans' organizations member and lobbyist, arms smuggler to Israel (1948),
and over-aged World War II volunteer. The memoir also includes information on
the Goldman family and North Minneapolis history (1920s-1930s). |
| |
Jerusalem Letter,
1977-1986. 3 folders.
|
| | | A newsletter published by the Center for Jewish Community Studies
at Temple University. One folder contains articles written by Elazar, who was
also the newsletter's editor. Two additional folders contain issues that do not
include articles written by Elazar. |
| |
Letter to Governor Terry Sanford, Durham, North Carolina,
December 5, 1966.
|
| | | Containing Elazar's critique of Governor Sanford's draft article,
"The States Must Go Downtown." |
| |
U.S. Senate, Subcommittee on Intergovernmental Relations,
1962.
|
| | | Contains a copy of the Subcommittee's questionnaire, "Problems of
Federal-State-Local Relations," and Elazar's reply in the form of a letter to
Senator Edmund Muskie, December 11, 1962. |
Return to the Table of Contents
|