Erich Cramer Stern Papers, 1868-1967


Summary Information
Title: Erich Cramer Stern Papers
Inclusive Dates: 1868-1967

Creator:
  • Stern, Erich C. (Erich Cramer), 1879-1969
Call Number: Milwaukee Mss EM

Quantity: 8.0 c.f. (18 archives boxes)

Repository:
Archival Locations:
UW-Milwaukee Libraries, Archives / Milwaukee Area Research Ctr. (Map)

Abstract:
Papers of Stern, a Milwaukee lawyer who served as an alderman, 1908-1910, state assemblyman, 1910-1912, and a major apologist for Germany's cause during World War I. Included are primarily personal and family correspondence, much of which is in German, clippings and comments on the war, brief aldermanic papers with information on a nation-wide survey on street maintenance and financing, legislative papers pertaining to a law establishing non-partisan municipal elections, financial papers of Stern's father's wholesale drygoods business, and other documents. Prominent correspondents include Benjamin Harrison, Werner Hegemann, Robert M. La Follette, Sr., Theodore Roosevelt, and Carl Schurz (concerning the Schurz Memorial Association).

Language: English

URL to cite for this finding aid: http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.uw-whs-mil000em
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Biography/History

Stern was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, February 8, 1879, son of Charles Gabriel and Alma (Cramer) Stern and grandson of Henry Stern, a native of Germany. His father was a businessman. Erich C. Stern received his preliminary education at public schools and the University School in Milwaukee and graduated with an A.B. in 1901 and LL.B. in 1904 at Harvard University and Ph.D. in 1905 at the University of Paris, France. Admitted to the Wisconsin bar in the latter year, he entered general practice in Milwaukee, and for some years until the close of his life was a member of the law firm of Stern, Croen 8 Bodner. Stern was particularly involved in trust and probate law. His firm's clients included the Summit Mineral Co., for which Stern served at one time as president. In addition to his practice, he was a professor of law at Marquette University during 1915-1920. Stern also held public office, serving as a member of the Common Council of Milwaukee during 1908-1910 and a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly during 1910-1912. While in the assembly, he was a member of the committee on cities and helped to introduce legislation for autonomy for cities. He also participated in the drafting of the state income tax law, was floor leader, and sponsored election laws and civil service reform. Stern participated in civic and cultural activities, serving as treasurer of the Milwaukee Orchestral Association and trustee of the Milwaukee Civic Music Association and Milwaukee Art Institute for many years. He also donated many works of art to the institute and the University of Wisconsin, including a set of original Piranesi engravings to the latter. He was instrumental in bringing to Wisconsin many avant-garde art shows. Interested in the Indians of the Southwest, he made many trips to New Mexico and Arizona. In 1926 he was elected a member of the Navajo tribe so that he could help record chants and songs of a medicine man for the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. For some years he was president of the Milwaukee Central Council of Social Agencies, predecessor of the United Fund, and of the Milwaukee Citizens' Bureau for Municipal Efficiency. For many years he was a member of the Wisconsin University Settlement Club, and he helped to establish the first camp in connection with the university's settlement house, a camp located at Lake Beulah, near East Troy, Wisconsin. Stern was a member of the American, Wisconsin, and Milwaukee County bar associations and the City Club of Milwaukee. In politics he was a Republican. In his early years he was a figure skater, a skier, and a hiker. He was interested semi-professionally in music throughout his life and was also a translator of manuscripts from German and French. For recreation he enjoyed bridge and travel. He was married in Milwaukee, March 8, 1930, to Lucia Martha, daughter of John Karker of that city, a merchandiser. Erich C. Stern died without issue in Milwaukee, February 18, 1969.

Note

Biographical sketch from The National Cyclopedia of American Biography (Clifton, New Jersey, 1973), v. 54, p. 434. Stern's work with the University Settlement Club is mentioned in Ruth Harman and Charlotte Lekachman, "The Jacobs House," Wisconsin Magazine of History, Vol. 16, No. 3 (March 1933), pp. 252-284. The work of Stern's grandfather, Henry Stern (1825-1903), is described in Henry Stern, "The Life Story of a Milwaukee Merchant," Wisconsin Magazine of History, Vol. 9, No. 1 (September 1925), pp. 63-79.


Scope and Content Note

Except for less than one-half cubic foot of the correspondence, Stern's papers pertain to his activities and to Stern family matters during the first half of Stern's life, before his marriage at the age of fifty-one. The papers are divided into correspondence and a subject file; only a small percentage relate to Stern's career and public life. However, there are a few records of a turn-of-the-century family wholesale drygoods business; and limited papers relating to Stern's concerns as a Milwaukee alderman, 1908-1910, and as a Wisconsin state assemblyman, 1910-1912. Stern's papers as a practicing attorney are not with the collection.

The CORRESPONDENCE series is subdivided as Stern Family correspondence and the correspondence of Erich Stern. Most of the Stern family letters, 1868-1916, are written in German. Family correspondence with friends and relatives living in Germany, c.1914-1916, is indicative of the pro-Germany leanings of many German Americans prior to America's entry into World War I. This correspondence breaks off prior to America's entry into the war and is not resumed. The Sterns were outspoken partisans of Germany's cause throughout the war, and were enthusiastic supporters of German war relief. Erich Stern remained a spokesperson for the Milwaukee German community throughout this period.

The Erich Stern correspondence, 1884-1967, is primarily in English. A few letters dated before 1905 are in German. Included are all known letters to and from Stern, beginning with his letters as an adolescent and continuing until a year before his death. There are two major gaps in this correspondence, 1929-1931 and 1938-1944, for which no explanation is available. Moreover, the correspondence is heavily weighted toward Stern's earlier years, more than half of it written before his greatest involvement in public life. Most of the later letters deal with private concerns, and there is little to indicate active interest in public affairs. There are, however, several letters from correspondents of public prominence. In answer to a letter from a youthful Erich Stern, former President Benjamin Harrison replied evasively on 25 March 1897 about his position on current issues. Werner Hegemann, the German city planner and author of a controversial revisionist biography of Frederick the Great, wrote Stern about his personal situation and about conditions in Germany on 11 October 1922, 4 October 1925, 10 January 1928, and 19 January 1935. All but the 1928 letter are written in German, at least in part. Translations by the processor with assistance from Eugen Pacher and Dr. Robert L. Koehl, Department of History, University of Wisconsin-Madison, are included. A letter from Robert M. La Follette, Sr., 12 November 1917, relates to the antiwar movement; and a letter from former President Theodore Roosevelt, 2 May 1911, concerns Roosevelt's pleasure with the passage of bills in the Wisconsin Legislature which had been supported by Stern. A letter of appreciation in German from Carl Schurz to General Frederick Winkler, head of the Carl Schurz Memorial Association of Wisconsin, dated 9 March 1899, is also filed here and has been translated.

The SUBJECT FILE series includes papers directly concerned with Erich Stern as well as other Stern family records. The ledger book of the Carl Schurz Memorial Association of Wisconsin contains both minutes and financial records for the organization's Fellowship Committee. Henry Stern, Jr. and Brothers Company was a Milwaukee wholesale drygoods firm founded by Erich Stern's grandfather in 1852. Stern's Journals include press clippings. In most cases the clippings and notations in the journals are interrelated, but occasionally clippings have been included in the journals about which Stern made no further comment. The journals plainly reveal Stern's impassioned opposition to American entry into World War I, and his fears for the limitations on political freedom in this country imposed as a consequence of the war. The papers relating to the Milwaukee Common Council are those collected by Stern during his term as a Milwaukee alderman. They include election records for the 1908 and 1910 Milwaukee election and, most significantly, papers relating to street maintenance, including the results of an informal nationwide survey conducted by Stern to ascertain street maintenance procedures and financing in other cities. The Speeches are contemporary with, and similar in content to, the positions expressed by Stern in his journals. Stern's most noteworthy contribution as a state assemblyman, his advocacy of the 1912 bill (and later law) to establish non-partisan politics in Wisconsin cities, is partially documented in the Wisconsin State Assembly materials. The Clippings pertain to Stern's youth, his election campaigns, World War I, and miscellaneous activities in which Stern was interested or involved.

All press clippings and the journals have been photocopied because of their deteriorating condition at the time of processing. The originals have not been retained.

Administrative/Restriction Information
Acquisition Information

Presented by Lucia (Mrs. Erich Cramer) Stern, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, December 7, 1977. Accession Number: M77-492


Processing Information

Processed by V. Paul Rood and Joanne Hohler, January 1979.


Contents List
Series: Correspondence
Stern Family
Box   1
Folder   1-16
1868-1883
Box   2
Folder   1-8
1884-1891, August
Box   3
Folder   1-9
1891, September -1897
Box   4
Folder   1-10
1898-1907
Box   5
Folder   1-11
1908-1916
Erich Stern
Box   6
Folder   1-18
1884-1897
Box   7
Folder   1-9
1898-1899
Box   8
Folder   1-9
1900-1901
Box   9
Folder   1-9
1902-1904
Box   10
Folder   1-10
1905-1908
Box   11
Folder   1-10
1909-1914, July
Box   12
Folder   1-12
1914, August-1920, July
Box   13
Folder   1-8
1920, August-1923, July
Box   14
Folder   1-10
1923, August-1927
Box   15
Folder   1-9
1928-1967
Series: Subject File
Box   16
Folder   1
Carl Schurz Memorial Association of Wisconsin ledger book, 1906-1907
Henry Stern, Jr. and Brothers Company
Box   16
Folder   2
Financial reports, 1923-1928
Ledgers
Box   16
Folder   3
1888-1902
Box   16
Folder   4
1902-1908
Miscellaneous financial papers
Box   16
Folder   5
1888-1902
Box   16
Folder   6
1927-1928
Journals and press clippings
Box   16
Folder   7-8
Volume 1, 1917-1918, October
Box   16
Folder   9-10
Volume 2, 1918, September -1918, November
Box   16
Folder   11
Volume 3, 1918, November-1918, December
Box   17
Folder   1
Volume 3, continued
Box   17
Folder   2-3
Volume 4, 1918, December-1919, February
Box   17
Folder   4-6
Volume 5, 1919, February-August
Milwaukee Common Council
Election
Box   17
Folder   7
1908
Box   17
Folder   8
1910
Box   17
Folder   9
Schools, 1908-1910
Box   17
Folder   10
Streets, 1908-1910
Box   17
Folder   11
Streets survey, 1908
Box   17
Folder   12
Miscellaneous papers, 1908-1910
Box   17
Folder   13
Progressive Republican Club register of members, 1912
Box   17
Folder   14
South Side Community Club resolution of thanks to Erich Stern for procuring lecturers for club meetings
Box   17
Folder   15
Speeches, 1916, 1919
Wisconsin State Assembly
Box   17
Folder   16
Committee on cities, 1911
Box   17
Folder   17
Election, 1910
Box   17
Folder   18
Non-partisan elections for cities law, 1912
Box   17
Folder   19
Miscellany
Clippings
Box   18
Folder   1
c.1889, 1896, n.d.
Box   18
Folder   2
c.1893-1903
Box   18
Folder   3
1908, 1910-1913, 1915
Box   18
Folder   4-8
1916-1920
Box   18
Folder   9
c.1914-1920, n.d.
Box   18
Folder   10-11
Miscellaneous Stern family papers, 1873, 1901-1902