My files contain thousands of letters from people in all walks of life – under all manner of stresses and strains. –Harold Sherman, letter to Dr. J.B. Rhine, August 5, 1944.
The University of Central Arkansas Archives contains a variety of collections, and one of the most requested collections is the Harold Sherman Collection (M87-08). Born July 13, 1898, Harold Sherman hailed from Traverse City, Michigan before moving to: Chicago, Illinois; New York City, New York; and finally settling in Arkansas in 1947.
While in New York, Sherman began writing scripts for radio programs, with the hope of securing corporate sponsorship from established household brands such as Jergens Lotion, Vick Products, and Frigidaire.
Beyond radio programs Sherman wrote plays, some of which were performed on Broadway. “Choose Your Partner” and “Mark Twain” dramatized the life of author Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain) due to the acquisition of exclusive rights from the Mark Twain Estate. Sherman’s rights through the Mark Twain Estate also included the invaluable assistance of Clemens’ daughter–Clara Clemens Gabrilowitsch. The plays garnered much attention, subsequently offering Sherman the opportunity to pen a screenplay for the silver screen. Warner Brothers produced the cinematic dramatization of Samuel Clemens’ life, The Adventures of Mark Twain (1944) for audiences nationwide.
I have had tremendous pleasure in reading your play which certainly has been written with great care and sensitive understanding of the different members of my family. –Clara (Clemens) Gabrilowitsch, letter to Harold Sherman, August 24, 1936.
Another cinematic offering from Sherman was Are We Civilized? (1934). Despite being produced by an independent production company, Civilized holds several distinctions, one of which includes being one of the last pre-Code films released to American cinemas. Civilized premiered June 6, 1934, and with the creation of the Production Code Administration, rigid enforcement of the Motion Picture Production Code began July 1, 1934 (despite the Code existing since 1930).
Civilized was one of only two films released in the United States which criticized Adolf Hitler and his rise to power in Germany, and questioned the validity of a dictatorship. Almost concurrently with the enforcement of the Motion Picture Production Code, Paul von Hindenburg died August 2, 1934, with Hitler named as his political heir. Through the use of the popular referendum for a second time on August 19, 1934, the powers of the President were conferred to that of the Chancellor, Hitler’s position at the time. Civilized delivered thinly veiled criticism of antisemitism, specifically that of Hitler and Nazi Germany, and anticipated another world war.
A key scene provides viewers with an arresting dramatization of the Berlin book burnings of 1933; the local censorship bureau, along with a mob of townsfolk, attack the World News Association building and subsequently purge the building of its publications, namely books, and set the pile on fire. One of the main characters, Paul Franklin, Sr. spends most of the film philosophizing the true nature of civilization and posing the question–Are we civilized? While imploring the group to reconsider their beliefs, Franklin, Sr. is hit in the head with a projectile hurled by one of the onlookers, symbolic of the punishments meted out to those who dared question those in power.
The film’s opening message addressing the social problems of the emerging Third Reich provide the audience with what Sherman believed was a remedy to the increasing intolerance found within Hitler’s Germany:
Throughout the ages ignorance, superstition, greed, and intolerance have been the greatest enemies of Civilization. Today Mankind is combating these destructive forces with freedom of speech and freedom of the press, ever seeking a great freedom of thought and expression.
Labeled a “message film”, Civilized was but one example of a common theme found within the Sherman materials, that of self-reflection to address and provide solutions to social problems, be it through a critique of foreign regimes or through individual introspection.
In addition to radio programs and screenplays, Sherman wrote self-help books ranging from topics such as finding one’s own happiness, coping with death, relationship advice, and battling addiction. Sherman’s words provided advice through various stages of life, and through a variety of difficult situations, which impacted the everyday individual as well as well-known figures such as First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt. In a February 26, 1945 news column, Roosevelt praised Sherman’s Your Key to Youth Problems:
…which I think many people will find valuable reading. It is full of common sense, and if we stopped to think we would realize much that he tells us for ourselves.
Instead of taking refuge in the belief that other people are at fault, as we often do, we might find the reasons for our difficulties very often in ourselves.
Sherman saw the uncertainty which affected post-war Americans and wished to provide an avenue in which the adjustment from life deeply rooted in the war effort to that of “normalcy” would be one of calm introspection through his printed words. Moreover, Sherman wished to provide a “program designed to feed the mind as we now feed the body,” recognizing that mental health was as important as physical health. As a result, Sherman’s Your Key series ranged from youth problems to married life. So prolific was Sherman’s Your Key to Happiness (1935) that he received numerous letters from those incarcerated, praising his work decades after its original publication.
Other offerings from Sherman included young adult fiction which focused on recreational sports, as well as science fiction which focused on the possibility of extraterrestrials, and nonfiction which explored extrasensory perception (ESP).
The Green Man: A Visitor from Outer Space (1946) posited a world in which extraterrestrials existed and communicated with humans; in this science fiction work by Sherman, Numar, the green man, held the distinction of being the first extraterrestrial to contact Earth. The Green Man included references to differing elements of popular culture, or that which simply captured Sherman’s interest, and seemingly coalesced into a miniature version of the Harold Sherman Collection. Sherman included Eleanor Roosevelt’s “My Day” news column; Hollywood was represented in the form of talent agents from MGM and Warner Brothers; and Numar, who possessed telepathic and telekinetic abilities, traveled within the United States to locations which held personal significance to Sherman.
How to Make ESP Work for You (1964), How to Solve Mysteries of Your Mind and Soul (1965), and other works of Sherman explored the ways in which individuals could explore their own ESP capabilities.
My BASIC INTEREST, however, is in the practical utilization of these higher powers of mind in the meeting of every day problems… –Harold Sherman, letter to Dr. J.B. Rhine, November 6, 1944.
Sherman’s work on ESP was so prolific, he has been considered a pioneer of the study. Collaborations with others in the field resulted in numerous experiments and projects involving aspects of ESP such as telepathy. In 1937 Sherman and Arctic explorer and photographer, Sir Hubert Wilkins conducted long-distance telepathic experiments, which were published in Cosmopolitan Magazine and collectively as Thoughts Through Space (1942). Sherman remained in New York City while Wilkins searched for lost Russian aviators in the Arctic; Sherman received “hundreds of telepathic impressions” which were “photographically accurate” under the supervision of Dr. Gardner Murphy.
I have unbounded respect for Sir Hubert Wilkins who risked his scientific reputation to conduct these experiments with me. –Harold Sherman, letter to Dr. J.B. Rhine, February 7, 1948.
They captured the attention of Dr. J.B. Rhine, a professor at Duke University who founded parapsychology as a subfield of psychology. Sherman and Rhine corresponded about ESP topics such as telepathy and psychokinesis, specifically with the use of Zener cards to test for telepathy and of the human mind determining the roll of a dice via psychokinesis.
In 1971, Sherman continued his use of the Zener cards in an experiment which involved Captain Edgar Mitchell, who was selected in 1966 by NASA for their Apollo missions; Mitchell worked as a part of the Apollo 13 Mission Operations Team before serving as Lunar Module Pilot on Apollo 14 in February of 1971. During his mission on the moon, Mitchell conducted an experiment by telepathically transmitting zener cards drawn from a deck to Olaf Jonnson on Earth. Sherman was to attempt to also receive Mitchell’s transmissions via telepathy and record the impressions.
“…I admire your taking the one step which may lead to a giant leap into INNER space!” –Harold Sherman, letter to Capt. Edgar Mitchell, July 30, 1971.
Mitchell quickly moved from a general fan of Sherman’s works; Sherman’s How to Make ESP Work for You (1964) resonated with Mitchell, resulting in correspondence between the two men, which led to their partnership in ESP experiments and the desire to contribute further advancements within the field of ESP as well as unite the varying foundations and organizations which studied parapsychology.
While in Arkansas, Sherman became involved with state and local politics, often writing to various legislators including Congressman Wilbur D. Mills, Senator J.W. Fulbright, Governors Sid McMath, Orval Faubus, and Dale Bumpers. As a citizen of Stone County, Sherman advocated and was instrumental in the county receiving infrastructural improvements.
In Stone County, Sherman also crossed paths with Ozark folk musician, Jimmy Driftwood (the Archives’ other most requested collection), who would become a close friend. This friendship and exposure to Ozark culture undoubtedly influenced Sherman’s decision to collaborate with Driftwood on the play “Yankee in Wonderland” in 1954.
Martha and I have just finished playing your recordings of YANKEE IN WONDERLAND and you have done a magnificent job. Made us homesick for our little home in the Ozarks… –Harold Sherman, letter to Jimmy Morris (Driftwood), February 8, 1955.
Sherman also wrote a television pilot depicting rural Arkansas in “The Amazing Adventures of My Dog Sheppy” (1958); however, despite generous funding from then Governor Orval Faubus, the pilot never reached audiences beyond Batesville, Arkansas.
To understand Harold Sherman is to understand the definition of persistence. Throughout his long career, Sherman persisted against rejection, critics, and failure. Whatever new idea he had for a new project, Sherman shared it with those within his immediate circle, and with those beyond because he saw value in what he created, not only for himself, but for others as well. The potential Sherman saw within his creations is evidenced in the responses he received from Old Hollywood executives, former astronauts, politicians, Grammy winning musicians, and individuals ranging from a First Lady to those incarcerated.
The wide ranging audiences Sherman appealed to highlight another key aspect of his collection–that of being multifaceted not only amongst those consuming Sherman’s contributions into popular culture, but the varying topics which interested him and thus was the genesis of that multifaceted persona which still interests researchers today.
Author: Shelbea Gentry | Editor: Phoenix Smithey
For additional reading, sources used in the article:
*The Harold Sherman Collection (M87-08). University of Central Arkansas Archives.
*Blevins, Brooks. Hill Folks: A History of Arkansas Ozarkers & Their Image. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 2002.
Doherty, Thomas Patrick. Pre Code Hollywood: Sex, Immorality, and Insurrection in American Cinema, 1930-1934. New York: Columbia University Press, 1999. https://www.google.com/books/edition/Pre_Code_Hollywood/tyZx10XsSbIC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Pre-Code+Hollywood:+Sex,+Immorality,+and+Insurrection+in+American+Cinema,+1930-1934&printsec=frontcover
Shurlock, Geoffrey. “The Motion Picture Production Code.” The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 254 (1947): 140–46. http://www.jstor.org/stable/1026152.
Zurcher, Arnold J. “The Hitler Referenda.” The American Political Science Review 29, no. 1 (1935): 91–99. https://www.jstor.org/stable/1947171
Are We Civilized? (1934) – Turner Classic Movies
*An asterisk indicates the material is located within the UCA Archives for patron browsing.