Kheel, Theodore W. Photographs, 1949-1978
Collection Number: 6021 P

Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation & Archives
Cornell University Library


DESCRIPTIVE SUMMARY

Title:
Theodore W. Kheel Photographs, 1949-1978
Repository:
Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation & Archives
Collection Number:
6021 P
Creator:
Kheel, Theodore W.
Quanitities:
1.78 cubic feet
Language:
Collection material in English

Biographical / Historical

Theodore Woodrow Kheel was said to be named for both Woodrow Wilson and his political rival Theodore Roosevelt, the result of a compromise between his politically differing parents. The settlement presaged a career in which Kheel would be tapped by mayors, governors, and presidents to settle disputes that were part of the nation's major political and social transitions from post-World War II to well into the 21st century.
Born in 1914 in Brooklyn, Ted Kheel attended public high school in the Bronx. He was awarded a Regents scholarship to Cornell University, where he attended an accelerated undergraduate law school program permitting him to earn a bachelor's and law degree in six years.
In private practice for a brief time after graduation from law school, Kheel soon was offered a position as a National Labor Relations Board attorney in Washington. Kheel's special talents as a mediator and his obvious political skills soon gave him the opportunity to move to a new war-time agency, where he was initially hired as principal mediation officer. By 1944, he had been appointed executive director of the National War Labor Board, with a staff of 2,500 who were hearing 150 disputes a week. Kheel's work at the WLB introduced him to the most important figures in the labor movement and key government officialscontacts he would use effectively in the future.
Following the end of World War II, Kheel returned to New York City and was drafted by Mayor O'Dywer to serve in the city's new Labor Relations Division, which Kheel came to head within a year. With the agreement of the mayor, Kheel was able to serve both in this position and maintain a separate, private law practice.
In 1949, Kheel was appointed to a part-time position as impartial chairman for an important segment of public transit in New York City, a position in which he would render 30,000 decisions through 1982. Also in 1949, Kheel became a partner in the New York law firm Battle, Fowler, Jaffin and Kheel. His skills in conflict resolution led an observer to remark that the firm's work began with a battle, ended by Kheel.
During his more than half a century of involvement in labor matters, Kheel was known above all else for his extraordinary ability to get feuding parties to make concessions to reach an agreement. In the important New York and national labor disputes which he would be called to mediate, Kheel's approach was to protect management rights and at the same time demand fairness to workers while also trying to protect the public interest in the issue.
Kheel's was frequently the voice of reason in settling a number of extremely difficult labor disputes of the 1960s and 1970s. Mayor Robert F. Wagner, Jr., turned to Kheel to help end the 114-day newspaper strike of 1962-63. Among his most infamous cases was the strike involving Mike Quill, head of the Transport Workers Union, who publically battled Mayor John V. Lindsay in 1965-66. Kheel's efforts also included helping coordinate bargainers and mediators during the 35-day New York City teachers' strike in 1968. President Lyndon B. Johnson summoned Kheel to Washington in 1964 to help mediate 10 days of feverish negotiations that prevented a nationwide rail walkout. Kheel would ultimately serve as a mediator and advisor for virtually every New York mayor from O'Dwyer to Beame, for the Kennedy-Johnson Administration, and other presidential administrations as well.
Kheel's interests in public issues were not limited to the labor sector. The policy disputes that came to his attention as a mediator and lawyer frequently cried out for larger solutions, and Kheel was not averse to using his considerable public presence and media contacts to seek redress, especially for what he viewed as past institutional injustices or misguided government actions. Although pressed to do so on a number of occasions, Kheel refused to run for elective office, preferring the role of a labor neutral and public advocate.
Kheel was also not averse to backing his powers of persuasion with legal action: a fierce advocate for public transit, he initiated a class action lawsuit over the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey's refusal to fund mass rail transit. His most sustained crusade for the public good related to his battle to limit commuter auto traffic and control highway building in New York City in favor of increased use of public transportation. Initially attacked by Port Authority officials and some city, state, and federal politicians of both parties, many of the solutions originally proposed by Kheel, including the concept of the subsidized fare, became public policy in later years.
An early supporter of the civil rights movement, Kheel and his wife Ann become involved with the New York Urban League in the 1950s. He served as its president in 1955 and as national president for four years. He worked with President Johnson on race issues and with Martin Luther King, Jr., in a libel suit against the New York Times. Kheel's mediation skills led to important strides in hiring African Americans in the airline industry. His reputation for sensitivity to minority issues resulted in his becoming involved in efforts to add civilians to the New York City Police Review Board in 1965. Kheel was also recruited as a peacemaker in the 1968 Ocean Hill-Brownsville Teachers dispute.
Even though Kheel handled disputes for transit workers, typesetters, and longshoremen, he reveled in the finer things in life, and dabbled as a restaurateur in fine food and was a patron of the fine arts.
He once owned a stake in Le Pavillon, a leading French restaurant in Manhattan, among others. He also represented numerous artists, including Robert Rauschenberg and Christo, and was the prime mover in the realization of the long-heralded Gates Project in Central Park in 2005.
He also made millions of dollars as an entrepreneur while facilitating sustainable economic and social change. He was the lead investor in the giant Punta Cana resort, transforming 30 miles of jungle in the Dominican Republic, and helped bring about the airport that opened that country to tourists and travelers.
Finding the solution to problems such as the impact of automation on the workplace, community disputes, and protecting a sustainable environment in which mankind will flourish, to name but a few, were the focus of Kheel's interest, enthusiasm, and financial support. He was the prime mover, bringing along like-minded citizens and specialists, in the creation of organizations to find solutions to the more intractable issues facing society. The Foundation on Employee Health, Medical Care and Welfare, the Foundation on Automation and Employment (and its British counterpart), Automation House, the Institute for Mediation and Conflict Resolution, and the Earth Pledge Foundation were among the most successful of such efforts. In the same vein, in collaboration with Price, Waterhouse in 1994, Kheel formed Prevention and Early Resolution of Conflicts, Inc. (PERC), now housed at Cornell ILR as Cornell/PERC Institute.
A prolific writer, Kheel is perhaps best known for his encyclopedic work on labor law. Throughout a career that was active almost until his death at age 96 in November 2010, he was able to balance, with amazing success, advocacy of the public good and the management of a successful law and mediation practice and other business and cultural interests.
Access to the collections in the Kheel Center is restricted. Please contact a reference archivist for access to these materials.
Conditions Governing Use

This collection must be used in keeping with the Kheel Center Information Sheet and Procedures for Document Use.

INFORMATION FOR USERS

Preferred Citation

Theodore W. Kheel Photographs #6021 P. Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives, Cornell University Library.

Related Materials

Related Collections: 5024: Theodore W. Kheel Arbitration Awards 5776 AV: Theodore W. Kheel Interviews and Programs 6017: Theodore W. Kheel Newspaper Clipping File 6021 AV: Theodore W. Kheel Audio-Visual Materials 6021 MB: Theodore W. Kheel Memorabilia 6021/001: Theodore W. Kheel Correspondence 6021/003: Theodore W. Kheel Arbitration files 6021/004: Theodore W. Kheel Legal Files 6021/005: Theodore W. Kheel Speeches and Articles 6021/006: Theodore W. Kheel Non-Profit Organization Files 6021/007: Theodore W. Kheel Subject Files 6021/008: Theodore W. Kheel Books and Articles 6021/009: Theodore W. Kheel Newspaper Clipping File 6021/010: Theodore W. Kheel Additional Files 6021/011: Theodore W. Kheel Punta Cana Files 6021/012m: Invitation and Program for the Theodore W. Kheel Memorial Service 6059 OH: Thomas Shactman Interviews with Theodore W. Kheel 6194 OH: College of Labor and Employment Lawyers Interview with Theodore W. Kheel 6196 OH: New York City Central Labor Council Interview of Theodore W. Kheel for Central Archives 6207 OH: CLEL Video Oral History Project

SUBJECTS

Names:
Kheel, Theodore Woodrow

CONTAINER LIST
Container
Description
Date
Box 1
Mr. Kheel Portrait
Box 1
Portrait of Ted Kheel
Box 2
Automation House
Scope and Contents
12 photographs
Box 2
Collective Bargaining Forum, Automation House, 1970-1972
Scope and Contents
2 photographs
Box 2
Collective Bargaining Forum, Automation House, 1972
1972
Scope and Contents
26 photographs
Box 2
Curran, Joseph Portrait
Scope and Contents
1 photograph
Box 2
Israel Conference
Scope and Contents
30 photographs
Box 2
Israel Conference
Box 2
Haley factory visit 1965
1965
Scope and Contents
4 photographs
Box 2
Johnson, Lyndon Portrait
Scope and Contents
1 photograph
Box 2
Marx, Groucho, Charlotte Chandler, Ted Kheel at Automation House, April 6, 1978
1978
Scope and Contents
12 photographs
Box 2
Middle East -
Box 2
National Urban League
Scope and Contents
10 photographs
Box 2
Rauschenberg/Felissimo
Scope and Contents
12 photographs
Box 2
Van Arsdale, Harry, Jr. Receives John P. Snyder Jr. Award (from an album)
Scope and Contents
39 photographs ; kept all photographs together for integrity of the photo album they came out of
Box 2
Misc. - Art Work
Scope and Contents
13 photographs
Box 3
Ann Kheel
Scope and Contents
6 photographs
Box 3
Ann Kheel, Certificates
Scope and Contents
2 certificates
Box 3
Kheel, Theodore Esquire photographs, March 1962
1962
Scope and Contents
20 photographs
Box 3
Theodore Kheel Portraits (1 of 3)
Scope and Contents
13 photographs
Box 3
Theodore Kheel - Portraits (2 of 3)
Scope and Contents
21 photographs
Box 3
Kheel, Theodore - Portraits (3 of 3)
Scope and Contents
4 photographs
Box 3
Kheel, Theodore at meetings, banquets
Scope and Contents
16 photographs
Box 3
Kheel, Theodore at meetings, presentations
Scope and Contents
15 photographs
Box 3
Kheel, Theodore at presentation photos by Yann Gamblin
Scope and Contents
9 photographs
Box 3
Kheel, Theodore Career Highlights (1 of 5)
Scope and Contents
10 photographs
Box 3
Kheel, Theodore Career Highlights (2 of 5)
Scope and Contents
10 photographs
Box 3
Theodore Kheel Career Highlights (3 of 5)
Scope and Contents
11 photographs
Box 3
Theodore Kheel Career Highlights (4 of 5)
Scope and Contents
12 photographs
Box 3
Theodore Kheel Career Highlights (5 of 5)
Scope and Contents
8 photographs
Box 3
Kheel sworn in as NYC Director of Labor Relations 1949
1949
Scope and Contents
1 photograph
Box 3
Kheel w/Lyndon Johnson 1963
1963
Scope and Contents
1 photograph
Box 3
Kheel, Theodore with Kwame Nkrumah March 5, 1957
Scope and Contents
3 photographs
Box 3
Kheel w/Mayor John Lindsay
Scope and Contents
1 photograph
Box 3
Kheel w/Golda Meir, Israel, 1969
1969
Scope and Contents
1 photograph
Box 3
Kheel w/Pope Paul VI -- c.1968
1968
Scope and Contents
1 photograph
Box 3
Theodore Kheel with Robert Rauschenburg
Scope and Contents
8 photographs
Box 3
Kheels w/the Gores 1994 East Hampton
Scope and Contents
2 photographs
Box 3
Kheel, Theodore and Ann with public figures, 1951-1996
Scope and Contents
11 photographs
Box 3
Kheel, Theodore, NY Daily News Negotiations Nov. 1975
1975
Scope and Contents
14 photographs
Box 3
Kheel Family Photos
Scope and Contents
3 photographs
Box 3
Kheel, Theodore and group ca 1945
1945
Scope and Contents
1 photograph
Box 3
Theodore Kheel Tudor Photo Service
Scope and Contents
1 photograph
Box 3
Kheel, Theodore with
Scope and Contents
I photograph
Box 3
Kheel, Theodore with Mike Quill
Scope and Contents
1 photograph
Box 3
Kheel, Ann and Pres. Lyndon Johnson
Scope and Contents
1 photograph
Box 3
Group photo (unlabeled)
Scope and Contents
1 photograph
Box 3
Group photo (unlabeled)
Scope and Contents
1 photograph
Box 4
Photographs of Ann Kheel
Box 4
Photographs of Ann Kheel
Box 5
Photographs of Ann Kheel
Box 5
Photographs of Ann Kheel
Box 6
Photographs of Ann Kheel
Box 6
Photographs of Ann Kheel
Box 7
Photographs of Ann Kheel
Box 7
Photographs of Ann Kheel