Banner image            Home    What's New    Articles    Images    Subjects    Corrections    Advanced Search    Timeline    Maps    Multimedia    About
The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History

SCHOENFELD, MAX - The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History

SCHOENFELD, MAX (30 May 1915 - 7 Mar. 1999) was a labor, civil rights and peace activist as well as a prolific photographer who served many years both on the executive board of the United Auto Workers Local 45 and as a member of the Congress on Racial Equality. He was born in New Haven, CT. to Ethel and Samuel Schoenfeld, who owned a neighborhood drug store. In 1935 Shoenfeld received a degree in mathematics from City College in New York. He tutored high school students and adults and became involved in socialist politics and the teachers union. When funds for the program he worked for expired, he took a job in a textile factory. During World War II, Shoenfeld entered the Army and was assigned to a military police unit in Buffalo. Finding the work distasteful, he volunteered to be a firefighter and stoked a furnace eight hours a day prior to being promoted staff sergeant. He married Carrie May Pearson in Buffalo in 1943 and they moved to Cleveland following the war. Schoenfeld became a press operator at the FISHER BODY DIVISION OF GENERAL MOTORS CORP. on Coit Rd. and bought a home in Collinwood.

He became an active union member with the UAW Local 45 by organizing and teaching a union-sponsored high school equivalency class. Prior to his being selected to sit on the union's executive committee, Schoenfeld served as editor and writer of the union's newspaper and as the union's health and safety director. As a member of the Congress on Racial Equality, Schoenfeld demonstrated for civil rights in Cleveland and Washington D.C. He helped organize the St. Joseph Community Relations Council, which worked to overcome racial and ethnic boundaries in his diverse neighborhood. In the late seventies and early eighties, Schoenfeld participated in marches from Euclid to Public Square that the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy sponsored to oppose nuclear proliferation. Shoenfeld became known as a photographer - taking pictures of labor, political and neighborhood activities that he developed in his darkroom. He donated over 4,500 of his negatives to the WESTERN RESERVE HISTORICAL SOCIETY. In 1974 he received the Cleveland Area General Motors Award for Excellence in Community Service.

Schoenfeld and his wife Carrie had two sons: Daniel and Ed. He died of heart failure while visiting friends in Santa Rosa, CA. and his remains were cremated.

Last Modified: 16 May 2001 11:47:58 AM

Related Article(s)
This site maintained by Case Western Reserve University