Joseph Heller Oral History Interview

Interviewed by Charlotte E. (Shelley) Erwin

Interview Sessions from 2010
  • May 5, 2010

Abstract

Joseph H. Heller recounts his childhood recollections of Richard P. Feynman, whom he refers to as Richy, during the 1920s and up to 1935 in Far Rockaway, New York, and then the resumption of contact between the two in Los Angeles in the 1950s. Heller’s older brother, Elmer, was a close friend of Feynman’s; Feynman frequently spent time with the Heller brothers in their home. The reminiscences include Feynman’s first wife, Arline Greenbaum, and the beginnings of her relationship to Richard Feynman. Heller recounts teaching Arline to row and Richard to play trap drums. He traces parallels in the paths of his brother and Feynman, both of whom he notes worked during World War II at Palmer Physical Laboratory in Princeton on the Manhattan Project and then subsequently taught at Cornell. He touches on the later brief relationship of Elmer Heller to Feynman in Los Angeles in the 1950s; relations of both brothers with Feynman tail off after Feynman’s marriage to Gweneth Howarth [1960]. Discussion of some details surrounding illness and death of Arline Greenbaum [died 1945]. Heller recalls others from Far Rockaway High School social group: Harold Gast, David Leff, Buzzy Mann, Robert Stappler. Interview concludes with further anecdotes about childhood and high school years; Feynman’s childhood names of Richy versus Ritty; and reference to a set of letters and documents given by Heller to the Caltech Archives from the papers of his deceased brother relating to Feynman.

Archival record in collection guide

PDF version of transcript [0.47 MB]

Preferred Citation

Joseph Heller Oral History Interview, interviewed by Charlotte E. (Shelley) Erwin, Caltech Archives Oral History Project, May 5, 2010, http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechOH:OH_Heller_J.

Note to Readers

Oral history interviews provide valuable first-hand testimony of the past. The views and opinions expressed in them are those of the interviewees, who describe events based on their own recollections and from their own perspective. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the Caltech Archives and Special Collections or of the California Institute of Technology.