His papers are archived at Yale. After his death, he was honored by a volume of studies in his honor, Religions in Antiquity: Essays in Memory of Erwin Ramsdell Goodenough, edited by Jacob Neusner, published by E.J. Brill in 1968 (reprinted by Wipf and Stock in 2004).
His first marriage, to Helen Miriam (Lewis), produced two noted professors: University of Pennsylvania anthropologist Ward Goodenough (1919–2013) and University of Texas solid-state physicist John B. Goodenough (1922-2023, who in 2019 became the oldest-ever Nobel laureate); and his second marriage, to Evelyn (Pitcher), produced two more: Ursula Goodenough and Daniel Goodenough.[5]
1929. The Jurisprudence of the Jewish Courts in Egypt.
1930. The Church in the Roman Empire.
1935. By Light, Light: The Mystic Gospel of Hellenistic Judaism.
1937. Religious Tradition and Myth.
1938. The Politics of Philo Judaeus, with a General Bibliography of Philo.
1940. An Introduction to Philo Judaeus.
1953-1968. Jewish Symbols in the Greco-Roman Period. Twelve volumes of text and illustrations, plus a thirteenth of indexes, maps and corrigenda over many years. An abridged version with the same title was edited by Jacob Neusner (Princeton 1988).
1955. Toward a Mature Faith.
1968. Religions in Antiquity: Essays in Memory of Erwin Ramsdell Goodenough. Ed. by Jacob Neusner (1968).
Further reading
Smith, Morton. 1965. Memorial minute [obituary]. Numen 12.3:233-235.