Recently I've come to the conclusion,after spending the last couple of years reading books about American history and politics, that most of what I was taught in school seems to be propaganda.. a white washed, sanitized and just general rewriting of United States history. This book, 'Imbeciles: The Supreme Court, American Eugenics and the Sterilization of Carrie Buck' taught me about a movement which began early in the 20th century which targeted poor white people (mainly women) for enforced sterilization… "to improve the genetic quality of the population"… whatever THAT means. I had heard of eugenics and read a fictionalized account of the practice of sterilizing a person against her will and without her knowledge ('Necessary Lies' by Dianne Chamberlain); but after reading this book, I realized just how little I actually knew about this movement.
To begin, on May 2, 2002 (on the 75th anniversary of the Supreme Court ruling in Buck v Bell). Governor Mark Warner of Virginia issued an apology for the state's participation in eugenics. 7,450 people were sterilized between 1927-1979 in Virginia… a state which sterilized more people than any other state besides California.
Adam Cohen, the author of this book, moves forward and backward through history, providing background information regarding what the social, political and economic climate was during the formation of the eugenics movement; and he couples the historical context with the facts surrounding this one young woman, Carrie Buck and what her case means in a broader sense.
To understand what happened to Carrie Buck.. to understand HOW Carrie Buck could be ordered by the Supreme Court to undergo sterilization.. Mr. Cohen explains what was happening in the United States in the early 1920s. The early 20th century was characterized by an explosion of new immigrants. The United States was in the process of changing from a rural farming society to an industrial urban society. The explosion of new immigrants was transforming the ethnic and religious makeup of America, leading to a feeling of angst among the middle and upper classes. (Sound familiar?) In England, at about this time, some followers of Charles Darwin and his ideas about natural selection and survival of the fittest, usurped those ideas to come up with a plan to deal with the people they considered 'unfit' or 'undesirable' in society. (Charles Darwin did NOT support the eugenics movement, by the way). Also at this time, the movement was encouraged by work being done by Gregor Mendel, who with his experiments with his famous pea plants was making important discoveries on the role of heredity.
The eugenics movement picked up steam in the United States and various states began passing laws forcing the institutionalization of people referred to as 'feebleminded'. This forced institutionalization began with the state of Indiana in 1907, and it was just the first step, according to prominent eugenicists, in "improving the human stock". And here is where the case of Carrie Buck becomes very important….
Three categories had been devised to determine whether people should be institutionalized and then for their protection and the protection of society, should be sterilized…. a person would be determined to be either 1. an idiot, 2. an imbecile or 3. a moron. I know, this sounds ridiculous… what do these terms even mean? These categories were vaguely defined and honestly, I couldn't make sense of any of them. I don't know if these were considered legal terms or psychological terms…. but the people who were ultimately classified as such were any people who "behaved in a way that offended the sensibilities" of the middle or upper classes… people with epilepsy, alcoholism or drug addiction, anyone who exhibited signs of criminality and women who seemed to be uncharacteristically interested in sex.
Carrie Buck, a resident of Charlottesville, Virginia, was born in 1906 and her family situation was a bit complicated.Carrie's mother found it impossible to care for her daughters after her 'husband' deserted the family. Carrie's mother was then placed in the Virginia Colony for Epileptics and Feebleminded; and Carrie was placed in the care of a foster family named Dobbs. John Dobbs was a police officer and he and his wife had one daughter who was slightly older than Carrie. The Dobbs family took Carrie in as a toddler and although they left her enrolled in school until the 6th grade, they treated her mainly as a servant.. not a daughter. When Carrie was removed from school, they began to loan her out to work for neighbors so that she might contribute monetarily to the household. It was in 1924 that Carrie became pregnant.. coincidentally after the extended visit of a Dobbs nephew, Clarence Garland. In a nutshell, the Dobbs knew Carrie's pregnancy would invite gossip among the neighbors and a stigma would be attached to the family. They had Carrie declared 'feebleminded' and labeled an 'imbecile'. They used her pregnancy as proof for this classification. After all, hadn't her pregnancy resulted because of her "excessive interest in sex'?
Carrie was sent to join the Colony of Epileptics and Feebleminded and it is here that she unfortunately caught the attention of Dr. Albert Priddy, the director of the colony, who was incidentally looking for a subject to use as a 'test case' in court for forced sterilization. In hearing after hearing, Carrie had no one who looked out for her interests. To say her counsel was ineffective would be a compliment. Her counsel raised no objection and had nothing to say whatsoever. Finally, the case came before the Supreme Court and that is where this travesty was completed. In an 8-1 decision, the Court ruled that Carrie Buck would have to submit to forced sterilization. Justice William Howard Taft (former president of the U.S.) , Louis Brandeis (a SUPPOSED progressive) and of course, the 'esteemed' Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. voted in favor of forced sterilization . In his opinion, Justice Holmes wrote that ".. three generations of imbeciles are enough" and that "the nation must sterilize those who sap the strength of the state". Only one Justice dissented … Pierce Butler, who wrote no dissenting opinion , although it is assumed he disagreed based on his religious beliefs.
Carrie Buck was ultimately sterilized… although this procedure was never explained to her. She believed that she had had an appendectomy. Years later, after having been married and widowed twice and having lived a quiet and productive life in Virginia, she was told she had been sterilized. This news filled her with anger and sadness which she carried the rest of her life. The daughter she had given birth to as a young woman, had been raised by the Dobbs and had died at the age of 8 from a stomach infection. Carrie had always wanted to have a couple of children and had never understood why it hadn't happened. One more thing regarding Carrie… her intelligence was found to be in the normal range… she had NOT been 'feebleminded' OR an imbecile.. she had been a pawn in a horrendous game.
I was shocked, horrified and terribly saddened by this book. And if it's a possibility, I was even MORE shocked to learn that Buck v Bell has never been overturned. It's very popular these days for people to talk a lot about American 'Exceptionalism' ; and I agree the United States and our citizens have achieved much to be proud of and that has contributed to the good of all mankind. But I also believe that we should never forget that we have engaged in horrific acts of cruelty and oppression against the powerless and most vulnerable people as well. So instead of trying to whitewash these events from our history, we should acknowledge them … so that we will never repeat them.
That Buck v Bell has never been overturned is worrisome to me. Scientists are now working on the Human Genome Project in which the goal is to map every human gene. What roads could this project lead us down? Perhaps once again,science will be twisted to quell the angst felt now over the changing face of our population. Perhaps I or my children… or perhaps you or your children will be found to possess a gene which makes us 'undesirable' or 'unfit'.
I highly recommend this book to everyone. The cast of characters is indeed large and Mr. Cohen is, at times, repetitive but this book is SO worth reading!
And one more thing… during the Nuremberg Trials, the Nazi war criminals used the American Eugenics movement as a defense of the atrocities they had committed. They had used the eugenics movement when designing their 'solution to the Jewish problem'. Think about that…….