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MONKEY BUSINESS : What really happened in Tennessee.


When the Kansas Board of Education voted this summer to remove overt references to the theory of evolution from that state's science curriculum, specters of Tennessee's "Monkey Trial" reappeared. The media had a field day-as they had the first time-writing about ignorant bumpkins who were again presuming pre·sum·ing  
adj.
Having or showing excessive and arrogant self-confidence; presumptuous.



pre·suming·ly adv.
 to rule on scientific matters well beyond their expertise. The original Monkey Trial was indeed historic and important-but not for the reasons given in the media then or now. As Harvard paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould Noun 1. Stephen Jay Gould - United States paleontologist and popularizer of science (1941-2002)
Gould
 recently wrote, "The usual reading of the trial as an epic struggle between benighted be·night·ed  
adj.
1. Overtaken by night or darkness.

2. Being in a state of moral or intellectual darkness; unenlightened.



be·night
 Yahooism and resplendent virtue simply cannot suffice-however strongly this impression has been fostered."

The Scopes trial never was a real criminal trial, with a real criminal defendant in any serious jeopardy of the consequences of his conviction. The entire case was a set-up-and a vivid example of what can go wrong when set-up cases are allowed to proceed.

The American Civil Liberties Union American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), nonpartisan organization devoted to the preservation and extension of the basic rights set forth in the U.S. Constitution. , founded during World War I, had advertised throughout Tennessee for a teacher willing to make a "friendly challenge" to Tennessee's law forbidding the teaching of evolution. John T. Scopes John Thomas Scopes (August 3, 1900 – October 21, 1970), a teacher in Dayton, Tennessee, was charged on May 25, 1925 with violating Tennessee's Butler Act, which prohibited the teaching of evolution in Tennessee schools. He was in court in a case known as the Scopes Trial. , a football coach and part-time physics teacher, volunteered.

Scopes was not your usual football coach. With his tiny horn-rimmed glasses, white shirt and tie, and sincere expression, he looked like a young professor. Indeed, he had first learned about evolution as a student at the University of Kentucky Coordinates:  The University of Kentucky, also referred to as UK, is a public, co-educational university located in Lexington, Kentucky. , whose president led a pro-evolution fight. After the trial, Scopes went on to earn a Ph.D. in geology at the University of Chicago.

Scopes pointed out to the ACLU ACLU: see American Civil Liberties Union.  that he had probably never actually taught the offending ideas, although he had used the offending textbook, G. W. Hunter's A Civic Biology, to help students review for a test.

Much of the contents of A Civic Biology would be shocking to Americans today. For one thing, notes historian Edward J. Larson, the book was "heavily laced with the scientific racism of the day." Human beings evolved from simple forms of life, with Caucasians being "finally, the highest type of all." Negroes were the lowest.

Like many of the scientists arguing the merits of biological Darwinism, Hunter discussed eugenics eugenics (yjĕn`ĭks), study of human genetics and of methods to improve the inherited characteristics, physical and mental, of the human race.  (the science of improving the quality of the human race) as hard science. By 1925, the year of the Scopes trial, thirty-five states had passed laws compelling the sexual segregation and sterilization of those regarded as eugenically unfit-those who were retarded, mentally ill, and epileptic epileptic /ep·i·lep·tic/ (ep?i-lep´tik)
1. pertaining to or affected with epilepsy.

2. a person affected with epilepsy.


ep·i·lep·tic
n.
One who has epilepsy.
.

In his textbook, Hunter casually wrote that "If such people were lower animals, we would probably kill them off to prevent them from spreading. Humanity will not allow this, but we do have the remedy of separating the sexes in asylums or other places and in various ways preventing intermarriage in·ter·mar·ry  
intr.v. in·ter·mar·ried, in·ter·mar·ry·ing, in·ter·mar·ries
1. To marry a member of another group.

2. To be bound together by the marriages of members.

3.
 and the possibility of perpetuating such a low and degenerate race."

William Jennings Bryan, one of the prosecutors in the Scopes trial and a man portrayed as a buffoon in the play Inherit the Wind, believed that World War I had in part been caused by Darwinian thinking. Many years before Hitler, Bryan railed about the brutality of eugenics, whose ugly implications were as important as biological Darwinism to the intellectual context of the Scopes trial.

Nonetheless, the facts of the trial itself were simple. A grand jury in Dayton, Tennessee, voted to indict in·dict  
tr.v. in·dict·ed, in·dict·ing, in·dicts
1. To accuse of wrongdoing; charge: a book that indicts modern values.

2.
 John Scopes for violating a state statute outlawing the teaching of evolution.

Presiding Judge presiding judge n. 1) in both state and federal appeals court, the judge who chairs the panel of three or more judges during hearings and supervises the business of the court.  John T. Raulston John T. Raulston was an American judge in Rhea County, Tennessee, best known for presiding over the Scopes Trial.

It is debatable whether or not Raulston allowed his personal support for the prosecution to affect his decisions during the course of the trial.
 read both the statute and the entire first chapter of Genesis aloud to the grand jury. He virtually directed an indictment: "If you find that the statute has been thus violated you should indict the guilty party promptly. You will bear in mind that in this investigation you are not interested to inquire into the policy or wisdom of this legislation." In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, the jury was not to judge the law, only whether Scopes had violated it. So instructed, they returned an indictment before noon. The grand jury's foreman, according to Larson, was a retired mine manager who later told reporters he believed in evolution. Given the judge's charge, the foreman felt he had no choice but to indict Scopes for violating the law.

Raulston moved quickly to put the case before the trial jury. Jury selection took only a few hours. Although flamboyant defense attorney Clarence Darrow was known for taking days to select a jury, he did not bother in this case. His purpose was not to get his client acquitted. Rather, it was to get the case to a federal court while showing the public-at-large the depth of ignorance in Tennessee. Building on Darrow's well-known view that Christianity was a "slave religion," the trial presented an opportunity for the forces of progress and modernism to triumph over fundamentalism and backwardness. Darrow's audience was the world, not the jurors of Dayton.

The trial became a media circus, one of the first. Journalists came from major newspapers here and abroad, and transmitted their stories via radio lines that the judge permitted into the courthouse. The crowds were so great that the judge eventually moved the trial outside to the courthouse lawn. The jury barely sat. Larson estimates that over the week-long trial the jury was in the courtroom for no more than thirty minutes-the time the prosecution took to present its case. As is so often true today, the battle between prosecution and defense was played out not in front of the jury but before the judge, who ruled on the admissibility of evidence and the appropriateness of witnesses. Famous scientists from Harvard and the University of Chicago, who were excluded from the courtroom, testified to throngs of journalists outside that evolution was fundamental to an understanding of science.

Darrow asked the court to instruct the jury to find his client guilty. He did this in part to hold off the possibility of a hung jury, which would have halted his plans to challenge the law's constitutionality in a higher court. Darrow did not ask the jury to consider its other choice-jury nullification nullification, in U.S. history, a doctrine expounded by the advocates of extreme states' rights. It held that states have the right to declare null and void any federal law that they deem unconstitutional. , that is, to find the law itself unjust. Nullification would have been a far better outcome for the country.

American juries have a long tradition of nullification, dating back to printer John Peter Zenger's trial in 1735. Zenger had printed an article- whose facts were not contested-criticizing the royal governor's embezzlement embezzlement, wrongful use, for one's own selfish ends, of the property of another when that property has been legally entrusted to one. Such an act was not larceny at common law because larceny was committed only when property was acquired by a "felonious taking," i. . Because English law The system of law that has developed in England from approximately 1066 to the present.

The body of English law includes legislation, Common Law, and a host of other legal norms established by Parliament, the Crown, and the judiciary.
 made criticizing government officials a felony, Zenger was clearly guilty of seditious libel Written or spoken words, pictures, signs, or other forms of communication that tend to defame, discredit, criticize, impugn, embarrass, challenge, or question the government, its policies, or its officials; speech that advocates the overthrow of the government by force or violence or . Arguing that a story could not be libel unless it was false, Zenger's lawyer urged the jury to consider both law and facts. They did, and found Zenger not guilty, setting the precedent for the First Amendment.

In the mid-nineteenth century, however, some American judges began objecting to nullification, particularly by the many Northern juries that refused to convict abolitionists who had helped fugitive slaves. In renowned racial cases, juries were far more likely than judges to be on the side of what we would consider right today. In the Dred Scott case Dred Scott Case, argued before the U.S. Supreme Court in 1856–57. It involved the then bitterly contested issue of the status of slavery in the federal territories. In 1834, Dred Scott, a black slave, personal servant to Dr. John Emerson, a U.S. , for example, the jury in the second trial, held in Saint Louis in 1850, concluded that Dred Scott and his family should be free. Scott's former owner appealed all the way to the Supreme Court, and won in a notorious decision that also said Negroes had no rights under the U.S. Constitution.

In 1895, the Supreme Court condemned jury nullification A sanctioned doctrine of trial proceedings wherein members of a jury disregard either the evidence presented or the instructions of the judge in order to reach a verdict based upon their own consciences. It espouses the concept that jurors should be the judges of both law and fact. , saying that it is the duty of juries "to take the law from the court and apply that law to the facts as they find them to be from the evidence." This matter is far from settled in practice. Four states (Georgia, Indiana, Maryland, and Oregon) acknowledge jury nullification in their constitutions. Juries across the country refused to convict draft resisters during the Vietnam War Vietnam War, conflict in Southeast Asia, primarily fought in South Vietnam between government forces aided by the United States and guerrilla forces aided by North Vietnam. . Over the last few years, many juries have refused to convict drug abusers under severe drug laws. In some capital cases, juries have refused to convict when the verdict meant execution.

But most judges try to make sure that juries follow the law-even if the law is foolish or excessive. Is this the best course? The Scopes trial is helpful here.

Most commentators today seem to think that while Scopes was found guilty by the jury, his side somehow won subsequently. In fact, the defense was firmly outmaneuvered. The ACLU's intent had been to take the case to the U.S. Supreme Court. Scopes hired Darrow over the objections of the ACLU, which rightly feared that he would not construct a careful case worthy of the Supreme Court.

Darrow made fun of both the jury and the judge, reiterating that he intended to get the case entirely out of the state and in front of a superior forum. Instead, in 1927, Tennessee's own Supreme Court overruled the trial court on technical grounds, saying the judge erred in imposing the $100 fine without the jury's consent. The court reversed the conviction, eliminated the fine, instructed the attorney general to dismiss the prosecution (nolle prosequi), and halted the legal drama. Darrow had nothing to appeal.

The law under which Scopes was prosecuted stood for another forty-two years. Tennessee textbooks were edited to exclude evolution. Worse, according to a study in Science magazine in 1974, publishers across the nation also expunged Darwin from textbooks, not wanting legal problems to interfere with sales.

The nation and its school children would have been better off had Darrow mounted a full defense and given the jury serious material to consider, enabling them to reflect and rule on the rightness of this particular prosecution under Tennessee law. With such a defense, the jury might have refused to convict, nullifying the law. Or, had the jury still convicted, a full defense might have given the ACLU a legitimate record on which to appeal, perhaps successfully. It would have been ironic, however, had science won its preeminent legal position based on a text most scientists would repudiate TO REPUDIATE. To repudiate a right is to express in a sufficient manner, a determination not to accept it, when it is offered.
     2. He who repudiates a right cannot by that act transfer it to another.
 today.

Julia Vitullo-Martin is the director of the Citizens Jury Project at the Vera Institute of Justice The Vera Institute of Justice is a non-governmental criminal justice research and policy organization, based in New York City. The Vera Institute of Justice was founded in 1961, by philanthropist Louis Schweitzer and Herb Sturz. .
COPYRIGHT 1999 Commonweal Foundation
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:the so-called 'Monkey Trial,' that took place in Dayton, Tennessee, was a 'set-up' trial, initiated by the American Civil Liberties Union to test the Tennessee law that prohibited the teaching of evolution
Author:Vitullo-Martin, Julia
Publication:Commonweal
Geographic Code:1U6TN
Date:Oct 8, 1999
Words:1667
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