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Scopes trial

The Scopes trial, formally The State of Tennessee v. John Thomas Scopes, and commonly referred to as the Scopes Monkey Trial, was an American legal case from July 10 to July 21, 1925, in which a high school teacher, John T. Scopes, was accused of violating Tennessee's Butler Act, which had made it illegal for teachers to teach human evolution in any state-funded school.[1] The trial was deliberately staged in order to attract publicity to the small town of Dayton, Tennessee, where it was held. Scopes was unsure whether he had ever actually taught evolution, but he incriminated himself deliberately so the case could have a defendant.[2][3]

Tennessee v. Scopes

Criminal Court of Tennessee

The State of Tennessee vs. John Thomas Scopes

July 21, 1925

Guilty (overturned on technicality)

None

Scopes was found guilty and was fined $100 (equivalent to $1,700 in 2023), but the verdict was overturned on a technicality. The trial served its purpose of drawing intense national publicity, as national reporters flocked to Dayton to cover the high-profile lawyers who had agreed to represent each side. William Jennings Bryan, three-time presidential candidate and former secretary of state, argued for the prosecution, while Clarence Darrow served as the defense attorney for Scopes. The trial publicized the fundamentalist–modernist controversy, which set modernists, who said evolution could be consistent with religion,[4] against fundamentalists, who said the word of God as revealed in the Bible took priority over all human knowledge. The case was thus seen both as a theological contest and as a trial on whether evolution should be taught in schools.

Origins[edit]

State Representative John Washington Butler, a Tennessee farmer and head of the World Christian Fundamentals Association, lobbied state legislatures to pass anti-evolution laws. He succeeded when the Butler Act was passed in Tennessee, on March 25, 1925.[5] Butler later stated, "I didn't know anything about evolution ... I'd read in the papers that boys and girls were coming home from school and telling their fathers and mothers that the Bible was all nonsense." Tennessee governor Austin Peay signed the bill to gain support among rural legislators, but believed the law would neither be enforced nor interfere with education in Tennessee schools.[6] William Jennings Bryan thanked Peay enthusiastically for the bill: "The Christian parents of the state owe you a debt of gratitude for saving their children from the poisonous influence of an unproven hypothesis."[7]


In response, the American Civil Liberties Union financed a test case in which John Scopes, a Tennessee high school science teacher, agreed to be tried for violating the Act. Scopes, who had substituted for the regular biology teacher, was charged on May 5, 1925, with teaching evolution from a chapter in George William Hunter's textbook, Civic Biology: Presented in Problems (1914), which described the theory of evolution, race, and eugenics. The two sides brought in the biggest legal names in the nation, Bryan for the prosecution and Clarence Darrow for the defense, and the trial was followed on radio transmissions throughout the United States.[8][9]

has published a gallery of such cartoons,[75] and 14 such cartoons are also reprinted in L. Sprague de Camp's The Great Monkey Trial.

American Experience

magazine's initial coverage of the trial focused on Dayton as "the fantastic cross between a circus and a holy war".

Time

magazine adorned its masthead with monkeys reading books and proclaimed "the whole matter is something to laugh about."[76]

Life

Both and the popular humor magazine Life (1890–1930) ran compilations of jokes and humorous observations garnered from newspapers around the country.[77]

Literary Digest

Anticipating that Scopes would be found guilty, the press fitted the defendant for martyrdom and created an onslaught of ridicule, and hosts of cartoonists added their own portrayals to the attack. For example:


Overwhelmingly, the butt of these jokes was the prosecution and those aligned with it: Bryan, the city of Dayton, the state of Tennessee, and the entire South, as well as fundamentalist Christians and anti-evolutionists. Rare exceptions were found in the Southern press, where the fact that Darrow had saved Leopold and Loeb from the death penalty continued to be a source of ugly humor. The most widespread form of this ridicule was directed at the inhabitants of Tennessee.[78] Life described Tennessee as "not up to date in its attitude to such things as evolution".[79] Time magazine related Bryan's arrival in town with the disparaging comment "The populace, Bryan's to a moron, yowled a welcome."[80]


Attacks on Bryan were frequent and acidic: Life awarded him its "Brass Medal of the Fourth Class" for having "successfully demonstrated by the alchemy of ignorance hot air may be transmuted into gold, and that the Bible is infallibly inspired except where it differs with him on the question of wine, women, and wealth".[81]


Vituperative attacks came from journalist H. L. Mencken, whose syndicated columns from Dayton for The Baltimore Sun drew vivid caricatures of the "backward" local populace, referring to the people of Rhea County as "Babbits", "morons", "peasants", "hill-billies", "yaps", and "yokels". He chastised the "degraded nonsense which country preachers are ramming and hammering into yokel skulls". However, Mencken did enjoy certain aspects of Dayton, writing


He described Rhea County as priding itself on a kind of tolerance or what he called "lack of Christian heat", opposed to outside ideas but without hating those who held them.[83] He pointed out "The Klan has never got a foothold here, though it rages everywhere else in Tennessee."[84] Mencken attempted to perpetrate a hoax, distributing flyers for the "Rev. Elmer Chubb", but the claims that Chubb would drink poison and preach in lost languages were ignored as commonplace by the people of Dayton, and only Commonweal magazine bit.[85] Mencken continued to attack Bryan, including in his withering obituary of Bryan, "In Memoriam: W.J.B.", in which he charged Bryan with "insincerity"—not for his religious beliefs but for the inconsistent and contradictory positions he took on a number of political questions during his career.[86] Years later, Mencken did question whether dismissing Bryan "as a quack pure and unadulterated" was "really just".[87] Mencken's columns made the Dayton citizens irate and drew general indignation from the Southern press.[88] After Raulston ruled against the admission of scientific testimony, Mencken left Dayton, declaring in his last dispatch "All that remains of the great cause of the State of Tennessee against the infidel Scopes is the formal business of bumping off the defendant."[89] Consequently, the journalist missed Darrow's cross-examination of Bryan on Monday.

[90]

's play, The Great Tennessee Monkey Trial (1993), was based on original sources and transcripts of the Scopes trial, because it was written with the goal of being historically accurate.[100] It was produced as part of L.A. Theatre Works' Relativity Series, which features science-themed plays and receives major funding from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, which seeks "to enhance public understanding of science and technology in the modern world".[101] According to Audiofile Magazine, which pronounced this production the 2006 D.J.S. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award: "Because there are no recordings of the actual trial, this production is certainly the next best thing."[102] The BBC broadcast The Great Tennessee Monkey Trial in 2009, in a radio version starring Neil Patrick Harris and Ed Asner.[103]

Peter Goodchild

Gale Johnson's play Inherit the Truth (1987) was based on the original transcripts of the case. Inherit the Truth was performed yearly during the Dayton Scopes Festival until it ended its run in 2009.[105] The play was written as a rebuttal of the 1955 play and the 1960 film, which Dayton residents claim did not accurately depict either the trial or William Jennings Bryan.[106] In 2007 Bryan College purchased the rights to the production and began work on a student film version of the play, which was screened at that year's Scopes Festival.[107][108]

[104]

The film (2010), a romantic drama which is set around the Scopes Trial, starring Brian Dennehy as Clarence Darrow and Fred Thompson as William Jennings Bryan, was released by Two Shoes Productions.[109] While the main storyline is fictional, all the courtroom scenes are accurate according to the actual trial transcripts. Coincidentally, Dennehy had played Matthew Harrison Brady, the fictionalized counterpart of Bryan, in the 2007 Broadway revival of Inherit the Wind.

Alleged

In 2013, the series Drunk History retold portions of the trial in the "Nashville" episode, with Bradley Whitford portraying Bryan, Jack McBrayer as Darrow, and Derek Waters as Scopes.[110]

Comedy Central

In 2018, the Graduate Musical Theatre Writing Program at 's Tisch School of the Arts presented a reading of a musical adaptation entitled "Nothing to See Here", with book and music by Bryan Blaskie and book and lyrics by Laurie Hochman.[111]

New York University

(1968), The Great Monkey Trial, Doubleday, ISBN 978-0-385-04625-1

de Camp, L. Sprague

Clark, Constance Areson (2000), "Evolution for John Doe: Pictures, The Public, and the Scopes Trial Debate", Journal of American History, 87 (4): 1275–1303, :10.2307/2674729, ISSN 0021-8723, JSTOR 2674729, PMID 17120375

doi

Conkin, Paul K. (1998), , p. 185, ISBN 978-0-8476-9063-3

When All the Gods Trembled: Darwinism, Scopes, and American Intellectuals

Edwards, Mark (2000), "Rethinking the Failure of Fundamentalist Political Antievolutionism after 1925", , 32 (2): 89–106, ISSN 0884-5379, PMID 17120377

Fides et Historia

Folsom, Burton W. Jr. (1988), "The Scopes Trial Reconsidered", Continuity (12): 103–127,  0277-1446

ISSN

Gatewood, Willard B. Jr., ed. (1969), Controversy in the Twenties: Fundamentalism, Modernism, & Evolution

Harding, Susan (1991), "Representing Fundamentalism: The Problem of the Repugnant Cultural Other", Social Research, 58 (2): 373–393

Grabiner, J. V. & Miller, P. D. (September 6, 1974) "Effects of the Scopes Trial", Science, New Series, Vol. 185, No. 4154, pp. 832–837

Ladouceur, Ronald P. (2008) "Ella Thea Smith and the Lost History of American High School Biology Textbooks", Journal of the History of Biology, Vol. 41, No. 3, pp. 435–471

(2004), Evolution, Modern Library, ISBN 978-0-679-64288-6

Larson, Edward J.

Lienesch, Michael (2007), In the Beginning: Fundamentalism, the Scopes Trial, and the Making of the Antievolution Movement, University of North Carolina Press, pp. 350pp,  978-0-8078-3096-3

ISBN

Menefee, Samuel Pyeatt (2001), "Reaping the Whirlwind: A Scopes Trial Bibliography", Regent University Law Review, 13 (2): 571–595

Moran, Jeffrey P. (2002), , Bedford/St. Martin's, pp. 240pp, ISBN 978-0-312-24919-9

The Scopes Trial: A Brief History with Documents

Moran, Jeffrey P. (2004), , Journal of Southern History, 70 (1): 95–120, doi:10.2307/27648313, JSTOR 27648313

"The Scopes Trial and Southern Fundamentalism in Black and White: Race, Region, and Religion"

Shapiro, Adam R. Trying Biology: The Scopes Trial, Textbooks, and the Antievolution Movement in American Schools (2013)

excerpt and text search

Smout, Kary Doyle (1998), The Creation/Evolution Controversy: A Battle for Cultural Power, pp. 210 pp,  978-0-275-96262-3

ISBN

; Presley, James (June 1967), Center of the Storm: Memoirs of John T. Scopes, Henry Holt & Company, ISBN 978-0-03-060340-2

Scopes, John T.

Simpson, George Gaylord (February 7, 1975) "Evolution and Education", Science Vol. 187, Issue 4175, pp. 389

Tompkins, Jerry R. (1968), D-Days at Dayton: Reflections on the Scopes Trial, Louisiana State University Press,  411836

OCLC

Cline, Austin. . About.com. Archived from the original on December 25, 2018. Retrieved April 15, 2007.

"Atheism: Scopes Monkey Trial"

. Six Days or Forever?: Tennessee v. John Thomas Scopes. London: OUP, 1974 [1958].

Ginger, Ray

. "Impressions of the Scopes Trial". Haldeman-Julius Monthly, vol. 2.4 (Sept. 1925), pp. 323–347 (excerpt—included in Clarence Darrow's Two Great Trials (1927). Haldeman-Julius was an eye-witness and a friend of Darrow's.]

Haldeman-Julius, Marcet

McKay, Casey Scott (2013). . University of Massachusetts Law Review. 8 (2): 442–464. Article 3.

"Tactics, Strategies, & Battles—Oh My!: Perseverance of the Perpetual Problem Pertaining to Preaching to Public School Pupils & Why it Persists"

A Religious Orgy in Tennessee: A Reporter's Account of the Scopes Monkey Trial. Hoboken: Melville House, 2006.

Mencken, H.L.

. American Experience. PBS.

"Monkey Trial"

Scopes, John Thomas and William Jennings Bryan. The World's Most Famous Court Trial: Tennessee Evolution Case: A Complete Stenographic Report of the Famous Court Test. Cincinnati: National Book Co., ca. 1925.

Shapiro, Adam R. Trying Biology: The Scopes Trial, Textbooks, and the Antievolution Movement in American Schools. Chicago: , 2013.

UCP

Shapiro, Adam R. "'Scopes Wasn't the First': Nebraska's 1924 Anti-Evolution Trial". Nebraska History, vol. 94 (Fall 2013), pp. 110–119.

The Church Case between Prof. and the Dutch Reformed Church in Cape Town, South Africa, on February 27, 1930 – 1931, regarding the biblical chapter of Genesis and evolution, was a similar event. The Church lost its case. OCLC 85987149

Johannes du Plessis

at University of Minnesota Law Library

Complete trial transcripts and other court documents

on the website of Professor Joe Cain from UCL

The World's Most Famous Court Trial

at the Internet Archive

Mencken's complete columns on the Scopes Trial

in University of Maryland Library

Papers of Warner B. Ragsdale, a reporter covering the trial

Archived December 22, 2017, at the Wayback Machine

Readings (audio) of H.L. Mencken's reports of the trial from The Baltimore Evening Sun

by Douglas Linder. University of Missouri at Kansas City Law School

Scopes Trial Home Page

Bryan, William Jennings (1925). . California State University Dominguez Hills. Dayton, Tennessee. Archived from the original on July 13, 2017. Retrieved July 14, 2006.

"Text of the Closing Statement of William Jennings Bryan at the trial of John Scopes"

Marks, Jonathan. . University of North Carolina. Charlotte, NC. Archived from the original on June 14, 2007.

"Transcript of Bryan's cross-examination"

. Smithsonian Archives.

"Unpublished Photographs from 1925 Tennessee vs. John Scopes "Monkey Trial""

Smithsonian, National Museum of Natural History (August 2016).

Human Timeline (Interactive)

digital collection, Tennessee Virtual Archive.

Scopes Trial

Original materials from and news coverage of the trial: