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Eugenics Movement in the United States
An excerpt from a book about eugenics laws in the United States, 1930.

An excerpt from a book about eugenics laws in the United States, 1930.

This book, The Legal Status of Eugenical Sterilization, was written in 1930 by Dr. Harry Laughlin. It describes the legal decision leading up to the Supreme Court decision in Buck v. Bell (1927). Ms. Carrie Buck, declared feeble-minded by the state of Virginia, was ordered sterilized in 1924, but refused and appealed to the court system. Once the case reached the Supreme Court, the Court upheld the Virginia sterilization statute. Ms. Buck was sterilized after the decision.

Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., writing for the majority in Buck v. Bell (1927) infamously stated that “three generations of imbeciles are enough.” In this specific case, “imbeciles” refers to Carrie Buck, a poor white woman who became pregnant as a result of being raped. At this time, the term “imbecile” also referred to a woman accused of promiscuity, a non-white poor person, a physically-disabled person, a mentally-disabled person, or a social “deviant.” The excerpt from the book discusses the state eugenical sterilization laws and why some were deemed unconstitutional. It also includes the legal rationale for why the Supreme Court upheld the Virginia eugenical sterilization law.

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Citation Information
Laughlin, Harry Hamilton, excerpt from “The legal status of eugenical sterilization,” Digital Public Library of America, https://dp.la/item/d5c3bf322ec23784748c68600bc4b9e7.
Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
Courtesy of University of Wisconsin via HathiTrust.

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Item 8 of 14 in the Primary Source Set Eugenics Movement in the United States

Previous ItemNext Item
An excerpt from a pamphlet supporting the sterilization of individuals in asylums, 1903.
An excerpt from a journal article about the progress of eugenics in the United States, 1911.
An excerpt from a pamphlet about eugenics and race, 1912.
An excerpt from a book about methods of practical eugenics, 1917.
An excerpt from an article by Dr. Kelly Miller about eugenics and African Americans, 1917.
A 1919 circular letter from Margaret Sanger to W. E. B. Du Bois asking for financial support for the Birth Control movement.
A poster for a “Better Baby Contest” in Indiana, 1930.
An excerpt from a book about eugenics laws in the United States, 1930.
A letter from Margaret Sanger on behalf of the Birth Control Federation of America, 1941.
A 1945 informational pamphlet about sterilization in North Carolina.
A 1947 pamphlet including information about sterilization laws and history in specific US states.
An audio recording of a 1971 eugenics speech interrupted by protestors at Sacramento State College.
An excerpt from the final report to the governor of North Carolina on compensating sterilization victims in 2012.
A 2014 poster for an event about the ethics of modern eugenics.

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