The Scopes Monkey Trial
Until the 1990s no trial in American history had attracted
more attentionand been more misunderstoodthan the
1925 trial in Dayton, Tennessee, of John Thomas Scopes, accused
of violating a state law banning the teaching of human evolution.
Shortly after the governor of Tennessee signed the antievolution
bill into law, the fledgling American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
in New York City began to search for a volunteer to test the constitutionality
of the law. Although young Scopes had not taught biology and could
not remember for sure whether he had discussed evolution during
a brief period substituting for the regular biology teacher, he
agreed to be "arrested" and to stand trial. For the
contest
the ACLU brought in several big-city attorneys, including the
famed criminal lawyer and agnostic Clarence Darrow from Chicago.
To assist the prosecution, the Worlds Christian Fundamentals
Association secured the services of William Jennings Bryan of
Nebraska, a thrice-defeated Democratic candidate for the presidency
of the United States and a well-known Presbyterian antievolutionist.
The July trial, which lasted eight days through searing heat,
attracted international news coverage. The Chicago radio station
WGN made history by broadcasting the trial. Downtown Dayton took
on the appearance of a carnival. The highpoint of the trial came
on the seventh day, when Darrow put Bryan on the stand as a biblical
expert, obviously expecting him to defend a literal reading of
the Bible. To Darrows apparent surprise, Bryan, who, like
virtually all Fundamentalist spokesmen, accepted the great antiquity
of life on earth, happily volunteered that the "days"
of creation could have spanned as many as 600,000,000 years each.
Bryan explained that although he believed "everything in
the Bible should be accepted as it is given there; some of the
Bible is given illustratively. For instance, Ye are the
salt of the earth. I would not insist that man was actually
salt, or that he had flesh of salt, but it is used in the sense
of salt as saving Gods people." (Privately, Bryan expressed
a willingness to accept pre-human evolutionif scientists
could demonstrate the evolution of one species into another.)
The trial, as expected, ended in a conviction for Scopes, whose
own attorneys conceded his guilt. Five days later Bryan died in
his sleep, a martyr to antievolutionist cause.
Over the years a number of historians have claimed that, despite
Scopess legal conviction, the trial actually represented
a public-relations victory for the evolutionists. The award-winning
movie Inherit the Wind conveys the same message. As the
story goes, Bryans testimony at Dayton, in which he admitted
the antiquity of life on earth, destroyed his credibility with
fellow Fundamentalists and brought about the demise of the antievolution
movement. The available evidence, however, supports none of these
claims. Many journalists did indeed review Bryans performance
at Dayton harshly, writing that he revealed his ignorance of both
religion and science. But Darrow also receive considerable criticism
in the press: for disrespecting the judge, for treating Bryan
rudely, and for trying to deny the people of Tennessee their democratic
right to determine what should be taught in their tax-supported
schools. In fact, Darrow became such a liability, the ACLU tried
(unsuccessfully) to dump him from the defense team handling Scopess
appeal to the state supreme court.
By and large, the Fundamentalists emerged from the trial flushed
with a sense of victory and proud of the way Bryan had handled
himself. The head of the Worlds Christian Fundamentals Association,
which had invited Bryan to Dayton, praised him for his "signal
conquest" on behalf of Fundamentalism: "He not only
won his case in the judgment of the Judge, in the judgment of
the Jurors, in the judgment of the Tennessee populace attending;
he won it in the judgment of an intelligent world."
Fundamentalists leaders could hardly have felt betrayed by
Bryans advocacy of an ancient earth, because, except for
the Seventh-day Adventist George McCready Price, they agreed with
him on that life on earth long antedated Adam and Eve. The events
at Dayton neither ended the antievolution crusade nor slowed it
down; nearly two-thirds of the antievolution bills introduced
in state legislatures in the 1920s came after 1925. Despite
its immense symbolic significance, the Scopes trial exerted little
influence on the actual course of antievolutionism in America.
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| Contributed by: Dr. Ron Numbers
|