links students ito uchii newsletters gallery English index index

Scientists and Society

Eugenics 1901-30 Timeline

[The materials are mainly drawn from Kevles 1985, chh. 2-8, Sheila Weiss's chapter 2, and W.H.Schneider's chapter 3 of The Wellborn Science (ed. by Mark B. Adams); arranged by S. Uchii.]

See also Eugenics becomes popular.


Eugenics Timeline, 1901-1930

 
Britain
USA
Other
1900
Mendelian Laws of genetics, rediscovered
1901      
1902 Biometrika    
1903     Schallmayer, Vererbung und Auslese im Lebenslauf der Voelker
1904   Davenport, Biological Research Station, Cold Spring Harbor

Binet-Simon intelligence test

Ploetz in Germany founded Archiv fuer Rassen-und Gessellschaftsbiologie

1905     Ploetz founded Gesellschaft fuer Rassenhygiene
1906      
1907 Eugenics Education Society (later, Eugenics Society, 1926) State Sterilization Law, Indiana, and 15 states follow until 1917 Internationale Gessellschaft fuer Rassenhygiene
1908   Goddard introduced Binet-Simon test into USA  
1909 Eugenics Review    
1910   Davenport, Eugenics Record Office, Cold Spring Harbor  
1911

Galton died

Pearson, Galton Eugenics Professor

Davenport, Heredity in Relation to Eugenics  
1912

1st International Eugenics Congress, in London

The Treasury of Human Inheritance

  French Eugenics Society
1913 Mental-Deficiency Act   Deutsche Gessellschaft fuer Rassenhygiene
1914
World War I began
1915      
1916  

Terman's revision of Binet-Simon test at Stanford; "I.Q." introduced

Eugenical News

 
1917   Army testing program (headed by R. Yerkes)  
1918
World War I ended (November)
1919 After the war, Haldane, (Julian) Huxley, and Hogben began the anti-mainline assault against eugenics. H.S.Jennings (in USA) later joined the British colleagues in the anti-mainline assault. C.Richet, La Selection Humaine
1920  

The Fitter Families contests began

Laughlin (Eugenic Record Office) got involved in the House Committee on Immigration

"social hygiene" became dominant in French eugenics
1921  

Emergency Restriction Act (for Immigration)

National Academy of Sciences, Psychological Examining in the United States Army

 
1922     Margaret Sanger visited Japan
1923   American Eugenics Society

Fritz Lenz, chair of Rassenhygiene in Munich

Lenz, Grundriss der Menschliche Erblichkeitslehre und Rassenhygiene (with Erwin Bauer and Eugen Fischer)

1924  

Immigration Act

Sterilization Law in Virginia, and Buck vs. Bell Case began (eventually the Supreme Court upheld the Law in 1927)

 
1925 Annales of Eugenics    
1926     Deutscher Bund fuer Volksaufartung und Erbkunde
1927     Kaiser Wilhelm Institut fuer Anthoropologie, menschliche Erblehre und Eugenik
1928      
1929
The Great Depression began (October)
1930    

Eugenik (by Deutscher Bund)

Pope Pius XI "Encyclical Letter on Christian Marriage"

(incomplete)


Mark B. Adams, ed., The Wellborn Science: Eugenics in Germany, France, Brazil, and Russia, Oxford University Press, 1990. (邦訳『比較「優生学」史』、佐藤雅彦訳、現代書館、1998)

ドイツの民族衛生学と優生学については、次も参照。

米本昌平『遺伝管理社会』弘文堂、1989。


Last modified December 6, 1999. (c) Soshichi Uchii

suchii@bun.kyoto-u.ac.jp