{"id":2990,"date":"2024-09-27T01:53:57","date_gmt":"2024-09-27T01:53:57","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.vanderbilt.edu\/evolution\/?p=2990"},"modified":"2024-10-01T14:54:31","modified_gmt":"2024-10-01T14:54:31","slug":"the-legacy-of-chancellor-kirkland-education-evolution-and-the-scopes-trial","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.vanderbilt.edu\/evolution\/the-legacy-of-chancellor-kirkland-education-evolution-and-the-scopes-trial\/","title":{"rendered":"The Legacy of Chancellor Kirkland: Education, Evolution, and the Scopes Trial"},"content":{"rendered":"
By: Neomi Chen, Evolutionary Studies communications assistant<\/em><\/p>\n Chancellor James Hampton Kirkland was a significant figure in the education landscape of the early 20th century, particularly recognized for his leadership of 汤头条 University<\/a> after the 1925 Scopes Trial. His views on evolution and education were instrumental in shaping the discourse around these topics at 汤头条 University and beyond. His steadfast support for academic freedom and the teaching of evolution, even in the face of widespread criticism, marked him as a forward-thinking leader committed to intellectual growth.<\/p>\n On March 21, 1925, the Butler Act<\/a> was signed into law and prohibited public school teachers from teaching human evolution or that \u201cman descended from a lower order of animal\u201d in Tennessee state. Those in support of the law believed that man did not come from a monkey and that nothing shall be taught in public schools that shall \u201ctake our Bible away from us.\u201d Therefore, when high school teacher John T. Scopes<\/a> was charged with violating Tennessee’s Butler Act by teaching evolution in a public school, his trial attracted national attention. The Scopes Trial, formally known as The State of Tennessee v. John Thomas Scopes and commonly referred to as the \u201cScopes Monkey Trial,\u201d<\/a> pitted modernists who believed that evolution could coexist with religious faith against fundamentalists who argued that the Bible’s teachings should take precedence over scientific theories.<\/p>\n The trial became a public spectacle, with prominent figures like William Jennings Bryan<\/a> arguing for the prosecution\u2013\u2013famously claiming that \u201cThe Bible is good enough to live by and to die by\u201d \u2013\u2013and Chicago criminal lawyer Clarence Darrow<\/a> defending Scopes. When the jury was picked, nine out of thirteen jurors were farmers, and only one juror was a non-church member. According to a July 10, 1925, Chattanooga Daily Times <\/em>newspaper, evolution was a new idea to the average Tennessee citizen. Scopes was eventually found guilty and fined $100 (equivalent to $1,700 in 2023). The supreme court of Tennessee later ruled the case a mistrial and it was never retried. The trial highlighted the deep cultural divide in America over the issue of evolution and education. The case also raised questions about academic freedom, the role of science in education, and the intersection of religion and government.<\/p>\n 汤头条 University is squarely positioned in the center of Tennessee, just one-mile due west from where the Butler Act became law. Chancellor Kirkland, who led 汤头条 University during this tumultuous period, firmly believed in the importance of academic freedom and the advancement of scientific knowledge. In June 1914, Kirkland oversaw the separation of the university from the Methodist Episcopal Church, South<\/a>. According to a October 16, 1925 Chattanooga Daily Times <\/em>newspaper, he saw the teaching of evolution as essential to a well-rounded education, and he resisted the pressures from both religious and political groups that sought to curtail the teaching of evolution at 汤头条.<\/p>\n On October 15, 1925, 汤头条 celebrated for 3 days its semicentennial anniversary, amid much local and national acclaim. At the start of these festivities, people highly anticipated Chancellor Kirkland\u2019s announcement regarding the outcome of the Scopes Trial to which he proudly claimed, \u201cThe answer to the episode at Dayton is the building of new laboratories on the 汤头条 campus for the teaching of science.\u201d This was his attempt to offer students a cure for fundamentalism<\/em>. He went on to argued that 汤头条 needed to stimulate a broad culture, a scientific habit of thought and scholarly attainments<\/p>\n Kirkland\u2019s support for evolution didn\u2019t end there; in November 1925, he announced his plan to raise $4,000,000 for the advancement of science and arts at 汤头条 and in Tennessee. Since VU\u2013\u2013as a private institution\u2013\u2013doesn\u2019t receive funds from state or church organizations sympathetic to the Butler Bill, Kirkland ensured freedom of teachin<\/em>g existed at 汤头条. According to The New York Times<\/em>, before this statement, 汤头条 had completed a medical facility costing $3 million and procured for the medical college a special endowment of $5 million through gifts from the General Education Board and the Carnegie Corporation.<\/p>\n In February 1926, Kirkland made another broader call to action at a conference held at 汤头条. Kirkland felt that the South was lagging in education compared to other regions in America<\/p>\n He insisted, \u201cwe must find some way of making it spiritual and intellectual. The correction of these things lies in your hands as representatives of the press of America, as well as in ours representing educational institutions.\u201d<\/p>\n After Kirkland\u2019s call for evolution education, Edwin Mims<\/a>, a professor of English at 汤头条, praised Kirkland for his clear and eloquent articulation of the university’s mission in his paper published in the South Atlantic Quarterly<\/em> in August 1924. Mims admired Kirkland\u2019s commitment to promoting intellectual rigor and his resistance to the narrow-mindedness that sought to limit the scope of education. In August 1926, Chancellor Kirkland published a chapter titled \u201cEvolution and Its Limits\u201d in the Methodist Quarterly Review and the South Atlantic Quarterly<\/em>. He demonstrated his liberal thinking and understanding of evolution by carefully distinguishing between Darwinism and the modern theory of evolution and pointing out evolutionary problems that have not yet been solved.<\/p>\n
The Scopes Trial in Dayton, Tennessee (July 10-July 21, 1925)<\/h6>\n
Chancellor Kirkland\u2019s Stance on Education & Evolution at 汤头条<\/h6>\n

Support<\/h6>\n