{"id":146392,"date":"2015-10-16T21:44:08","date_gmt":"2015-10-17T01:44:08","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.designerchildren.com\/eugenics-in-north-carolina-university-of-vermont\/"},"modified":"2015-10-16T21:44:08","modified_gmt":"2015-10-17T01:44:08","slug":"eugenics-in-north-carolina-university-of-vermont","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/eugenics\/eugenics-in-north-carolina-university-of-vermont\/","title":{"rendered":"Eugenics in North Carolina &#8211; University of Vermont"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><\/p><p>Home    (link to Eugenic Sterilizations in the United States)    <\/p><p>      Lutz Kaelber, Associate Professor of Sociology,      University of Vermont and students in HCOL195      Contact: <a href=\"mailto:lutz.kaelber@uvm.edu\">lutz.kaelber@uvm.edu<\/a>      Last updated: 10\/30\/2014    <\/p><p>     Eugenics\/Sexual    Sterilizations in<\/p><p>    (eugenics; sexual sterilization)<\/p><p>    Number of Victims  <\/p><p>    Over 8,000 sterilizations were approved by the Eugenics    Board of North Carolina. The total number of victims    actually sterilized is estimated to have been over 7,600    (Winston-Salem, Lifting the Curtain on a Shameful Era).    Of this number, females represented approx. 85% of those    sterilized (State Library, Statistics, p. 1). By the    late 1960s, the sterilization of men was virtually halted, as    women made up 99% of those sterilized (Sinderbrand, p.    1). African Americans represent 39% of those    sterilized overall; by the later 1960s, they made up 60% of    those sterilized, even though they made up only a quarter of    the population (Sinderbrand, p. 1). Of those    sterilized up to 1963, 25% were considered mentally ill and 70%    were considered mentally deficient. In each of these    categories, females account for over 75% of the    sterilizations. North Carolina ranked third in the    United States for the total number of people    sterilized.  <\/p><p>    Period During Which Sterilization Occurred  <\/p><p>    Sterilizations started in 1929 with the passage of the    sterilization law and continued through 1973, when the last    recorded sterilization is known to have been    reported.  <\/p><p>    Temporal    Pattern of    Sterilization  <\/p><p>    After the passage of the sterilization law in 1929,    sterilization law began at slow rate. It was not until    about 1938 that sterilizations began to increase at a steady    rate. After WWII, sterilizations accelerated and peaked in the    two years between 1950 and 1952, with 704 sterilizations (State    Library, Statistics, p. 1). This makes North Carolina    fairly unique, as its peak sterilizations occurred after WWII,    at a time when most other states had ceased performing    operations (for other exceptions, see also eugenic    sterilizations in Iowa and Georgia). After 1960, the rate of    sterilization began to slow and continued to decrease from a    rate of about 250 a year in 1963 to 6 per year in 1973.    From 1950-1963 there were an average of about 300    sterilizations per year.In the peak years (the    1950s) there were about 7 sterilizations for every 100,000    residents of the state per year.  <\/p><p>    Passage of Laws  <\/p><p>    The very first sterilization law was passed in 1919 but    it was probably never put to use. Many feared that the law was    unconstitutional and therefore the state feared putting it into    practice (Paul, p. 420). In 1929, The North Carolina    General Assembly passed a new sterilization law. It stated that    the governing body or responsible head of any penal or    charitable institution supported wholly or in part by the State    of North Carolina, or any sub-division thereof, is hereby    authorized and directed to have the necessary operation for    asexualization or sterilization performed upon any mentally    defective or feeble-minded inmate of patient thereof (State    Library, History, p. 1). After this law was declared    unconstitutional by the state's Supreme Court in 1933 due to a    deficient appeals process, North Carolina in the same year    enacted a new sterilization law that provided for notice,    hearing, and the right to appeal (Paul, p. 421). The    passage of this law also created the North Carolina Eugenics    Board (see below). The passage of the 1929 sterilization    law made North Carolina the 17th state out of 33 to    pass one. North Carolina's 1933 law remained effective    until 1973, when the last recorded sterilizations were    performed (State Library, History, p. 1). Finally, on    April 4, 2003, the North Carolina Senate voted unanimously to    overturn it (Bill to Overturn Eugenics Law Passes State    Senate, p. 1).  <\/p><p>    Groups Identified by the Law  <\/p><p>    As stated in the original sterilization law of 1929, the    groups targeted for sterilization were identified as mentally    ill, mentally retarded, and epileptic (Paul, p. 421).    However, the law also stated that the purpose of sterilization    is to protect impaired people from parenthood who would become    seriously handicapped if they were to assume parental    responsibilities (Paul, p. 421).  <\/p><p>    With the passage of the 1933 law, the state of North    Carolina instituted a Eugenics Board made up of high-ranking    public health officials. Their main purpose was to decide    whether sterilization petitions should be carried out. These    Board members were addresses cases of individuals diagnosed as    feeble minded or mentally ill (Gardella, p. 108). Another major    goal of sterilization was to keep the handicapped from    perpetuating themselves. Sterilization was seen as a way to    prevent the spending of tax dollars on the feeble-minded    (Gardella, p. 108). It should be noted that the law had an    \"extramural\" component; i.e., it allowed for the sterilization    of individuals who were presently not placed in state    institutions.  <\/p><p>        Process of the Law  <\/p><p>    Under the sterilization law, the North Carolina General    Assembly gave the governing body or executive head of any penal    or charitable public institution the authority to order the    sterilization of any patient or inmate whose operation they    considered would be in the best interest of the individual and    of the public good. It also gave the county boards of    commissioners authority to order sterilization at the publics    expense of any mentally defective or feeble-minded resident    upon receiving a petition from the individuals next of kin or    legal guardian outside state institutions (State Library,    History, p. 1) - thus applying potentially to every resident    in North Carolina. All orders for sterilization    had to be reviewed and approved by the commissioner of the    Board of Charities and Public Welfare, the secretary of the    State Board of Health, and the chief medical officers of any    two state institutions for the feeble-minded or insane.    In the reviewing process, they looked at a medical and family    history of the individual being ordered for sterilizations to    help decide whether the operation would be performed or    not. They also considered whether it was likely that the    individual might produce children with mental or physical    problems (State Library, History, p. 1).  <\/p><p>    In 1933, under the new law, the General Assembly created    the Eugenics Board of North Carolina to review all orders for    sterilization of mentally diseased, feeble-minded, or    epileptic patients, inmates, or non-institutionalized    individuals (State Library, History, p. 1). This centralized    board included five members: the commissioner of the Board of    Charities and Public Welfare, the secretary of the State Board    of Health, the chief medical officer of a state institution for    the feeble-minded or insane, the chief medical officer of the    State Hospital at Raleigh, and the attorney    general. In the hearings of patients or inmates in    a public institution, the head of that institution was the    prosecutor in presenting the case to the Eugenics Board.    In hearings of individuals who were non-institutionalized, the    county superintendent of welfare or another authorized county    official acted as the prosecutor. However, in both    hearings, the prosecutor provided the board with a medical    history signed by a physician familiar with the individuals    case. The petition for the hearing was sent to the individual    being ordered or to their next of kin or legal guardian.    In the situation where this person could not represent or    defend themselves at the hearing, the next of kin, guardian, or    county solicitor stepped in to represent them. If the    board decided to order the sterilization, the order had to be    signed by at least 3 members and then returned to the    prosecutor. This decision could be appealed by the    individual to the county superior court and then further    appealed to the state supreme court. If the appeal was    successful, any petitions for sterilization were prohibited for    one year, unless the individual, or his or her guardian or next    of know requested sterilization (State Library, History, p.    1).  <\/p><p>    Eugenics in the 1950s was to some extent a southern    phenomenon, as many states in other regions saw their number of    sterilizations drop. Few sterilizations occurred in the    1930s in North Carolina (and in the other southern states)    because the Great Depression resulted in funding crises that    didnt allow for sterilization to occur in full force in the    South. Sterilization picked up pace after WWII, especially    during the mid-1950s (Castles, p. 1).  <\/p><p>    One factor leading to the acceleration after WWII was    race. Race has always been a loaded issue in the south, as    slavery was prominent there. When slavery was legal,    white slave owners encouraged the reproduction of their slaves    in order to create bodies to work and sell. The legacy of    considering poor Blacks as a source of cheap servant labor    continued. By the 1950s, some in the white majority were    becoming anxious about supporting blacks through welfare.    The heads of the agencies of welfare departments agreed on the    value of sterilization for reducing general welfare relief and    ADC (Aid for Dependent Children) payments (Winston-Salem,    Wicked Silence). Some erroneously believed that blacks    accounted for the majority of illegitimate births that were    subsidized by ADC. The state threatened to remove    welfare benefits if the person did not submit to the    operation. The fears about the rising cost of the    ADC program was a major factor in leading to the shift in    racial composition of those targeted for sterilization.    As the attention shifted away from the structural causes of    poverty and crime to placing the blame for urban poverty and    social unrest on blacks, sterilization of blacks was    facilitated (Schoen, Choice and    Coercion; see also Schoen, \"Reassessing,\" p.    149). It was believed the control the reproduction of ADC    recipients was necessary; as a result, the percentage of Blacks    sterilized rose from 23% in the 1930s and 1940s to 59% between    1958-60 and finally to 64% between 1964 and 1966    (Schoen, Choice and Coercion,    p. 108; \"Reassessing,\" p. 149).  <\/p><p>    Sterilization also accelerated because it expanded to    include the general population when the state gave social    workers the authority to submit petitions for    sterilization. Therefore, the amount of eligible people    increased drastically. The North Carolina Board-which    initially targeted those who were deemed mentally ill, expanded    its program to include the general    population. In fact, the    majority of those sterilized had never been institutionalized,    and 2,000 were younger than 19 (Wiggins, p. 1). In    addition, the fight against poverty in North Carolina led to    sterilizations in the general population. As this fight    intensified, a new policy was created that led to an increase    in the number of non-institutionalized people who were    sterilized. Sterilizations of the non-institutionalized    rose from 23% between 1937 and 1951 to 76% between 1952 and    1966 (Schoen, Choice and Coercion,    p. 109, \"Reassessing,\" p.    151).  <\/p><p>    The Human Betterment League made it their mission to    spread information to the public regarding the benefits of    eugenic sterilization (Gardella, p. 110). At the University of    North Carolina State Public officials from the department of    sociology searched for any possible people eligible for eugenic    sterilization. Eventually through their efforts and the    upholding of the states sterilization law North Carolina eve    managed to sterilize the non-institutionalized (Gardella, p.    110)  <\/p><p>        Other Restrictions Placed on Those    Identified in the Law or with Disabilities in    General  <\/p><p>    There are no other known restrictions placed on    those identified in the law.    <\/p><p>        Groups Targeted and Victimized    Women, Especially African Americans and Those with    Developmental Disabilities    77% of all those sterilized in North Carolina were women.    North Carolina carried out 50 percent of these between 1929 and    1947 on females under the age of twenty (Cahn, p.162). There    was a strong historical mentality in the South that supported    the idea of trying to control the reproduction of women, and    African Americans which helped the idea of eugenics to spread    from the North to the South with little opposition from the    elitist White male population. Because of the strong belief in    moral purity of the South, however it was easy to explain why    White women were just as endangered as African American    women.    Physicians in North Carolina didnt leave any margin for    error either. Many women were brought in under the pretext that    they might have been exhibiting behaviors that were sexual in    nature and thus increasing the possibility of sexual    promiscuity and warranting eugenic sterilization (Cahn, p.    165).    Women that were deemed subnormal intellectually were    also likely to be forcibly sterilized. About sixty percent of    the inmates at a North Carolina Farm Colony in the 1930s were    considered feebleminded and candidates for sterilization (Cahn,    p.165). The greatest fear with women was that they are    deceiving to others as they are still attractive to men and yet    are below the standards for reproduction. North Carolinian    journalists reported on these issues stated that these morons    would breed rapidly like mink and contaminate the whole    healthy human stock, (Cahn, p.166). And most of the women    that they felt needed to be sterilized most were those women    that exhibited no outward sign of incompetence but simply    didnt do well on IQ tests because these womens charm of    personality and conversation l abilityposed a greater social    threat than more obviously disabled persons since their very    attractiveness would lead to more opportunities for illicit sex    or marriage and , thus a, the likelihood of starting a family    of future liabilities to the State (Cahn, p. 168).    Women were not safe even if they somehow managed to flee the    State of North Carolina either. Such sexually deviant women    could be chased all the way to Florida, as was the case for    Emma Suggs. She was a candidate for sterilization because of    her mental state due to her past and her out of wedlock    pregnancy (Cahn, p. 169).    Soon North Carolina set its sights on women of color who    were seen as likely to be on welfare and to have illegitimate    children. Chapel Hill Weekly stated that there was a    higher proportion of Negroes than whites: and noted that    the feebleminded Negro woman, often with illegitimate    children, is a familiar and recurrent problem to health and    welfare agencies (Cahn, p. 177).    Women, including wives, daughters, sisters and unwed mothers,    were overrepresented. They were labeled as either    promiscuous, lazy, or unfit (Wiggins, p. 1), or more commonly    as sexually uncontrollable (Schoen, Choice and    Coercion, p. 110). Overall, women made up 84.8% of    sterilizations (State Library, Statistics, p. 1).    However, more interesting is that the sterilization of men    virtually halted in the 1960s, with only 2 sterilizations in    1964, and 254 sterilizations of women (State Library,    Sterilizations, p. 1). Therefore, after 1960, women    accounted for 99% of sterilizations (Sinderbrand, p. 1). While    many white women were sterilized, the state began to focus on    sterilizing black women as they became the majority of the    welfare population. Black women were seen as highly    uneducated, poor, and as having higher fertility rates than    their white female counterparts. Schoen noted that as the    amount of black women on welfare increased the public    association between ADC and black female recipients was    particularly close (Schoen, Choice and Coercion,    p.109; see also \"Reassessing,\" p. 153). Black women    were presumed to have uncontrollable sexual behavior, and as    these racial stereotypes were reinforced, black women became an    even larger target for controlled reproduction through    sterilization.<\/p><p>    Social class also played a role in who was targeted after    WWII, as women on welfare, usually living in socially isolated    places, were overrepresented. The reason for this was to    prevent poor and unfit women from reproducing children with    mental or social ills (Wiggins, p. 1). They were    generally ordered for sterilization by social workers and lived    outside of institutions. The poor were not only targeted    for their social ills but also because they were easier to    sterilize. They would often not be released until they or    a family member agreed to have them sterilized (Wiggins, p.    1).  <\/p><p>    Women that were social workers were strong supporters for    the eugenics movement. Johanna Schoen (2011) has argued that    some social workers provided sterilization out of empathy.    However, Krome-Lukens maintains that women were often coerced    and that many social workers provided sterilizations as an    opportunity to save money from future drains on society    (Krome-Lukens, p. 49). Interestingly enoughaccording to    Krome-Lukenseugenics was a key element of progressive reform    and was indicative of the new mentality surrounding sexuality    and the standard gender roles of the time (Krome-Lukens, p.    9).  <\/p><p>    Finally, race also played a role in those targeted for    sterilization. During the Civil Rights Movement,    petitions were sent to the states eugenics board for black    women (Winston-Salem, Wicked Silence). Overall, by the    later 1960s, 60% of those sterilized were young, black women    (Wiggins, p. 1). Overall, blacks represent 38.9% of    sterilizations. This is because sterilizations of blacks    were concentrated in a shorter period of time and because    minorities only made up quarter of North Carolinas population    (State Library, Statistics, p. 1). From the years 1960    to 1962, of the 467 sterilization ordered by the board, 284    (61%) were black (Winston-Salem, Wicked Silence). In    addition, blacks were targeted because the amount of welfare    recipients who were black grew from 31% in 1950 to 48% in 1961    (Schoen, Choice and Coercion, p. 109; see \"Reassessing,\"    p. 151). It was seen as necessary to    sterilize those recipients of welfare to decrease the growing    financial burden on the state.<\/p><p>    There are two stories that were made public by two black    women who were sterilized against their will at a young age in    North Carolina. The first is Elaine Riddick, who had been    sterilized at the age of 14 by a state order in North Carolina    in 1968 after giving birth to a baby after being raped.    When she was operated on she was not informed that she was    being sterilized. She only discovered this years later    when she was trying to get pregnant with her husband. She    was considered part of a lower class and the consent form had    been signed by her illiterate grandmother, who was threatened    to lose her public benefits, and her parents, who were both    alcohol dependent at the time. She blames the    sterilization for ending her marriage and is still affected by    the surgery, saying, I felt like I was nothing. Its    like, the people that did this; they took my spirit away from    me (Sinderbrand, p. 1).  <\/p><p>    The second story is of Nial Cox Ramirez, who was    sterilized at the age of 17 after several instances of pressure    from social workers to get sterilized after becoming    pregnant. She eventually complied because they threatened    to take her family off of welfare, but she was never informed    of the consequences of the surgery. She was assured she    would be able to become pregnant again, but learned otherwise    when she attempted to conceive years later. Like Riddick,    her marriage fell apart. When she sued the state of North    Carolina in 1967, the lawsuit was dismissed on a technicality    (Wiggins, p. 1). These women were only two among those    who fell under the categories of the groups targeted, and    suffered as a result.  <\/p><p>    Some were quick to believe that Black Americans practiced    reckless breeding (Larson, p. 156). However, North Carolina    took an ever more grand approach to solving its reproductive    woes, instituting a birth control program geared towards giving    poor women a more acceptable and less costly way to prevent    unwanted pregnancies claiming that it would be taught when the    economic status precludes adequate care (Larson,    p.157).  <\/p><p>    Young children were also targeted by these eugenic    practices. A teenage girl from North Carolina was the object of    her fathers affections. She was given a physical and the    doctors realized that shed had sexual intercourse. As a result    he parents gave consent to have their daughter sterilized    instead of reprimanding the father for sexually assaulting his    daughter (Ariyo, p. 59).  <\/p><p>    Blacks and Mentally and Physically Disabled: The Story of    Junius Wilson<\/p><p>    (Source:    <a href=\"http:\/\/www.racialicious.com\/2009\/05\/26\/when-systems-of-oppression-intersect-mental-health-and-the-immigration-system\/\" rel=\"nofollow\">http:\/\/www.racialicious.com\/2009\/05\/26\/when-systems-of-oppression-intersect-mental-health-and-the-immigration-system\/<\/a>)<\/p><p>    Junius Wilson was born in 1908 to Sidney and    Mary Wilson (Burch, p. 1). He was born deaf in and so his    literacy level was extremely low. At the age of eight he was    sent away to a residential North Carolina School for the deaf    and blind in Raleigh. This was Americas first school created    to care for the special needs black children (Burch, p. 20). He    was never taught proper sign language and so his family members    often would misunderstand him or misinterpret gestures that he    made, and he also did not understand the things that his family    members were telling him, as his mother could not teach him how    to read and write (Burch, p. 18). Because of the confusing    communication, some of his family members suspected that he had    assaulted one of his own family members sexually. In this    community he was somewhat safer from his family however he was    sent here not for deafness per se but for his perceived mental    deficiencies and sexual deviations. Here in this institution    Wilson became a member of a community that was equally    misunderstood and equally ostracized by the greater community.    They were all people of color and they were all unable to    communicate by normal conventions. They were never officially    taught ASL (American Sign Language) as they were all people of    color and at the time no one saw fit to use their teaching    resources on Blacks. They instead developed their own gestures    and signs to communicate with one another and to the staff    members in the institution. This form of sign language was    entirely unique to these people. As a result, the deaf Blacks    from Raleigh could not communicate with other signing deaf    people, and far less could they be understood by their hearing    peers (Burch, p. 22).  <\/p><p>    Southern states had a strong history of segregation. This    mentality of separation and White superiority bled the special    education programs of even the most progressive places south of    the Mason Dixon, like North Carolina. Gustavus Ernest Lineberry    became the superintendent for the North Carolina School for the    Colored Blind and Deaf in 1918, after this the quality of    education changed dramatically. Lineberry was a firm believer    in the teaching of the blind and deaf, even Blacks, but he was    not so kind as to consider the needs of his White and Black    students to be the same (Burch, p. 22). He completely    redistributed the resources of the school so that the best    teachers and alumni were teaching at the White schools. He then    made sure to provide a far less academic curriculum for the    Blacks, as he felt there was a dire need to keep Blacks in    their place (Burch, p. 22). The Black students with physical    disabilities were given an education that would prepare them    for rudimentary, vocational labor so that they could prove    their worth to society boys were taught shoe repairing,    carpentry and cabinetmaking along with dairy work (Burch, p.    22). It was also clear that this vocational form of training,    towards fields that required little interaction, lowered the    cost that their programs would incur and made the need for    sufficient literacy nearly unimportant.  <\/p><p>    This, however, created a great deal of socialized    problems for the students participating in the programs.    Everyone sent to the school for the Colored Deaf and Blind was    sent there to become better functioning and well prepared to    rejoin society. But the students were not exposed to role    models that were not fluent in sign and who did not know how to    supply the needs of the deaf and blind. And because of the    segregation that was taking place students could not even be    taught by their White peers secretly, because they were    transferred to Morganton (Burch, p.23).  <\/p><p>    Goldsboro Asylum during the Great    Depression  <\/p><p>    Junius Wilson was becoming too much of a burden for his    family as he became older, and his communication with them had    not really improved either which was greatly to his detriment.    His family decided that the best thing they could do in their    situation was to have Wilson committed to a mental asylum. He    was given up to the police by his family under the charge of    attempted rape. However, it is clear that not everyone was on    board with this idea. Although, his mother allowed them to take    him away it was said that she didnt approve of the decision    and would not speak with Andr, his father, because he was the    one that supported removing his son permanently (Burch, p.    129).  <\/p><p>    Wilson was moved to Goldsboro Asylum in a farming colony.    North Carolina was experiencing the debilitation of the Great    Depression just like everyone else at the time and so holding    whole mental institutions was more of a juggling act than those    that ran the institutions could bear alone. Goldsboro opened up    farming colonies in order to defer some of the costs involved    in feeding inmates by having the inmates work for the food that    they ate. The institution even went so far as to send inmates    to other farms so that they could make money for the asylum.    One could look at this as a sad combination of economic    desperation seasoned with racism in the South and a disregard    for the mentally and physically disabled (Burch, p. 76).  <\/p><p>    Freedom for Wilson  <\/p><p>    After a great deal of mistreatment however, Junius    Wilsons case was taken up by John Wasson, who noted that    Wilson was being held in the Asylum for phase of life    adjustment disorder something he felt didnt warrant a seventy    year stay in a mental institution (Burch, p. 128). In a major    State court case Junius Wilson v. the State of North    Carolina Wilson was finally granted his freedom and a    cottage to call his own on the outskirts of the Hospital    property at Goldsboro.  <\/p><p>    The Years after Junius Wilson  <\/p><p>    Wilsons story continued to have a significant impact    after his death. His case which he brought through the North    Carolina judiciary as a result of his poor treatment and    wrongful sterilization was a model that others used in order to    seek compensation for the trauma caused (Burch, p. 214). The    state of North Carolina has made great efforts to own up to its    involvement in the eugenics movement. In 2003 North Carolina    was one of the first states to repeal the eugenic sterilization    laws. Unfortunately it has taken until very recently for any    party afflicted by the eugenics laws to be officially    recognized and monetarily compensated. Until the    2009-2010 session of the State Legislature of North Carolina,    there had been one promise after another with only symbolic    acknowledgement being offered (Burch, p. 215). (See also below    on compensation for victims.)  <\/p><p>    Dr. William Allan was North Carolinas initial    promoter of negative eugenics. He wrote his    first study on eugenics in 1916 and by the end of his life he    had written 93    papers. He had his own private    practice until 1941, when he started the medical genetics    department at Bowman Gray. He thought that    hereditary diseases could be halted by prevention and based    much of his work on field studies and    surveys. He pushed for a statewide bank of    genetic information that would catalog peoples genetic    backgrounds to see if they were prospective    parents. He continued to push for this until    his death in 1943 (Winston-Salem, Forsyth in the    Forefront).  <\/p><p>    Dr. C. Nash Herndon followed in the footsteps of    Allan when he took over the department at Bowman Gray after his    death. He conducted surveys of those with    disabilities in an effort to find links of hereditary    diseases. He was president of the American    Eugenics Society from 1953-1955 and president of the Human    Betterment League of North Carolina. He was    the greatest contributor in pushing the eugenics movement    forward in North Carolina after WWII (Winston-Salem, Forsyth    in the Forefront).  <\/p><p>        (Source:    <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ci.winston-salem.nc.us\/Home\/DiscoverWinston-Salem\/History\/Articles\/Winston-SalemMayorsBiographies\" rel=\"nofollow\">http:\/\/www.ci.winston-salem.nc.us\/Home\/DiscoverWinston-Salem\/History\/Articles\/Winston-SalemMayorsBiographies<\/a>)<\/p><p>    Ira M. hardy was the Superintendent at the North Carolina    School for the Feeble-Minded. She appealed to the Southern    Medical Association that took place in Florida expressing her    deep desire to make the mentally ill completely separate from    the rest of the population (Larson, p. 46).  <\/p><p>    Kate Burr Johnson was female social worker during the era    of eugenic sterilization. She was a major proponent of the    movement of compulsory sterilization. Johnson claimed that she    wanted women to be liberated and be provided with reproductive    freedom; however, she was actually strongly supporting the    eugenic sterilization of people that would become social    liabilities and produce unfit or economically unstable    offspring (Krome-Lukens, p. 3).  <\/p><p>    Feeder Institutions and institutions where    sterilizations were performed  <\/p><p>    The Bowman Gray School of Medicine    housed a program for eugenic sterilizations starting in    1948. It was aimed at the eugenic    improvement of the population of Forsyth    County. It consisted of a systematic    approach that would eliminate certain genetically unfit    strains from the local population (Winston-Salem, Forsyth in    the Forefront). It expanded the    program throughout North Carolina. The    school received much philanthropic support for research of    genetic ideas. Today, school officials    condemn eugenic research, as the dean of the school, Dr.    William B. Applegate, states I think that the concepts and the    practice of eugenics is wrong and unethical and would in no way    be approved or condoned in modern medical times    (Winston-Salem, Forsyth in the Forefront).    The school is now part of the Wake Forest University Baptist    Medical Center-one of the most respected academic medical    centers in the country. Although officials    of the school condemn eugenics there is no mention of the    program for eugenic sterilizations on the medical centers    website.  <\/p><p>     (Photo origin: North    Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, available at    <a href=\"http:\/\/www.dhhs.state.nc.us\/mhfacilities\/images\/Caswell-Center.jpg\" rel=\"nofollow\">http:\/\/www.dhhs.state.nc.us\/mhfacilities\/images\/Caswell-Center.jpg<\/a>)  <\/p><p>        (Source:    <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ncgenweb.us\/cabarrus\/Photos\/HistMarkers\/StonewallJacksonTrainingSchool.jpg\" rel=\"nofollow\">http:\/\/www.ncgenweb.us\/cabarrus\/Photos\/HistMarkers\/StonewallJacksonTrainingSchool.jpg<\/a>)<\/p><p>    The Stonewall Jackson Training School    was founded in 1907 and was North Carolinas first juvenile    detention facility. This was mostly a school    for boys, but a few girls were sterilized there over its    history, all of whom were labeled as mentally    retarded. The boys who were sent there had    only minor scrapes with authorities, not for mental    illness. In 1948, seven boys out of 300 were    targeted for sterilization because they were ready for    discharge. These boys were deemed    feebleminded as a justification for the    operation. These were the only boys    sterilized at this school (Winston-Salem,DETOUR: In 48    State Singled out Delinquent Boys). The    building still exists but does not remain in operation    today. There is no commemoration at the site    or mention of the past.  <\/p><p>    The Goldsboro Training School, now    known as the OBerry Center, opened in 1957 as the first    institution for black intellectually disabled    citizens. It had 150 clients were    transferred to it from Cherry Hospital, at which point the    treatment of the patients was limited to academics and    vocational training. It is still operating    today with approximately 430 clients, but it is no longer    limited to African Americans (Castles, pp.    12-14). The centers website refers to the    institution's history of dealing with Black citizens with    intellectual disabilities.  <\/p><p>    (Source:<a href=\"http:\/\/digitalgallery.nypl.org\/nypldigital\/dgkeysearchdetail.cfm?trg=1&#038;strucID=607397&#038;imageID=1253742&#038;total=17&#038;num=0&#038;word=21273&#038;s=1&#038;notword=&#038;d=&#038;c=&#038;f=13&#038;k=0&#038;lWord=&#038;lField=&#038;sScope=Name&#038;sLevel=&#038;sLabel=North%20Carolina%20State%20Board%20of%20Charities%20and%20Public%20Welfare&#038;imgs=20&#038;pos=14&#038;e=w\" rel=\"nofollow\">http:\/\/digitalgallery.nypl.org\/nypldigital\/dgkeysearchdetail.cfm?trg=1&#038;strucID=607397&#038;imageID=1253742&#038;total=17&#038;num=0&#038;word=21273&#038;s=1&#038;notword=&#038;d=&#038;c=&#038;f=13&#038;k=0&#038;lWord=&#038;lField=&#038;sScope=Name&#038;sLevel=&#038;sLabel=North%20Carolina%20State%20Board%20of%20Charities%20and%20Public%20Welfare&#038;imgs=20&#038;pos=14&#038;e=w<\/a>)  <\/p><p>    Opposition    Blacks were opposed to sterilizations one two levels:    those who knew about its racial bias and those who    didnt. The sterilization program was only whispered    about in the black communities, and any evidence that race    played a part in those who were sterilized wasnt made public    or scrutinized. Therefore, the eugenics board was allowed    to proceed with few hurdles (Winston-Salem). Those blacks    knew about the racial bias involved with sterilization tried to    push for their rights. In 1959, State Senator Jolly    introduced a bill that would authorize the sterilization of an    unmarried woman who gave birth for the third time. This    bill was contested bygroup of blacks. However, the    senator's response was \"Youshould be concerned about this    bill. One out of four of your race is illegitimate.\"    Blacks that demanded to be heard were ruledout of order    by the white-controlled legislature    (Winston-Salem,\"Wicked Silence\").  <\/p><p>    Some college students were in opposition to the    sterilizations.In 1960, students fromNorth Carolina    A&amp;TState Universitybegan sit-in movement    against states progressive attitude or race relations.    However, this gained little speed or recognition by the state    to make any changes. Also, at Shaw University in Raleigh    from 1968 to 1972, student activists tried to educate blacks    about the issues and threats of sterilization. However,    they lacked detailed information, and therefore this gained    little momentum as well (Winston-Salem, Wicked    Silence).  <\/p><p>    Today, North Carolina is trying to amend for its past,    making it one of the only states to do so thus far. In    April 2003, the sterilization law was unanimously voted to be    overturned by the North Carolina Senate. A few weeks    later, a law was then signed by Governor Easley to officially    put an end to forced sterilizations in North Carolina.    Soon after, on April 17, 2003, Easley issued a public apology,    stating, To the victims and families of this regrettable    episode in North Carolina's past, I extend my sincere apologies    and want to assure them that we will not forget what they have    endured\" (\"Easley Signs Law Ending States Eugenics Era,\" p.    1). Then, in December 2005, the National Black Caucus of    State Legislators passed resolution calling for federal and    state programs to identify victims nationwide and get them    health care and counseling (Sinderbrand, p. 1). However,    these current efforts to find sterilized victims are difficult    due to budget constraints and high costs of a publicity    campaign. Therefore, efforts to find victims through    \"free media\" were employed, such as posting info on bulletins,    offices, health departments, libraries, schools, billboards,    and city buses etc. (Sinderbrand, p. 1).  <\/p><p>    Source:    <a href=\"http:\/\/news.ncdcr.gov\/2009\/06\/18\/historical-highway-marker-remembers-eugenics\/\" rel=\"nofollow\">http:\/\/news.ncdcr.gov\/2009\/06\/18\/historical-highway-marker-remembers-eugenics\/<\/a><\/p><p>    In 2009, a marker was dedicated in Raleigh, where the    state eugenics board had met<\/p><p>    A task force created by the governor has    considered providing compensation for victims (NC Justice for    Victims Foundation). (  <\/p><p>    Anderson Cooper on CNN ran a story on    compensation for victims of sterilizations on 12\/27\/2011    (see  <\/p><p>    While a task force    recommended to set compensation for surviving and verified    victims at the amount of $50,000, the state senate rejected    such a proposal in the summer of 2012, and the foundation was    faced with the prospect of shutting down due to a lack of    money. As of October 2012, only about 170 victims who are still    alive have been verified, out of an estimated total of approx.    1,500-2,000. The low number of victims who have revealed    themselves in this way reflects the continuing stigma of being    sterilized and parallels the situation in Germany, where for    many decades victims were reluctant to come forward in part due    to the stigma attached to sterilizations and the still-existing    belief that a sterilization constitutes a black mark on a    family lineage.  <\/p><p>    The situation might be    reflective of the difficulty of citizens in North Carolina to    allow for \"negative memory,\" i.e., a willingness to concede    that the state representing the will of its citizens was    capable of committing atrocious (though legal) deeds. In    contrast to sterilization victims in British Columbia and    Alberta, not a single victim of a state eugenic sterilization    law is known to have been compensated by a state in the United    States so far.  <\/p><p>    After extensive efforts by    organizations such as the Office of Justice for Sterilization    Victims, the states NAACP, and legal clinics by the University    of North Carolina Center for Civil Rights to spread the word    about compensation to victims of eugenic sterilization, the    number of claimants reached a number close to 800 until the    cutoff date of June 30, 2014. In the larger context of    compensation for social injustice stemming from illiberal and    injurious state programs a firm deadline seems highly    problematic, as the date seems arbitrary and informed not by    considerations of justice but by political expediency, and it    remains unclear why such a deadline would be necessary in the    first place.  <\/p><p>    The number of verified cases    remains very low at less than 220 (see here).    It appears that a victim is only verified for compensation if a    record of an order by the state's Eugenics board exists. If    this is the case, it leaves out those whose records might no    longer be extant, or whose sterilization was due not to a    sterilization order under the state's eugenics law but what is    known as \"Mississippi appendectomies\" (this is noted and    explained here).    As is the case with the deadline, this very narrow definition    of victimhood is not calibrated to the historical record or    experience of victimhood.  <\/p><p>    Bibliography  <\/p><p>    Ariyo, Oluwunmi. 2006. Making the Unfit Individual:    Analysis of the Rhetoric of the Eugenics Board of North    Carolina. Masters Thesis, Department of Communication, Wake    Forest University.  <\/p><p>    Schoen, Johanna. 2011. Reassessing Eugenic    Sterilization: The Case of North Carolina.    Pp. 141-60 in A Century of Eugenics in    America: From the Indiana Experiment to the Human Genome    Era, ed. Paul Lombardo. Bloomington: Indiana University    Press.        ------. 2005. Choice and Coercion: Birth Control,    Sterilization, and Abortion in Public Health and Welfare.    Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.  <\/p><p>    Severson, Kim. \"Thousands Sterilized, a State Weighs    Restitution.\" NYTimes.com Dec. 9, 2011. Available at    <http:>.  <\/http:><\/p><p>    Sinderbrand, Rebecca. 2005. \"A Shameful Little Secret.\"    Newsweek 33 (March 28).        State Library of North Carolina. \"Eugenics in North    Carolina.\" Available at     Wiggins, Lori. 2005. North Carolina Regrets Sterilization    Program. Crisis 112, 3: 10.        Winston-Salem Journal. Against Their Will.    Available at <http:><\/http:>.      <\/p><p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p><p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/www.ncgenweb.us\/cabarrus\/Photos\/HistMarkers\/StonewallJacksonTrainingSchool.jpg\" style=\"padding-left:10px; padding-right: 10px;\"><\/p><p>See the rest here:<br><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"http:\/\/www.uvm.edu\/~lkaelber\/eugenics\/NC\/NC.html\" title=\"Eugenics in North Carolina - University of Vermont\">Eugenics in North Carolina - University of Vermont<\/a><\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Home (link to Eugenic Sterilizations in the United States) Lutz Kaelber, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Vermont and students in HCOL195 Contact: <a href=\"mailto:lutz.kaelber@uvm.edu\">lutz.kaelber@uvm.edu<\/a> Last updated: 10\/30\/2014 Eugenics\/Sexual Sterilizations in (eugenics; sexual sterilization) Number of Victims Over 8,000 sterilizations were approved by the Eugenics Board of North Carolina. The total number of victims actually sterilized is estimated to have been over 7,600 (Winston-Salem, Lifting the Curtain on a Shameful Era). Of this number, females represented approx <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/eugenics\/eugenics-in-north-carolina-university-of-vermont\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[187750],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-146392","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-eugenics"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/146392"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=146392"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/146392\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=146392"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=146392"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=146392"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}