Everything about John T Scopes totally explained
John Thomas Scopes (
August 3,
1900 –
October 21,
1970), a
teacher in
Dayton, Tennessee, was charged on
May 25,
1925 with violating
Tennessee's
Butler Act, which prohibited the teaching of
evolution in Tennessee schools. He was in court in a case known as the
Scopes Trial.
Scopes was born and raised in
Paducah, Kentucky, but as a teenager attended
Danville High School in
Danville, Illinois (Danville High was also the first school he taught at shortly before he moved to Dayton). Scopes was a member of the class of 1919 in
Salem, Illinois, which is also
William Jennings Bryan's home town. After he'd gained a law degree at the University of Kentucky in 1924, Scopes moved to Dayton where he took a job as the
Rhea County High School's
football coach, and occasionally filled in as substitute teacher when regular members of staff were off work.
Scopes' involvement in the so-called Monkey Trial came about after the
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) announced that it would finance a test case challenging the
constitutionality of the Butler Act if they could find a Tennessee teacher willing to act as a defendant.
A group of businessmen in Dayton, Tennessee, led by engineer and geologist
George Rappleyea, saw this as an opportunity to get publicity for their town and approached Scopes. Rappleyea pointed out that while the
Butler Act prohibited the teaching of human evolution, the state required teachers to use the assigned textbook, Hunter's
Civic Biology (1914), which included a chapter on evolution. Rappleyea argued that teachers were essentially required to break the law. When asked about the test case Scopes was initially reluctant to get involved, but after some discussion he told the group gathered in Robinson's Drugstore, "If you can prove that I've taught evolution and that I can qualify as a defendant, then I'll be willing to stand trial." (Scopes, p. 60)
By the time the trial had begun, the
defense team included
Clarence Darrow,
Dudley Field Malone, John Neal,
Arthur Garfield Hays and Frank McElwee. The prosecution team, led by
Tom Stewart, included brothers Herbert and Sue Hicks, Wallace Haggard, and father and son pairings Ben and J. Gordon McKenzie and
William Jennings Bryan and William Jennings Bryan Jr. Bryan had spoken at Scopes' high school commencement and remembered the defendant laughing while he was giving the address to the graduating class six years earlier.
The case ended with a questionable
guilty
verdict, and Scopes was fined $100, which Bryan and the ACLU offered to pay. The case was appealed to the Tennessee Supreme Court. In a 3-1 decision written by Chief Justice
Grafton Green the Butler Act was held to be
constitutional, but overturned Scopes' conviction on a
technicality: the judge had set the fine instead of the jury. The Butler Act remained until 1967 when it was repealed by the Tennessee legislature.
Scopes may have actually been innocent of the crime to which his name is inexorably linked. After the trial Scopes admitted to reporter
William Kinsey Hutchinson "I didn't violate the law," explaining he'd skipped the evolution lesson and his lawyers had coached his students to go on the stand; the Dayton businessmen had assumed he'd violated the law. Hutchinson didn't file his story until after the Scopes appeal was decided in 1927. Scopes also admitted the truth to the wife of the
Universalist minister Charles Francis Potter.
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