CHARLES FREMONT DIGHT:
An Inventory of His Papers at the Minnesota Historical Society
Manuscripts Collection
Part or all of this collection is restricted.
For
details, please see restrictions.
| | |
| Creator: |
Dight, Charles Fremont,
1856-1938.
|
| Title: | Charles Fremont Dight
papers. |
| Dates: | 1883-1984. |
| Abstract: | Correspondence (undated and 1892-1936), photographs
(1879-1930s), lecture notes (1900-1908), essays, article manuscripts (1906-1910,
1933-1936), newspaper clippings (1900-1927), scrapbooks (1914-1930s), radio scripts
(1928, 1933), editorials (ca.1921-1935), income tax forms (1919-1936), pamphlets,
flyers, bills, minutes, and printed matter related to the life and career of a
Minneapolis medical professor, socialist politician, and leader of the eugenics
movement in Minnesota. |
| Quantity: | 4.0 cubic feet (8 boxes, and 1 folder
in reserve). |
| Location: | P1628: See Detailed Description for
shelf locations. |
C. F. Dight was born in Mercer, Pennsylvania in 1856. He graduated with a medical
degree from the University of Michigan in 1879. After serving as a health officer in
Holton, Michigan, from 1879 to 1881 he returned to the university to assist
pathology professor Alonzo B. Palmer. From 1883 to 1889 he was professor of anatomy
and physiology at the American University of Beirut, Syria (now Lebanon). From about
1890 to 1892 Dight served as resident physician and teacher of physiology and
hygiene at Shattuck School, Faribault, Minnesota.
Dight married Dr. Mary A. Crawford in 1892, but was divorced in 1899 without
children. During this period he practiced medicine for a year in Portsmouth, New
Hampshire; taught for two years as professor at the medical school of New Orleans
University; and spent four years in travel and study in New York, Chicago, Ann
Arbor, and the University of Pennsylvania.
In 1899 Dight returned to Minnesota and began teaching at Hamline University's
medical school. In 1901 he also became medical director of the Ministers Casualty
Union, a Minneapolis insurance company. When the University of Minnesota assimilated
Hamline's medical school program in 1907 Dight stayed on, lecturing on pharmacology
at the university until 1913.
From 1914 to 1918 Dight served as Minneapolis alderman from the 12th ward. He was a
staunch socialist.
In the early 1920s Dight launched a crusade to bring the eugenics movement to
Minnesota. He believed that many of society's evils could be eliminated through
selective breeding. His main lines of approach included eugenics education, changes
in marriage laws, and the segregation and sterilization of "defectives." He
organized the Minnesota Eugenics Council in 1923 and began campaigning for a
sterilization law. In 1925 the Minnesota legislature passed a law allowing the
sterilization of the "feeble-minded" and insane who were resident in the state's
institutions. For the next several legislative sessions Dight fought unsuccessfully
for expansion of the law to include sterilization of the unfit outside of
institutions. The Minnesota Eugenics Society became moribund by the early 1930s, but
Dight continued his legislative efforts as late as 1935 and also continued to speak
and write on the subject of eugenics. In 1935 he published History of the Early Stages of the Organized Eugenics Movement for Human
Betterment in Minnesota, a 69-page pamphlet. In 1936 he published Call for a New Social Order, a 181-page book comprising
three parts: memoirs of his years as a socialist Minneapolis alderman, 1914-1918;
published versions of his radio talk on eugenics; and essays on "mental faculties"
and other subjects.
Dight died in Minneapolis in 1938. One biographer has noted that "Although he never
made much more than $1500 a year, his spartan habits, astute investments, and
calculated failure to file income tax returns helped him build a $200,000 estate"
(Medelman, p. 12, full citation below). He left the estate to the University of
Minnesota to found what became the Dight Institute for the Promotion of Human
Genetics.
This sketch was taken from the Dight Papers and from Gary Phelps, "The Eugenics
Crusade of Charles Fremont Dight," Minnesota History,
49:99-108 (Fall 1984); from John Medelman, "The Incredible Dr. Dight," Twin Citian, July 1962, 10-13; and from three items by
Evadene Burris Swanson: "A Biographical Sketch of Charles Fremont Dight, M.D.,"
Dight Institute of the University of Minnesota, Bulletin (Minneapolis, University of
Minnesota Press), No. 1, 1943, 8-22 (which includes a chronology of Dight's life, p.
8, and a bibliography of his published writings, p. 20-22; "The Story of Charles F.
Dight," unpublished typescript, [194-?], 71 p., including footnotes; and "Some
Sources for Northwest History: the Dight Papers," Minnesota
History, 25:62-64 (1944). All of the published sources referred to in
this biographical sketch are available in the Minnesota Historical Society book and
serials collections.
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Topics include Dight's teaching in Beirut, Lebanon and a number of American medical
schools; his writings on socialism and his public service as Minneapolis alderman
(1914-1918); and his writings on eugenics and his leadership in the Minnesota
movement to pass legislation regarding eugenic sterilization.
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These documents are organized into the following sections:
| | |
| | Personal Papers |
| | Medical Career Files |
| | Political Files |
| | Eugenics Files |
| | Newspaper Clippings and Scrapbooks |
| | Reserve Materials |
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Access Restrictions:
Access to and use of reserve materials requires the curator's permission. Please
consult the reference staff for more information.
Preferred Citation:
[Indicate the cited item and/or series here].
Charles Fremont Dight Papers. Minnesota Historical Society.
See the Chicago Manual of Style for additional
examples
Accession Information:
Accession number: 5363A; 5411; 14,828
Processing Information:
Processed by: John M. Wickre, March 1988; Frank P. Hennessy, 1994
Catalog ID number: 09-00038054
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Location | Box |
P1628 | 1 | Biographical and genealogical material, undated, 1921-1984. 2 folders. |
| | | This material includes copies of the 1984 Phelps article on Dight and
material by Evadine Burris Swanson cited above, autobiographical
information written by Dight, and genealogical information on the Dight
family (1921 and 1928). |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Correspondence, 1892-1936. 3 folders. |
| | | Most of this group of papers consists of Dight family correspondence,
1927-1936. It includes letters related to Dight family reunions, and
correspondence with Dight's nieces: Lizzie Emma Dight Whipple in Natick,
Massachusetts (1927-1936); Isabella Dight Hover (and her husband Galen
Hover) in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (1925-1928), Sherman, New York
(1929-1934), and Grand Junction, Colorado (1934-1935); Frances Dight
Francis in New Wilmington, Pennsylvania (1928-1936); and Georgia May
Dight Gilkey in Brooklyn (1928-1934) and St. Petersburg, Florida
(1935). |
| | | There is also material related to C. F. Dight's brother, George W. Dight,
in Seattle, Washington including a patent document and drawings
([ca.1890?]) related to a "pumping apparatus" invented by George; a note
from George (May 2, 1928) and reply by C. F. (May 16, 1928) regarding
the Dight family reunion; and correspondence regarding George's illness
(Jan.-Feb. 1925) and death (May 1930). |
| | | Other items include an essay on "How and What the Turks Eat" ([1890?]); a
printed sheet ([ca.1898?]) advertising "The Dight Thermal Inspirator and
Animal Heat Conserver" invented by C. F. Dight, Brooklyn, N.Y.; a set of
letters answering Dight's newspaper inquiry for a room in a private home
(June-July 1932); correspondence with Arthur Hurtt (Aug.-Oct. 1933) in
California, mostly regarding the health of Arthur and Mrs. Hurtt; and
letters relating to Dight's search for a nursing home (1934-1936),
including an information sheet on the Jones-Harrison Home for aged
Protestant men and women, Minneapolis ([ca.1936]). |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Photographs, 1879-1903. 3 folders. |
| | | Photographs of Dight (ca.1900-1930s); of the families of the same four
nieces whose letters comprise the bulk of the series above: Lewis and
Lizzie Emma Dight Whipple, Galen and Isabella Dight Hover, Joseph and
Frances Dight Francis, and Waldo and Georgia May Dight Gilkey (undated
and 1896, 1928); his "tree" house; and his medical school class
(1879). |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Saturday Lunch Club materials, [circa 1927]-1937. |
| | | This folder includes a copy of the club's 1927 printed history (which
includes references to Dight), a list of members (undated), some
correspondence, and printed matter. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Location | Box |
P1628 | 2 | Financial Files: |
| | | Bonds and other investments, undated, 1920-1937. 4 folders. |
| | | | The first two folders contain notes and two small record books
pertaining to Dight's personal investments. The last two folders
contain investment newsletters, printed items, and correspondence
related to specific bonds issued by the Minneapolis Gas Light
Company, the Minneapolis Theatre Company, Northern States Power
Company (Minneapolis), Otter Tail Power Company (Fergus Falls,
Minn.), Swedish Hospital (Minneapolis), and Tri-State Telephone and
Telegraph Company (St. Paul). Non-Minnesota investments held by
Dight vary from Randolph County (N.C.) road and bridge bonds to
Seattle municipal light and power bonds, and from Republic of Chile
bonds to the bonds of the Sisters of Charity of Providence of
Montana (Columbus Hospital, Great Falls, Montana). |
| | | Income taxes, 1919-1936. 2 folders. |
| | | | This folder contains U.S. and some Minnesota income tax returns, and
correspondence related to U.S. Internal Revenue Service audits of
Dight's returns. |
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Location | Box |
P1628 | 2 | Miscellaneous items, undated, [circa 1883]-1893. |
| | | This folder includes physiology class notes (undated), an 1883 clipping
related to Dr. Mary A. G. Dight [Dight's ex-wife], a letter of
recommendation for Dight from the University of Michigan medical school
(1883), and a printed flyer advertising a plan for Dight's prepaid
medical service at Portsmouth, New Hampshire (ca.1893). |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | American University of Beirut, 1883-1936. |
| | | From 1883 to 1889 Dight was professor of anatomy and physiology at this
school. The folder includes Dight's license to practice medicine in the
Ottoman Empire (1883), a paper by Dight entitled "Sanitary Progress"
(1886), a request for contributions to the Near East College Association
(1935), a Christmas letter from the university president (1936), and a
list of former members of the faculty and staff (1936). |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | New Orleans University, undated, 1893-1896. |
| | | Dight was a professor and dean at the university's medical school during
this period. The folder includes a clipping from the university's
newspaper listing Dight as a professor of anatomy and chemistry in the
medical department (undated); a copy of a letter from Dight regarding
standards for medical education, and noting that the New Orleans
University medical school "admits men and women students of all races"
(July 28, 1895); and a 40-page typescript for a talk given by Dight to a
New Orleans women's club on the subject of heredity, sterilization of
criminals, and the need for sex education for young women (undated).
There are also two undated photographs of an unidentified woman, taken
by a New Orleans photographer. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, [circa 1896]. |
| | | This folder contains notes on the study of hygiene (1896), and a letter
of inquiry regarding teaching positions and listing Dight's educational
and medical experience (ca.1896). |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Location | Box |
P1628 | 3 | Hamline University: |
| | | Dight taught at the Hamline University medical school during this period.
These folders consist of lecture notes, two pamphlets Dight wrote
(undated and 1902), and copies of pages from the university catalogs for
1899-1900 (listing Dight as professor of physiology in the Hamline
University College of Medicine) and 1906-1907 (listing Dight as
professor of physiology and embryology at the "Minneapolis College of
Physicians and Surgeons/The Medical Department of Hamline
University"). |
| | | Miscellaneous, 1900-1908. |
| | | Lecture notes, 1900-1908. |
| | | Physiology lecture notes, 1900-1908. 2 folders. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | University of Minnesota, [circa 1908]-1911. |
| | | The University of Minnesota assimilated Hamline's medical school program
in 1907. Dight remained on the staff as an instructor in pharmacology
until 1913. There are only a few items in this folder, including three
that have information on his educational and medical experience. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Correspondence and miscellaneous items, [circa 1919]-1937. |
| | | This folder includes a letter relating to nursing education (1919);
correspondence with the Minnesota State Board of Examiners in the Basic
Sciences regarding the necessity of Dight registering under the state
basic science act (1927); and personal correspondence with fellow
doctors including Harry M. Guildford in Madison, Wisconsin
(ca.1918-1936). |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Ministers Casualty Union, [circa 1915]-1936. |
| | | From 1901 until his retirement in 1933 Dight was medical director of the
Ministers Casualty Union, a Minneapolis firm providing "life, accident
and sick benefit insurance at cost for clergymen only." This folder
includes Dight's reports to the company's board of directors (1922-1933,
incomplete), scattered copies of form letters issued by the company
(1915-1936), and four small notebooks kept by Dight when investigating
claims against the company (1920s). Dight used the backs of company form
letters when making notes on a variety of subjects, and Ministers
Casualty Union form letters are therefore scattered throughout the
collection. About 1936 the name of the company was changed to Ministers
Life and Casualty Union. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Minneapolis "Walkathon," 1932-1933. |
| | | The walkathon was a walking endurance contest that took place July
11-September 6, 1932 in the Minneapolis auditorium. Materials in this
folder include two flyers advertising the contest, with contest rules; a
typewritten copy of Dight's report, "The Walking Endurance Contest
Considered from a Physician's Point of View"; and letters related to
Dight's efforts to end the contest in Minneapolis and prevent such
contests in other cities. There is also a small booklet with Dight's
notes about the contest, about an eye operation performed on him in
January 1933, and about other subjects. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Miscellaneous printed items, undated, [circa 1916]-1927. |
| | | This folder contains a few printed leaflets and flyers related to such
pseudo-medical subjects as phrenology, character analysis, and personal
development. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Miscellaneous essays, undated. |
| | | Manuscript for "Medical Superstition and Graft, the Physician and
Socialism"; and miscellaneous medical essays. |
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Location | Box |
P1628 | 3 | Miscellaneous items, [circa 1906]-1919. 2 folders. |
| | | This folder includes a mimeographed flyer from the Public Ownership
Party, Minneapolis (Aug. 25, 1906) regarding help for Dight as party
"organizer"; and miscellaneous items related to socialism and
politics. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | "The Way Out: Socialism" (manuscript), [circa 1906]-[circa 1910]. |
| | | An essay with some chapters typewritten and some in the form of annotated
copies of printed articles written by Dight for socialist journals such
as Wayland's Monthly, Studies in Socialism, and One-Hoss
Philosophy Quarterly (all 1906). |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Location | Box |
P1628 | 4 | Minneapolis Alderman Files, 1914-1918: |
| | | Miscellaneous. |
| | | | A folder of miscellaneous material includes a campaign flyer (Oct.
31, 1914); mimeographed copies of correspondence between Theodore
Roosevelt and Ernest Lundeen (Oct.-Nov. 1917) regarding Lundeen's
patriotism and his views on the war in Europe; a report to the city
council on Dight's study of public health in Milwaukee, Detroit, and
Toronto, and on his attendance at the American Public Health
Association in Rochester, N.Y. (Sept. 1915); and items related to
socialism and to specific issues such as prohibition. |
| | | Municipal markets. |
| | | | Another folder on municipal markets includes information on T. B.
Walker's privately owned Central City Market and on the Mayor's
Commission on Municipal Markets (undated and ca.1915-1918). There
are also items related to food costs, including a study submitted to
the council's committee on commerce and markets by the Minneapolis
Civic and Commerce Association bureau of municipal research (Nov.
21, 1916). |
| | | Feeding garbage to hogs. |
| | | | A folder on feeding city garbage to hogs (undated and ca.1917-1918)
includes items related to Dight's promotion of the concept, as well
as a printed pamphlet on "Garbage Utilization" published by the U.S.
Food Administration (1918) and a letter from the North Hennepin
Stock Feeder's Association to the city council (ca.1918) regarding
the possibility of purchasing city garbage for use as livestock
feed. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Petitions to President Roosevelt, [circa 1933]. |
| | | The folder contains petitions presented to President Franklin D.
Roosevelt asking for a more equitable sharing of wealth, the abolition
of private profit, and public ownership of resources and industries. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Citizen's Artesian Water League (Minneapolis, Minn.), 1925-1936. |
| | | A few items related to efforts promoting the use of artesian wells,
rather than the Mississippi River, as a supply source for Minneapolis
city water. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Llano Co-operative Colony (Newllano, La.), [circa 1933]-1936. |
| | | Correspondence and small printed items related to the colony and to
Dight's investment in the Llano Co-operative Oil Corporation of
Newllano. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Technocracy, [circa 1933]-1934. |
| | | Typed essays by Dight, small printed leaflets, and other items related to
the north central division of the Continental Committee on Technocracy,
an organization advocating "a scientific reconstruction of our economic
systems"; and to the general subject of a new industrial order. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | "Call For a New Social Order" (manuscript), [circa 1933]-1936. |
| | | Typed pages of a manuscript (undated) for a book published in 1936, along
with a few items (mostly 1936) related to the printing of the book by
Argus Publishing Company, Minneapolis and its distribution to various
libraries by Dight. |
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Location | Box |
P1628 | 4 | Minnesota Eugenics Society Records, [circa 1923]-1936. 3 folders. |
| | | Minutes, correspondence, form letters, financial materials, and other
items related to the society (2 folders); and typed field notes and a
few letters of A. F. Lockhart (Sept. 7-Dec. 3, 1926, one folder).
Lockhart visited potential donors and members (especially physicians)
and wrote letters soliciting memberships, money, and other support. The
Lockhart folder also contains two letters (Nov. 15 and 30) regarding his
work. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Location | Box |
P1628 | 5 | Correspondence and related papers, undated, 1920-1928. 11 folders. |
| | | This group consists principally of Dight's correspondence as president of
the Minnesota Eugenics Society, along with other material related to the
subject of eugenics. It includes copies of various versions of
sterilization bills presented to the Minnesota legislature;
correspondence with legislators, supporters, members of the state
advisory council of the Minnesota Eugenics Society, the State Board of
Health, and the State Board of Control; requests for donations;
scattered copies of articles and pamphlets published by Dight; and
materials related to items written by him on the subjects of eugenics
and sterilization, including pamphlets, booklets, and letters to the
editors of local newspapers. The Phelps article, cited above, provides a
good summary of the issues and activities prominent in this part of the
collection. |
| | | Noteworthy items include three small books containing Dight's notes on
his legislative efforts (undated and ca.1920s-1931); his booklet
entitled "Human Thoroughbreds - Why Not," and correspondence regarding
its publication (1922); correspondence related to proposed "Fitter
Family" competitions at the Minnesota State Fair (1923-1924, 1926);
correspondence with Lotus D. Coffman, president of the University of
Minnesota, regarding the proposed office of "State Eugenist [sic]" (Oct.
4, 5, 19, 1926) and Dight's bequest for the formation of a eugenics
program at the University (Feb. 27, 1927); correspondence and a
photograph related to the presentation of a plaque to Charles Lindbergh
"in recognition of his superior hereditary endowment" (Aug.-Sept. 1927);
a copy of a letter from A. A. Wood to John Burke regarding Wood's will
(Jan. 5, 1928; possibly the source of some of the money for the Dight
Institute?); a request from Roy L. Garis (Vanderbilt University) for
information on Mexican labor (Aug. 24, 1929); three printed bulletins of
the American Equity Association (Washington, D.C.) opposing
sterilization and the unjust imprisonment of insane persons (1929); a
copy of the printed booklet, "Increase of the Unfit a Social Menace;
Facts Which Call for Enactment of an Adequate Eugenics Law for Human
Betterment; Opposition to It by the Minnesota State Board of Control"
(1930), and correspondence related to the ensuing controversy
(1930-1931); a letter and two printed leaflets from Edward C. Baumann of
the Christian Brotherhood of America, Bagley, Minnesota (March 20,
1930); correspondence with governor-elect Floyd B. Olson regarding the
possibilities for eugenics and sterilization legislation in the coming
session (Dec. 13, 1930); correspondence regarding Dight's radio talks on
radio station WRHM (1933-1934); correspondence with the Minnesota
Historical Society regarding Dight's history of the eugenics movement
and the possibility of Dight's leaving money to the historical society
for the promotion of eugenics (1935). |
| | | Correspondents in the papers include the following members of the
advisory council of the Minnesota Eugenics Society:
Eitel, George G., chief surgeon of Eitel General Hospital,
Minneapolis, and vice president of the Minnesota Eugenics
Society (1925-1926);
Canfield, E. H., attorney, Luverne, Minn. (1926, Sept. 10,
1929);
Guilford, Paul W., physician, Minneapolis (1925-1930);
Jenks, A. E., professor of anthropology, University of
Minnesota (1926);
Kuhlmann, Fred, director of the bureau of research, State
Board of Control (1925-1928, 1936);
Lyon, E. P., dean, University of Minnesota medical school
(1926, 1928-1931);
Nachtrieb, Henry F., professor of animal biology, University
of Minnesota, (1922-1923, 1926, 1936);
Smith, Roy L., minister, Simpson Methodist Episcopal Church,
Minneapolis (1926, 1928).
|
| | | Other authors include:
Chase, Ray P., state auditor (1929-1930);
Chelsey, A. J., executive officer of the State Board of Health
(1926, 1928);
La Du, Blanche, chairman, State Board of Control (1928-1931,
1934);
Mayo, William J., Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn. (March 8,
April 3, Oct. 1, 1926);
Osgood, Phillip E., minister, St. Mark's Church, Minneapolis
(1926, 1929-1930);
Paige, Mabeth Hurd, chairman, Minnesota House Committee on
Public Welfare (1927, 1934);
Swendsen, Carl J., member, State Board of Control
(1931).
|
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Location | Box |
P1628 | 6 | Correspondence and miscellaneous papers, 1929-1937. 7 folders. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | American Eugenics Society (New Haven, Conn.), [circa 1926]-1936. 2 folders. |
| | | Correspondence (bulk 1926-1931) and printed items related to the work of
the society nationally, and to Dight's work in Minnesota, including
correspondence between Dight and Leon F. Whitney, society field
secretary. The printed items include a form letter and membership
list. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Birth control, 1931-1936. |
| | | Mostly semi-print items related to the National Committee on Federal
Legislation for Birth Control, and to the Minnesota Birth Control
League, Inc. The National Committee materials include correspondence,
semi-print newsletters (April and June 1932), and form letters signed by
Margaret Sanger, president. The Minnesota League items include a printed
membership leaflet (1931), an annual report (May 1933), minutes of
meetings (Jan., Sept., Oct. 1934; Jan. 1935), and a newsletter (Sept.
1935), as well as correspondence with Genevieve Steefel, chairman of the
publicity committee. |
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Location | Box |
P1628 | 7 | Eugenics Record Office/Eugenics Research Association (Cold Spring
Harbor, Long Island, N.Y.), [circa 1922]-1935. |
| | | Harry H. Laughlin was assistant director of the Eugenics Record Office
and secretary of the Eugenics Research Association. Letterheads of the
Eugenics Record Office state that it was a subdivision of the department
of genetics of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, while the
Eugenics Research Association seems to have had some sort of affiliation
with the American Museum of Natural History in New York. This folder
contains printed items related to the two organizations, as well as
Dight's correspondence with Laughlin regarding eugenics, sterilization,
and eugenics conferences. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Human Betterment Foundation (Pasadena, Calif.), [circa 1927]-1936. |
| | | Printed items published by the foundation on the subject of eugenic
sterilization, and correspondence of Dight with E. S. Gosney (foundation
president) and Paul Popenoe (secretary). |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | "Essentials of Heredity and Eugenics" (manuscript) and other
essays, undated. |
| | | Typed drafts of essays on the subject of eugenics. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Editorials, [circa 1921]-1935. 3 folders. |
| | | Typed letters to the editors of the Minneapolis
Journal, Minneapolis Star, and
Minneapolis Tribune on sterilization
and eugenics in general. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Radio talks, 1928, 1933. 2 folders. |
| | | Typed copies of talks on heredity and eugenics presented over various
radio stations. |
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Location | Box |
P1628 | 7 | Newspaper clippings: Eugenics and miscellaneous, [circa 1901]-1937. 3 folders. |
| | | Most of the clippings relate to eugenics. |
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Location | Box |
P1628 | 8 | Newspaper clippings: Eugenics and miscellaneous, [192-]-1937. 2 folders. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Newspaper clippings: Llano Colonist, 1932-1934. |
| | | A few partial copies of the newspaper of the Llano Co-operative Colony,
Newllano, Louisiana. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Scrapbook: Aldermanic activities, 1914-1918. 2 folders. |
| | | Clippings principally related to Dight's service as Minneapolis 12th ward
alderman and his promotion of municipal ownership of profit-making
industries, especially municipal markets (1916) and the feeding of
municipal garbage to hogs (1917-1918), but also including items related
to a municipal electrical plant, ice plant, and ice harvesting
operations. Other clippings include information on Dight's campaign for
alderman (1914), his treehouse, the ward council/citizen's advisory
committee he created to advise him, the Minneapolis Union [railroad]
Station, saloons, the pasteurization of milk sold in the city, and the
utilization of electric power from the Ford dam. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Scrapbook: Eugenics and miscellaneous, [circa 1912]-[circa 193-]. |
| | | This scrapbook deals mostly with eugenics, including copies of Dight's
letters to the editors of various newspapers. There also are clippings
related to the Minneapolis Walkathon (1932) and to technocracy (1935).
Photocopies of Dight's 1933 correspondence with Adolf Hitler are
included. |
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Location | Folder |
Reserve 82 | 1 | Correspondence with Adolf Hitler and related items, 1933. 4 items: |
| | |
Access Restricted.
|
| | | Includes closed originals from the eugenics scrapbook: a letter written
by Dight to Adolf Hitler on the letterhead of the Minnesota Eugenics
Society (August 1, 1933), in which Dight praises Hitler's plan "to stamp
out mental inferiority among the German people;" a printed postcard
(August 23, 1933) from Hitler, acknowledging the courtesy; a printed
card inviting Dight to a eugenics lecture in Munich later that year; and
the front pane of the postal cover that presumably enclosed the latter
two items. |
| | |
Digital version
|
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This collection is indexed under the following headings in the catalog of the
Minnesota Historical Society. Researchers desiring materials about related topics,
persons or places should search the catalog using these headings.
- Topics:
- Birth control -- Minnesota.
- Eugenics -- Minnesota.
- Investments.
- Municipal bonds.
- Medical education.
- Socialism -- Minnesota.
- Sterilization, Eugenic -- Minnesota.
- Technocracy.
- Persons:
- Dight, George Washington,
1850?-1930.
- Dight family.
- Eitel, George G., -1928.
- Francis, Frances Dight, 1883-
- Gilkey, Georgia May Dight, 1877-
- Hitler, Adolf, 1889-1945.
- Hover, Galen M., 1896-
- Hover, Sarah Isabella Dight, 1888-
- Lockhart, A. F.
- Whipple, Lizzie Emma Dight, 1876-
- Organizations:
- American Eugenics Society.
- American University of Beirut.
- Citizen's Artesian Water League
(Minneapolis, Minn.).
- Human Betterment Society (Pasadena,
Calif.).
- Llano colony (Secular Community).
- Minneapolis (Minn.). City
council.
- Minneapolis College of Physicians and
Surgeons.
- Minnesota. State Board of
Control.
- Minnesota. State Board of
Health.
- Minnesota Eugenics Society.
- University of Minnesota. Dight
Institute for Human Genetics.
- University of Minnesota. Department of
Medicine (1888-1913).
- Places:
- Beirut (Lebanon).
- Minnesota -- Politics and government --
1858-1950.
- New Llano (La.).
- Minneapolis (Minn.) -- Politics and government --
1898-1918.
- Minneapolis (Minn.) -- Officials and
employees.
- Occupations:
- Physicians.
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