EUGENICS RECORDS OFFICE
This file gives a brief selection of some of the materials in the Cold
Spring Harbor Laboratory Archives which pertain to the Eugenics Records Office which was
housed at Cold Spring Harbor at the Biological Laboratory from 1910-1921. This list is
updated as information is researched/collected.
1910-1921 EUGENICS RECORDS OFFICE Director: 1910-1921 Dr. Charles B. Davenport
This is a brief overview of the ERO written by Dr. Jan Witkowski, Director of the
Banbury Center at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.
"A new development came in 1907 when Davenport became interested in human
genetics. His first studies dealt with physical traits like hair, eye and skin color that
were clearly related to similar studies going on in mice and other experimental animals.
His interests changed rather quickly to the genetics of human traits that were not so
easily quantifiable, for example, intelligence and attributes such as musical skill. This
was in part are response to the similar studies going on elsewhere, notably in England,
and in part because of the potential social relevance of such studies in a time where
there was increasing concern about immigration from Europe into the United States.
Davenport persuaded a local resident to provide funds for the creation of the Eugenics
Records Office (ERO) that would put the study of human traits on a firm, quantitative
basis. He developed questionnaires that were taken from door-to-door by trained workers
who recorded the characteristics of individuals in the families interviewed. These were
stored on index cards that by 1924 numbered 750,000. These were analyzed according to the
principles of Mendelian genetics but with little or no regard for the quality of the data
or whether Mendelian genetic analysis was appropriate for such traits. Nevertheless,
Davenport¹s work as a eugenicist was very influential, and as a consequence, the ERO
became the center for scientific studies of eugenics. By the early 1920¹s, the influence
of the ERO reached beyond academia when Davenport¹s colleague, Harry Laughlin, began
testifying before Congress on matters relating to immigration and sterilization.By the
late 1920¹s, however, eugenics was beginning to fade under the attack of bona fide
geneticists such as T. H. Morgan and H. J. Muller."
The collection is an invaluable resource for studies of eugenics in the United States
in the early part of this century. As might be expected, the collection of eugenics texts
is especially comprehensive, including books from Europe. It includes popular treatments
of eugenics; monographs; and reports of international congresses. There is a set of the
Eugenics Records Office Bulletins together with other publications of the ERO.
View current holdings of eugenics materials in the CSHL
Archives.