Samuel George Morton
Samuel George Morton | |
---|---|
Born | [1] | January 26, 1799
Died | May 15, 1851 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. | (aged 52)
Resting place | Laurel Hill Cemetery, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Education | University of Pennsylvania University of Edinburgh |
Occupation(s) | Physician, natural scientist, writer |
Children | 8 including James St. Clair Morton |
Signature | |
Samuel George Morton (January 26, 1799 – May 15, 1851) was an American physician, natural scientist, and writer. As one of the early figures of scientific racism, he argued against monogenism, the single creation story of the Bible, instead supporting polygenism, a theory of multiple racial creations.
He was a prolific writer of books on various subjects from 1823 to 1851. He wrote Geological Observations in 1828, and both Synopsis of the Organic Remains of the Cretaceous Group of the United States and Illustrations of Pulmonary Consumption in 1834. His first medical essay, on the use of cornine in intermittent fever was published in the Philadelphia Journal of the Medical and Physical Sciences in 1825.[2] His bibliography includes Hybridity in Animals and Plants (1847), Additional Observation on Hybridity (1851), and An Illustrated System of Human Anatomy (1849).
Early life and career
[edit]Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Morton was raised as a Quaker and educated at Westtown School and the University of Pennsylvania, from where he graduated in 1820.[3] He then earned an advanced degree from the University of Edinburgh, in Scotland, and began to practice medicine in Philadelphia in 1824. He was one of the founders of the Pennsylvania Medical College in Philadelphia[4] and served as its professor of anatomy from 1839 until his resignation in 1843.[5] He was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1828[6] and the American Antiquarian Society in 1844.[7] He is buried at Laurel Hill Cemetery, Philadelphia.[8]
"American School" ethnology
[edit]Samuel George Morton is often thought of as the originator of "American School" ethnology, a school of thought in antebellum American science that claimed the difference between humans was one of species rather than variety and is seen by some as the origin of scientific racism.[9] Morton claimed the Bible supported polygenism, and working in a biblical framework, his theory stated that each race had been created separately and each was given specific, irrevocable characteristics.[10]
After inspecting three mummies from ancient Egyptian catacombs, Morton concluded that Caucasians and Negroes were already distinct three thousand years ago. Since the Bible indicated that Noah's Ark had washed up on Mount Ararat, Morton claimed that Noah's sons could not possibly account for every race on earth. According to Morton's theory of polygenesis, races have been separate since the start.[10]
Morton claimed that he could define the intellectual ability of a race by the skull capacity. A large volume meant a large brain and high intellectual capacity, and a small skull indicated a small brain and decreased intellectual capacity. He was reputed to hold the largest collection of skulls, on which he based his research. He claimed that each race had a separate origin, and that a descending order of intelligence could be discerned that placed Caucasians at the pinnacle and Negroes at the lowest point, with various other race groups in between.[11] His research of ancient Egyptians was meant to show that this racial hierarchy had always existed and should remain in place. When confronted with evidence that many ancient Egyptians had dark skin like other Africans, Morton used skull measurements to corroborate the words of Georges Curvier: "whatever may have been the hue of their skin, they belonged to the same race with ourselves."[12] Aside from this occasionally dark-skinned Caucasian ruling class, Morton's skull measurements led him to admit "Negroes were numerous in Egypt but their social position in ancient times was the same that it now is, that of servants and slaves."[13] Morton's scholarship greatly contributed to Egyptology and several other disciplines adopting the Hamitic Hypothesis, the idea that civilization is antithetical to Negroes and a legacy of the Caucasian race such that any evidence of civilization in Africa must have derived from Caucasian presence or influence.[14] Morton's skull collection was held at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia until 1966, when it was transferred to the Penn Museum, where it is presently curated.[15]
Morton's theories were very popular in his day, and he was a highly respected physician and scientist. The anthropologist Aleš Hrdlička called Morton "the father of American physical anthropology".[16] Crispin Bates has noted that Morton's "systematic justification" for the separation of races, along with the work of Louis Agassiz, was also used by those who favoured slavery in the United States, with the Charleston Medical Journal noting at his death that "We of the South should consider him as our benefactor for aiding most materially in giving to the negro his true position as an inferior race."[11][17]
Craniology
[edit]Morton claimed in his Crania Americana that the Caucasians had the biggest brains, averaging 87 cubic inches (1,426 cc), Indians were in the middle with an average of 80 cubic inches (1,344 cc) and Negroes had the smallest brains with an average of 78 cubic inches (1,278 cc).[10] Morton believed that the skulls of each race were so different that a wise creator from the beginning had created each race and positioned them in separate homelands to dwell in.[18]
Morton believed that cranial capacity determined intellectual ability, and he used his craniometric evidence in conjunction with his analysis of anthropological literature then available to argue in favor of a racial hierarchy which put Caucasians on the top rung and Africans on the bottom. His skull measurements (by volume) then came to serve as "evidence" for racial stereotypes.[19] He described the Caucasian as "distinguished by the facility with which it attains the highest intellectual endowments"; Native Americans were described as "averse to cultivation, and slow in acquiring knowledge; restless, revengeful, and fond of war, and wholly destitute of maritime adventure" and the Africans he described as "joyous, flexible, and indolent; while the many nations which compose this race present a singular diversity of intellectual character, of which the far extreme is the lowest grade of humanity".[20]
Morton's followers, particularly Josiah C. Nott and George Gliddon in their monumental tribute to Morton's work, Types of Mankind (1854), carried Morton's ideas further and backed up his findings which supported the notion of polygenism – the premise that the different races were separately created by God. The publication of Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species in 1859 changed the nature of the scholarly debate.[11]
Morton amassed over 1,000 human skulls.[21] Some of the skulls that Morton collected and measured include those of enslaved people.[22][23] Morton amassed his collection of human skulls when he worked at the Academy of Natural Sciences. The collection was transferred to the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology in 1966. In 2021, the University of Pennsylvania Museum apologized for the unethical collection and promised to repatriate the remains of the people whose skulls were collected by Morton.[21] The museum has promised to provide burials for 13 skulls of Black Philadelphians.[24] In January 2024, 19 skulls from the Morton collection were interred in two mausolea in Eden Cemetery in Collingdale, Pennsylvania.[25]
Allegations of bias in data collection and interpretation
[edit]In a 1978 paper[26] and later in The Mismeasure of Man (1981), Stephen Jay Gould asserted that Morton had, perhaps because of an unconscious bias, selectively reported data, manipulated sample compositions, made analytical errors, and mismeasured skulls in order to support his prejudicial views on intelligence differences between different populations. Gould's book became widely read and Morton came to be considered one of the most prominent cases of the effects of unconscious bias in data collection, and as one of the main figures in the early history of scientific racism.
Subsequently, two separate studies of Morton's data and methods, one conducted in 1988 and the other in 2011, argued that Gould had overstated or misrepresented the case, and that Morton's measurements were essentially correct.[27] In the latter study, entitled "The Mismeasure of Science: Stephen Jay Gould versus Samuel George Morton on Skulls and Bias"[28] and authored by six anthropologists, it was concluded that the bias came from Gould, who failed to examine and remeasure the crania in order to determine Morton's level of accuracy.[29] However, this study was reviewed in an editorial in Nature, which recommended a degree of caution, stating "the critique leaves the majority of Gould's work unscathed," and noted that "because they couldn't measure all the skulls, they do not know whether the average cranial capacities that Morton reported represent his sample accurately."[30] The journal stated that Gould's opposition to racism may have biased his interpretation of Morton's data, but also noted that "Lewis and his colleagues have their own motivations. Several in the group have an association with the University of Pennsylvania, to whom Morton donated his collection of skulls, and have an interest in seeing the valuable but understudied skull collection freed from the stigma of bias and did not accept Gould's theory "that the scientific method is inevitably tainted by bias."[30]
A 2014 review of the paper by University of Pennsylvania philosophy professor Michael Weisberg, tended to support Gould's original accusations, concluding that "there is prima facie evidence of a racial bias in Morton's measurements". Weisberg concludes that although Gould did commit mistakes in his own treatment, Morton's work "remains a cautionary example of racial bias in the science of human differences".[31]
Research based on the discovery of some of Morton's original data by University of Pennsylvania anthropology doctoral student Paul Wolff Mitchell in 2018 argues that Morton was nevertheless guilty of bias, though not in data collection. Mitchell argues that Morton's interpretation of his data was arbitrary and tendentious; he investigated averages and ignored variations in skull size so large that there was significant overlap.[32] A contemporary of Morton, Friedrich Tiedemann, had collected almost identical skull data and drawn conclusions opposite to Morton's on the basis of this overlap, arguing strongly against any conception of a racial hierarchy.[33][22]
Evolving views on race of the Egyptians
[edit]Samuel George Morton believed that the Nile Valley in both Egypt and Sudan was originally populated by a branch of the Caucasian race.[34] Furthermore, he considered the Copts as being a mixed community, derived from the Caucasian and Negro, and a large proportion of them can be regarded as mullatos. Morton wrote that Egyptian Fellahs are the lineal and least mixed descendants of the ancient Egyptians, he originally believed the modern Nubians are a mixed race of Arabs and Negroes, and are not descendants of the monumental Ethiopians.[34][35]
Samuel Morton later addressed several letters to George Gliddon, and stated that he modified many of his old views on ancient Egypt, believing them to be similar to Barabra (northern Nubian) populations, but not Negroes
On 26 February 1846 he wrote:
"I am more than ever confirmed in my old sentiment, that Northern Africa was peopled by an indigenous and aboriginal people, who were dispossessed by Asiatic tribes. These aborigines could not have been Negroes, because the latter were never adapted to the climate, and are nowhere now, nor ever have been, inhabitants of these latitudes. Were they Berabra? - or some better race, more nearly allied to the Arabian race?"
In another letter to Gliddon, December 14, 1849:
"By the hands of the person to whom you confided them, I last night received Lepsius's "Chronologie," and the tin case of fac-simile drawings. These, when studied in connection with the Egyptian heads [skulls], and especially with the small series sent me [from Memphis] by your brother William [seventeen in number, and very ancient,], compel me to recant so much of my published opinions as respects the origin of the Egyptians. They never came from Asia, but are the indigenous or aboriginal inhabitants of the valley of the Nile. I have taken this position in my letter to Mr. J.R. Bartlett (New York Ethnological Soc. Journal, I.): every day has verified it, and your drawings settle it forever in my mind. It has cost me a mental struggle to acknowledge this conviction, but I can withhold it no longer."
In another letter to Gliddon, January 30, 1850:
"You allude to my altered views in Ethnology; but it all consists in regarding the Egyptian race as the indigenous people of the valley of the Nile. Not Asiatics in any sense of the word, but autochthones of the country, and the authors of their own civilization. This view, which you will recollect is that of Champollion, Heeren, and others [excepting only that they do not apply the word indigenous to the Egyptians], in nowise conflicts with their Caucasian position; for the Caucasian group had many primordial centres, of which the Egyptians represent one."[36]
In a letter to Mr. Bartlett on Dec. 1, 1846, he wrote:
"My later investigations have confirmed me in the opinion, that the valley of the Nile was inhabited by an indigenous race, before the invasion of the Hamitic and other Asiatic nations; and that this primeval people, who occupied the whole of Northern Africa, bore much the same relation to the Berber or Berabra tribes of Nubia, that the Saracens of the middle ages bore to their wandering and untutored, yet cognate brethren, the Bedouins of the desert."[37][38]
Works
[edit]- “Observations on Cornine, (an Alkaline Principle, recently obtained from the bark of Cornus Florida, By George W. Carpenter of Philadelphia).” The Philadelphia Journal of the Medical and Physical Sciences 11 [n. s. 2]:195–198, 1825.
- “Description of the Fossil Shells characterizing the Atlantic Secondary Formation of New-Jersey and Delaware; including four new species.” Read on December 11, 1827 and January 1, 1828. Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 6 (1): 72–73, 1829.
- “Geological Observations on the Secondary, Tertiary, and Alluvial Formations of the Atlantic Coast of the United States of America arranged from the notes of Lardiner Vanuxem,” Read on January 8, 1828. Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 6 (1): 59–71, 1829.
- “On the analogy which exists between the Marl of New Jersey, Etc. and the Chalk formation of Europe,” Letter from S. G. Morton, MD to the Editor, dated February 14, 1832. American Journal of Science and Arts 22 (1): 90–91, 1832.
- Illustrations of Pulmonary Consumption: Its Anatomical Characters, Causes, Symptoms and Treatment. Philadelphia: Key & Biddle, 1834.
- Crania Americana; or, A Comparative View of the Skulls of Various Aboriginal Nations of North and South America: To which is Prefixed An Essay on the Varieties of the Human Species. Philadelphia: J. Dobson, 1839.
- Catalogue of the Skulls of Man and the Inferior Animals in the Collection of Samuel George Morton, Philadelphia: Turner and Fisher, 1840.
- A Memoir of William Maclure, Esq. Philadelphia: T. K. and P. G. Collins, 1841.
- Editor for Benjamin Ellis. The Medical Formulary: Being a Collection of Prescriptions Derived from the Writings and Practice of Many of the Most Eminent Physicians in America and Europe. Philadelphia: Lea and Blanchard, 1842.
- Editor for John Makintosh. Principles of Pathology and Practice of Medicine, 4th American Ed. Philadelphia, Lindsay and Blakiston, 1844.
- An Inquiry into the Distinctive Characteristics of the Aboriginal Race of America. Philadelphia: John Penington, 1844.
- Catalogue of the Skulls of Man and the Inferior Animals in the Collection of Samuel George Morton, 2nd Ed. Philadelphia: F. Turner, 1843.
- Crania Aegyptiaca; or Observations on Egyptian Ethnography Derived from Anatomy, History and the Monuments. Philadelphia: John Pennington, 1844.
- “On a supposed new species of Hippopotamus,” Meeting of February 27, 1844. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 2 (2): 14–17, 1844.
- Hybridity in Animals and Plants, Considered in Reference to the Question of the Unity of the Human Species. New Haven: B.L. Hamlen, 1847.
- An Illustrated System of Human Anatomy. Philadelphia: Grigg, Elliot and Co., 1849.
- Catalogue of the Skulls of Man and the Inferior Animals in the Collection of Samuel George Morton, 3rd Ed. Philadelphia: Merrihew and Thompson, 1849.
- “On the Size of the Brain in the Various Races and Families of Man.” In Types of Mankind, 8th Ed. Josiah Nott and George Gliddon, eds. Pp. 298–327. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippencott - London: Trübner and Co., 1850.
- “Physical Type of the American Indians.” In Historical and Statistical Information Respecting the History, Condition, and Prospects of the Indian Tribes of the United States. Vol. II, Pp. 315–335. Henry Schoolcraft. Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo, 1851.
- “Exerpta from Morton’s Inedited Manuscripts.” In Types of Mankind. Josiah Knot and George Gliddon, eds., pp. 298–327. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippencott - London: Trübner and Co., 1855.
See also
[edit]- Anthropometry
- Craniometry
- Drapetomania
- Hamitic hypothesis
- John Hanning Speke
- Paul Broca
- Paul Topinard
- Race (historical definitions)
- Race and intelligence
Notes
[edit]- ^ Wood, George Bacon (1853). . Philadelphia: College of Physicians of Philadelphia.
- ^ Wood, George Bacon (1859). "A memoir of the Dr. Samuel George Morton". Introductory lectures and addresses on medical subjects : delivered chiefly before the medical classes of the University of Pennsylvania / by George B. Wood. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott. p. 443. OCLC 4402287.
His first medical essay was on the user of cornine in intermittent fever, and was published in the Philadelphia Journal of the Medical and Physical Sciences (xi. 195, A.D. 1825).
- ^ Life of Morton at penn.museum
- ^ "Extinct Philadelphia Medical Schools". Philadelphia Medical History and the University of Pennsylvania. University of Pennsylvania, University Archives and Records Center. Retrieved April 27, 2015.
- ^ Wood, George Bacon (1853). . Philadelphia: T. K. and P. G. Collins – via Wikisource.
- ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2021-04-07.
- ^ American Antiquarian Society Members Directory
- ^ Fabian, Ann (2020). The Skull Collectors: Race, Science, and America's Unburied Dead. University of Chicago Press. pp. 12–13. ISBN 9780226760575.
- ^ Fredrickson, George M. (1972). The Black Image in the White Mind: The Debate on African-American Character and Destiny, 1817–1914. New York: Harper Torchbooks. p. 74.
- ^ a b c David Hurst Thomas, Skull Wars Kennewick Man, Archaeology, And The Battle For Native American Identity, 2001, pp. 38 – 41
- ^ a b c Bates, Crispin (1995). "Race, Caste and Tribe in Central India: the early origins of Indian anthropometry". In Robb, Peter (ed.). The Concept of Race in South Asia. Delhi: Oxford University Press. p. 225. ISBN 978-0-19-563767-0. Retrieved 2011-11-30.
- ^ Morton, Samuel George (1839). Crania Americana: Or a Comparative View of the Skulls of Various Aboriginal Nations of North and South America; to Which Is Prefixed an Essay on the Varieties of the Human Species. Philadelphia: J. Dobson. p. 31.
- ^ Morton, Samuel George (1844). Crania Aegyptiaca, Or Obsercations on Egyptian Ethnography, Derived from Anatomy, History and the Monuments. Philadelphia: J. Pennington. p. 66.
- ^ Reed, Justin Michael (2021-09-02). "Ancient Egyptians in Black and White: 'Exodus: Gods and Kings' and the Hamitic Hypothesis". Religions. 12 (9): 712. doi:10.3390/rel12090712. ISSN 2077-1444.
- ^ "History of Collection | Morton Crania Collection - Penn Museum".
- ^ Clark Spencer Larsen, A Companion to Biological Anthropology, 2010, p. 14
- ^ The quote from the Charleston Medical Journal also cited by: Stephen Jay Gould (17 June 2006). The Mismeasure of Man. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0393314250. Retrieved 2020-06-11. and by: Emily S. Renschler and Janet Monge. "The Samuel George Morton Cranial Collection. Historical Significance and New Research". Retrieved 2020-06-11.
- ^ John P. Jackson, Nadine M. Weidman, Race, racism, and science: social impact and interaction, 2005, p. 45
- ^ Backhouse, Constance (2001). "The Historical Construction of Racial Identity and Implications for Reconciliation" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on January 31, 2017. Retrieved April 24, 2015.
- ^ Menand, L. (2001). Morton, Agassiz, and the origins of scientific racism in the United States. Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, 110-113. Even in his time, some physicians opposed the idea that there were differences in average cranial size across races. The German physician Friedrich Tiedemann, for instance, argued vigorously that previous scholars who found differences in cranial size across races were wrong in their measurements (or in some cases had too small a sample to draw inferences). Tiedemann advanced this in 1838 in his paper On the Brain of the Negro Compared with that of the European and the Ourang-Outang.
- ^ a b Salisbury, Stephan (12 April 2021). "Penn Museum apologizes for its 'unethical' collection of human skulls and says it will repatriate remains of Black Philadelphians and others". www.inquirer.com. Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 13 April 2021.
- ^ a b Mitchell, P.W. and Michael, J.S. (2019). "Bias, Brains, and Skulls Tracing the Legacy of Scientific Racism in the Nineteenth-Century Works of Samuel George Morton and Friedrich Tiedemann" In Jackson, Christina, and Thomas, Jamie (eds.). Embodied Difference: Divergent Bodies in Public Discourse. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littefield. p. 77-98. ISBN 978-1-4985-6386-4. Retrieved 2019-07-26.
- ^ "Black Philadelphians in the Samuel George Morton Cranial Collection | Penn Program on Race, Science, & Society". prss.sas.upenn.edu. Retrieved 2022-08-09.
- ^ Tumin, Remy (2022-08-09). "Penn Museum to Bury Skulls of Enslaved People". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-08-09.
- ^ Cartagena, Rosa (2 February 2024). "Penn Museum committed to repatriating skulls of Black Philadelphians used for racist science, Here's why experts say the burials were rushed and unethical". www.inquirer.com. The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 3 February 2024.
- ^ Gould, S. J. (1978). "Morton's Ranking of Races by Cranial Capacity." Archived 2011-06-18 at the Wayback Machine Science 200 (May 5): 503–509.
- ^ Wade, Nicholas (2011-06-13). "Scientists Measure the Accuracy of a Racism Claim". The New York Times. pp. D4. ISSN 0362-4331. ProQuest 1634240071. Retrieved 2023-01-25.
- ^ Lewis, J., D. DeGusta, M. Meyer, J. Monge, A. Mann, and R. Holloway (2011). "The Mismeasure of Science." Public Library of Science Biology 9 (6): e1001071.
- ^ Samuel Morton collection of skulls at center of controversy. June 16, 2011. http://www.physorg.com/news/2011-06-samuel-morton-skulls-center-controversy.html
- ^ a b Editorial (2011). "Mismeasure for mismeasure." Nature 474 (23 June): 419.
- ^ Weisberg, M. (2014), Remeasuring man. Evolution & Development, 16: 166–178. doi: 10.1111/ede.12077
- ^ Mitchell, P.W. (2018). "The fault in his seeds: Lost notes to the case of bias in Samuel George Morton's cranial race science." Public Library of Science Biology 16 (10): e2007008.
- ^ Ars Technica "There’s new evidence confirming bias of the “father of scientific racism”
- ^ a b Morton, Samuel George (1844). Crania Aegyptiaca: Or, Observations on Egyptian Ethnography, Derived from Anatomy, History, and the Monuments. J. Pennington. pp. 65–66. ISBN 978-0-608-40997-9.
- ^ Gliddon, George Robins (1847). Ancient Egypt: Her Monuments, Hieroglyphics, History and Archæology, and Other Subjects Connected with Hieroglyphical Literature. W. Taylor. p. 46.
- ^ Nott, Josiah Clark (1854). Types of Mankind Or Ethnological Researches, Based Upon the Ancient Monuments, Paintings, Sculptures, and Crania of Races, and Upon Their Natural, Geographical, Phililogical, and Biblical History by J.C. Nott and Geo. R. Gliddon. Trübner. pp. 231–232.
- ^ Nott, Josiah Clark (1854). Ibid. Trübner. pp. xlii.
- ^ The Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal: Exhibiting a View of the Progressive Discoveries and Improvements in the Sciences and the Arts. A. and C. Black. 1849. p. 146.
- ^ Nott, Josiah Clark (1854). Ibid. Lippincott, Grambo & Company. p. 226. ISBN 9780608408774.
External links
[edit]- 1799 births
- 1851 deaths
- 19th-century American physicians
- Alumni of the University of Edinburgh
- American birth control activists
- American proslavery activists
- American science writers
- Burials at Laurel Hill Cemetery (Philadelphia)
- Members of the American Antiquarian Society
- Physicians from Philadelphia
- Proponents of scientific racism
- Quakers from Pennsylvania
- People involved in race and intelligence controversies
- Reproductive rights in the United States
- University of Pennsylvania alumni
- University of Pennsylvania faculty
- Westtown School alumni
- Writers from Philadelphia