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Reframing Scopes: Journalists, Scientists, and Lost Photographs from the Trial of the Century

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Description

The plight of John T. Scopes dominated headlines for weeks, but in the back of the scenes of the famous “Monkey Trial” were other dramas hidden from public view. Now a serendipitous discovery has opened a new window on the “Trial of the Century,” enabling modern readers to comprehend more completely the tensions that gripped a Tennessee community—and the nation—in 1925.

Historian Marcel LaFollette used to be combing through unprocessed records at the Smithsonian when she found a cache of more than sixty never-before-published photographs taken at the Scopes trial. Her research on these photos sheds new light on the proceedings, in addition to on the journalists and scientists who gathered for this epic confrontation between science and tradition.

Deftly integrating text and illustrations, LaFollette takes readers in the back of the scenes to witness the trial from the perspective of science writers Watson Davis and Frank Thone, who had come to cover the trial but became informal liaisons between defense attorneys and the scientific community. The two journalist-photographers observed visitors and events and even befriended John Scopes in the years following the trial. Their impressions offer new views of Clarence Darrow and William Jennings Bryan and reveal the role of fascinating characters like George Washington Rappleyea, the cocky promoter who saw the trial with the intention to bring publicity, tourists, and new business to Dayton.

These photos—trial witnesses and visiting celebrities, an out of doors baptism service, defiant ministers assembled in front of a Dayton church—help ground the Scopes trial in southern religion and culture and relate it to a time and place on the cusp of change. The notes of Davis and Thone preserve keen observations of personalities and events, even as letters between Scopes and the two reporters in the years after the trial help illuminate the character of an unusual young man thrust into atypical circumstances.

LaFollette weaves an engaging story of friendship, newly minted coalitions between scientists and journalists, and acts of goodwill in the middle of turmoil. The Scopes trial remains the consummate metaphor for cultural combat between science and religion. Reframing Scopes enables us to take note better the passions that swept one small town and came to divide the nation.

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