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(
09.07.2004 )
America’s Deep, Dark
Secret – Eugenics in America
[ Systemic Child Abuse
and Neglect in Institutional Care ]
•
A
60 Minutes Special Report
May
2, 2004 7:44 pm US/Eastern
[
Previewing the recently published book: THE STATE BOYS REBELLION
]
NEW YOYK
(CBS) One of the deep, dark secrets of
America’s past has finally come to light. Starting in the early
1900s, hundreds of thousands of American children were warehoused in
institutions by state governments. And the federal government did
nothing to stop it.
The justification? The kids had been
labeled feeble-minded, and were put away in conditions that can only
be described as unspeakable.
Now, a new book, "The State
Boys Rebellion," by Michael D’Antonio, reveals even more:
A large proportion of the kids who were locked up were not retarded
at all. They were simply poor, uneducated kids with no place to go,
who ended up in institutions like the Fernald School in Waltham,
Mass.
The Fernald School is the oldest institution of its
kind in the country. At its peak, some 2500 people were confined
here, most of them children. All of them were called feeble-minded,
whether they were or not.
The people who ran Fernald back in
the bad, old days are no longer alive, but many of the victims still
are -- victims like Fred Boyce, who was locked up there for 11 years.
He came back to Fernald with Correspondent Bob Simon.
”We
thought for a long time that we belonged there, that we were not part
of the species. We thought we were some kind of, you know, people
that wasn’t supposed to be born,” says Boyce.
And
that was precisely the idea.
The Fernald School, and others
like it, was part of a popular American movement in the early 20th
century called the Eugenics movement. The idea was to separate people
considered to be genetically inferior from the rest of society, to
prevent them from reproducing.
Eugenics is usually associated
with Nazi Germany, but in fact, it started in America. Not only that,
it continued here long after Hitler’s Germany was in ruins.
At the height of the movement - in the ’20s and ’30s
- exhibits were set up at fairs to teach people about eugenics. It
was good for America, and good for the human race. That was the
message.
But author Michael D’Antonio says it wasn’t
just a movement. It was government policy. “People were told,
we can be rid of all disease, we can lower the crime rate, we can
increase the wealth of our nation, if we only keep certain people
from having babies,” says D’Antonio.
He says back
then, schools tested children regularly, and those classified as
feeble-minded got a one-way ticket to Fernald -- or to one of the
more than 100 institutions like it.
“Idiot, imbecile,
and moron were all medical terms. They were used to define various
levels of retardation or disability. Moron was coined to describe
children who were almost normal,” says D’Antonio. “I
would estimate that at least 50 percent would function in today’s
world well.”
Fred Boyce was just 8 years old in 1949
when his foster mother died, and the State of Massachusetts committed
him to Fernald.
Boyce’s records from Fernald show they
labeled him as a “moron”, even though tests showed his
intelligence was within the normal range, not bad for a boy with no
education at all. He was kept there for 11 years.
Boyce says
he thinks the state recommended that he come to Fernald because it
was the easy way out: “They didn’t have to look for homes
for you, so they could just dump you off in these human warehouses
and just let you rot, you know. That’s what they did. They let
us rot.”
Most of the school is closed now, including
Boyce’s old dorms, which will be torn down soon. Approximately
36 children slept in each room, with the beds jammed together. And
the children received little education and less affection.
Regimentation? There was no shortage of that. And how long
would they stay at Fernald? The kids were told they could be here for
life, that there was no exit.
“I kinda thought for a
while, maybe there was something wrong with me, or why would I be
here,” says Joe Almeida, who was swept up into the system even
though there was nothing wrong with him.
Almeida, an abused
child, was only 8 when his father took him for a drive to the Fernald
School, and told him to wait in the hallway.
“I said,
‘Wait a minute, dad. Where are you going,’” recalls
Almeida. “He goes, ‘Oh, you wait right there. I gotta go
get the car.’” And he went. And that was the last I seen
of him.
Almeida “moron”. He ended up in the same
dorm as Boyce, and they spent their mornings in the “schoolroom.”
At least, that’s what the room was called.
“It
was a school in name only. A child would experience the first year of
school 5 or 6 times in a row,” says D’Antonio. “He
would read the same ‘Dick and Jane’ reader, and never
make any progress because the school wasn’t equipped to
actually educate children. It was there as a sort of holding
pen.”
The children did most of the manual labor at the
school.
“The kids at Fernald raised the vegetables that
they ate. They sewed the soles on the shoes that they wore. They
manufactured the brooms that they used to sweep the floor,”
says D’Antonio, who adds that the school made sure that at
least 30 percent of the kids admitted had normal or near normal
intelligence.
The school needed those kids to work. “You
had to have somebody with a certain level of intelligence in order to
run this place,” says Boyce. “And I can remember being
out in the gardens from morning until night in the sun.”
Almeida, however, had an unusual job, and the fruits of his
labor are still there 50 years later. His job was to cut up the
brains of severely retarded people who had died at Fernald. He cut
them into thin slices so scientists could study them. Nothing ever
came of the research, but the bits of brains are still there.
"They're still sitting here years later,” says
Almeida. “I mean, what was it all for?"
Worse than
the work, says Almeida, was the abuse he suffered from the attendants
who staffed the place. It was called “Red Cherry Day,”
and the kids would sit in a circle and be called up alphabetically.
“And lucky me, my name is what? Almeida. You’d
get up in front of all these kids, and you would pull down your
pants,” recalls Almeida. “You’d pull down your
underpants and they’d make you turn around and they’d
whack your ass with this branch until it was red like a cherry.”
Almeida says few of the attendants showed any kindness, and
some of them should have been institutionalized themselves: “These
people were sick that worked here.”
And of course,
there was sexual abuse. The place was tailor made for it.
As
the boys grew older, many rebelled, often by running away. They
always got caught.
Boyce showed Simon what happened then. The
kids were taken to the infamous Ward 22, the school’s detention
center.
"Couldn’t escape, you know, this was the
prison,” says Fred, who was locked up in solitary confinement
here. “And they had a little mattress on the floor there.”
As a further humiliation, kids were stripped naked. Back
then, the windows had bars. “You’re just this child, and
you’'re in this cell because you ran away,” says Boyce.
“And you ran away for reasons of abuse and thinking that you
don’t belong here. You wanna have a life outside.”
Boyce finally got that life in 1960, when he was 19. Eugenics
was no longer politically acceptable in America, and Fernald started
releasing people. The problem was, there weren’t a lot of jobs
around for alumni of a school for the feeble-minded.
Boyce
joined the carnival circuit, traveling around the country, mixing
with people who didn’t need to see diplomas – surrounded
by reminders of what his childhood could have been.
“I
see these happy families, you know, and I see how much they love
their kids. And I think, you know, ‘I can never have that’”,
says Boyce.
What would their lives have been like, if they
hadn’t been sent to Fernald?
“The one thing I can
imagine is that their lives would have had a lot more love in them.
I’ve had men tell me, ‘I never saw a man or woman who
loved each other growing up. I never saw family life. And it’s
been impossible for me to find it as an adult,’” says
D’Antonio. “That’s the part that gets me most
upset, is they were denied the human relations that sustain all of
us.”
Almeida got out of Fernald the same year as Boyce,
but when he hit his 40s, he found himself drawn back to the place. It
was the only home he’d ever really known.
But Fernald
had changed, and only the seriously handicapped were living there
now. So Almeida applied for a job and worked there as a driver for 20
years. He retired last year.
“I always felt like they
owed me. I always felt that they owed me, because they took the most
important thing of my life away,” says Almeida. “They
took away my childhood and my education. The two things that you need
in life to make it, they took from me.”
And that’s
not all. More than 30 years after Boyce and Almeida were released,
they found out that the school had allowed them to be used as human
guinea pigs.
In 1994 Senate hearings, it came out that
scientists from MIT had been giving radioactive oatmeal to the boys -
men now - in a nutrition study for Quaker Oats. All they knew is that
they’d been asked to join a science club.
Among those
who attended the hearing was Almeida, also a member of the club. He
says the boys were recruited with special treats: “We were
getting special treatment, you know, extra dessert, we got to eat
away from the other boys. We were getting extra oatmeal. We’re
getting extra milk.”
“But they forgot to mention
the milk was radioactive,” says David White-Lief, an attorney
who worked on the state task force investigating the science club.
He says he was outraged that the children were exploited
without their knowledge. “It’s my contention, and it was
my contention on the task force, that these experiments, because of
the lack of informed consent, violated the Nuremburg Code established
just 10 years earlier,” says White-Lief. “The lesson of
Nazi Germany was we don’t do experiments on people without
informed consent. They didn’t use the word ‘informed
consent’ – ‘without knowing consent’.”
Boyce, also in the science club, got a group of members
together and they sued. Each received approximately $60,000 in
compensation from MIT, Quaker Oats and the government.
But
Boyce and Almeida never got what they really wanted: an apology for
sending them to Fernald and calling them morons, a label that remains
on their state records to this day.
Boyce, who is 63, says he
has never received an apology from the State of Massachusetts or from
any agency at all. What stays with him the most, says Almeida, is
being labeled a moron, and “never getting to know what I could
have been.”
Today, kids like Fred Boyce and Joe Almeida
are placed in foster homes and attend public schools. The dark era of
institutionalization ended in the ‘70s at Fernald. Since then,
it's become a home for mentally and physically handicapped adults,
and it’s about to be closed down forever.
The publisher
of the book, “The State Boys Rebellion”, is Simon and
Schuster. Both Simon and Schuster and CBSNEWS are units of
Viacom.
© MMIV, CBS
Worldwide Inc. All Rights Reserved.
[
Date of first publication on this Website: 9
July 2004 ] [ Main heading
added by the editor ]