The Graphical History Tour has one more stop to at the Scopes Monkey Trial today. We've got exciting courtroom drama, a momentous verdict, and an unexpected twist at the end <Law & Order .wav>!
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| "The Monkey Hasn't a Word to Say" by W.A. Rogers in Washington Post, July 9, 1925 |
Given that President Coolidge, Congress, and the Supreme Court were all on their summer vacations, little Dayton, Tennessee became the center of the editorial cartooning world when the trial convened on July 10, 1925. Some cartoonists, such as Edmund Duffy, J.P. Alley, and Carey Orr, drew two or three cartoons per week about the trial.
After all, if there were only so many gags to be drawn about monkeys, the conflict between science and the Bible was a great source of inspiration — so too was the creationists' ardent defender William Jennings Bryan.
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| "The Volunteer Fireman" by Nelson Harding in Brooklyn Daily Eagle, July 14, 1925 |
On the other hand, there were a few, for example Grover Page at the Louisville Courier-Journal, who did not produce a single cartoon about the trial during the entire month. I suppose that on this issue, Page might have had strong disagreements with his editors or publisher. Or his wife.
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| "Fame" by Edmund Duffy in Baltimore Sun, July 14, 1925 |
The Baltimore Sun — hardly a disinterested bystander, its publisher having put up the $500 (almost $9,200 in 2025 bucks) for teacher John T. Scopes's bail — sent their editorial cartoonist, Edmund Duffy, to cover the trial in person.
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| Courtroom sketches by Edmund Duffy in Baltimore Sun, July 16, 1925 |
In addition to his regular editorial cartoon, Duffy provided his newspaper with occasional sketches of the trial principals, witnesses, and by-standers.
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| "The Dayton War Cry" by Edmund Duffy in Baltimore Sun, July 15, 1925 |
There is a rough, sketchy quality to Duffy's cartoons from Dayton. He didn't stick around to witness the second week of the trial; this next cartoon is more typical of his usual output.
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| "Let There Be Darkness" by Edmund Duffy in Baltimore Sun, July 19, 1925 |
Cartooning for the prosecution, the Memphis Commercial Appeal's J.P. Alley defended his state's anti-evolution law and biblical inerrancy.
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| "They Ought to Submit a Few 'Exhibits' to the Supreme Court" by J.P. Alley in Memphis Commercial Appeal, July 1, 1925 |
Alley correctly but disapprovingly noted that teacher John Scopes freely admitted having broken the law by teaching Darwin's theory of evolution, and that the defense's intention from the very beginning was to attack the law itself as unconstitutional.
I have noticed that all cartoonists gave John Scopes the title of "Professor," although those who drew him tended to cartoon the 24-year-old teacher diminutive and even childlike.
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| "4.4 Stuff" by J.P. Alley in Memphis Commercial Appeal, July 14, 1925 |
Here Alley twitted the out-of-state journalists and movie men descending upon little Dayton, Tennessee. Was the trial as disappointing as 4.4 ABV (alcohol by volume) beer? Alley may have been alone in that perception.
(4.4 ABV is light beer to you and me, but considerably more potent than the legal Prohibition limit of 0.5 ABV.)
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| "Darrow's Paradise" by J.P. Alley in Memphis Commercial Appeal, July 15, 1925 |
Tell us what you really think of "Dangerous Darrow," Mr. Alley.
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| "Her Bodyguard" by Carey Orr in Chicago Tribune, July 20, 1925 |
Bravely staking out the middle ground, Carey Orr (who started his cartooning career in Tennessee) offered a defense here of religious faith, but dismissed anti-evolutionists as being of any particular importance to it. We shall get to Orr's regard for its chief spokesman presently.
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| "Sweet Punishment" by Ed LeCocq in Des Moines Register, July 22, 1925 |
In the last days of the trial, Darrow cross-examined Bryan on the stand — testimony later stricken by Judge Raulston — and Bryan in turn announced the questions he would have posed to Darrow had the judge allowed it.
Pressed by Darrow, Bryan proclaimed that he believed every word of the Bible to be true, although he couldn't answer Darrow's question about where Cain found a wife, how recorded Chinese history could be millennia older than biblical estimates of the planet's creation, or how the snake got around before God condemned it to crawl on its belly ("Do you know whether he walked on his tail or not?"). By the time Darrow brought up the creation of rainbows, both he and Bryan were shouting and pointing fingers in each other's face.
Darrow answered Bryan's questions outside the court. He did not believe in miracles, he said; asked whether he believed in the immortality of the soul, he answered, "I have been searching for proof of this all my life... and I have never found any evidence on the subject."
Responding to other questions, Darrow said he found "much that is of value in the Bible" but that it was not divinely inspired; and that "the Christ prophesied in the Old Testament was a great Jew who should deliver his people from their physical bondage, and nothing else."
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| "The Verdict" by Edmund Duffy in Baltimore Sun, July 22, 1925 |
In the end, Scopes was found guilty and fined $100 ($1,837 adjusted for inflation), which came nowhere near covering the cost of the trial. In addition to routine court costs exceeding $300 and hundreds more spent by the prosecution, Scopes's defense lawyers had spent $20,000 to $25,000 bringing expert witnesses to Dayton, some of whom were barred by Judge Raulston of ever offering their testimony.
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| "Will the Gun Hurt" by Michael E. Brady in Brooklyn Daily Eagle, July 26, 1925 |
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| "When Shall We Three Meet Again" by Ed Gale in Los Angeles Times, July 22, 1925 |
Emboldened by the Scopes verdict, fundamentalist legislators elsewhere proposed laws similar to Tennessee's. A government clerk, Lauren Wittner, brought suit in Washington D.C. against the teaching of evolutionary theory in the nation's capital on the theory that an appropriations bill passed by Congress forbade the district from using federal funds "to teach disrespect for the Bible."
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| "Migrating" by Ed LeCocq in Des Moines Register, July 25, 1925 |
The question appeared destined to be argued all the way to the Supreme Court. Darrow, however, gave notice that he would not represent the evolutionists any further.
Which leaves us with William Jennings Bryan.
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| "A Chip Off the Old Block" by Carey Orr in Chicago Tribune, July 12, 1925 |
Bryan had been a prominent public figure for thirty years by the time of the Scopes Monkey Trial — a lifetime for some of the cartoonists our Graphical History Tour features today. Carey Orr, age 35 when he drew this cartoon, could therefore be forgiven for thinking that Bryan had been around since the Garden of Eden.
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| "Our Greatest Actor" by Carey Orr in Chicago Tribune, July 17, 1925 |
Or if not since Adam and Eve, Orr suggested, how about these other Old Testament figures?
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| "Any Port in a Storm" by Nelson Harding in Brooklyn Daily Eagle, July 19, 1925 |
First elected to Congress in 1890, Bryan was the Democrats' presidential nominee in 1896, 1900, and 1908. He was Secretary of State under President Woodrow Wilson, resigning in protest of U.S. entry into World War I. An active proponent of Prohibition, he remained at his party's center stage during their years in the political wilderness.
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| "You May Not Be For Him..." by Billy Ireland in Columbus Dispatch, ca. July 26, 1925 |
"You may not be for him, but nevertheless, there he is," cartooned Billy Ireland as the Scopes Monkey Trial drew to a close. But suddenly, after thirty years on and off America's front pages, he wasn't.
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| "The Great Commoner" by Guy R. Spencer in Omaha Evening World Herald, July 28, 1925 |
Still in the town of Dayton, Bryan died on Saturday, July 26 in the home of Richard Rodgers, his host there during the Scopes trial. Bryan had given a stirring speech to townspeople that day, to great acclaim according to press reports. Telling friends that he had never felt better, he enjoyed a hearty meal and retired to his room for a nap. He succumbed to a cerebral hemorrhage around 4:45 p.m. and was discovered by his chauffeur about 20 minutes later.
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| "Onward, Christian Soldier..." by J.P. Alley in Memphis Commercial Appeal, July 28, 1925 |
As one would expect, cartoonists who defended Bryan, such as Guy Spencer from his home state and J.P. Alley, responded to his death with heartfelt eulogies. Even some dyed-in-the-wool Republicans heaped praise upon the longtime Democratic leader ....
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| "The Crusader" by Bill Donahey in Cleveland Plain Dealer, July 28, 1925 |
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| "Epitaph for a Crusader" by John T. McCutcheon in Chicago Tribune, July 28, 1925 |
...even if not necessarily for his politics.
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| "To the Highest Court of All" by Jesse Cargill for King Features Syndicate, ca. July 28, 1925 |
I have not included all of the cartoons eulogizing William Jennings Bryan, but I must note that many of the cartoonists who had been lambasting him just days earlier, opted in lieu of drawing something nice to draw nothing at all. Of the cartoonists included above, Nelson Harding appears to have left on vacation as soon as the Scopes trial was over. Edmund Duffy, Ed LeCocq, and Michael Brady devoted their work for rest of July to other topics.
Carey Orr had yielded the editorial cartoonist's space on Chicago Tribune's front page back to John T. McCutcheon, but he still had to produce a cartoon for syndication. So he doffed his hat and took a bite out of it.
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| "Sorrow in the American Home" by Carey Orr syndicated by Chicago Tribune, July 31, 1925 |
It has been an extra long Graphical History Tour today, and I thank you for reading this far. Please remain seated until the tour has come to a complete stop, and make sure you have all your personal belongings with you as you disembark.

























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