Disability in the Family: John and Alice
Dewey Raising Their Son, Sabino
SCOT DANFORTH
Chapman University
Background/Context: The current biographic understanding of John Dewey’s experience
adopting and raising an Italian boy named Sabino emphasizes the theme of finding an
emotional replacement for Morris and Gordon, two young sons who had tragically died on
family trips to Europe. Lacking is substantive attention to the fact that John Dewey’s son had
a physical disability who grew up during the early surge of eugenics thought in American
popular life. The leading biographer Jay Martin has portrayed John and Alice Dewey as
rescuing Sabino from poverty, an experience that gave John Dewey “a special empathy for the
second-best, the second-class citizen, the loser in society.” What is missing from all biographic
research on the Deweys is their experience of raising a boy with a physical disability during a
historical time when disabilities were highly stigmatized.
Purpose/Objective/Research: The purpose of this historical study is to supplement the current understanding of John Dewey fathering an adopted son with an account that attends to
the fact that young Sabino had a physical disability. Working in the disability studies tradition, this analysis explores both how the Deweys contended with Sabino’s bone tuberculosis as
an illness requiring medical treatment and how they navigated the complex political context
of deeply discriminatory attitudes surrounding disabled persons. The conclusion initiates a
discussion of the larger questions concerning how the experiences of fathering a boy impacted
directly by disability oppression might have influenced John Dewey’s political activity and
scholarship.
Research Design: This historical analysis utilizes prior biographic research, published and
unpublished works by John Dewey, and primary historical documents such as family letters
and medical and popular publications of the era.
Conclusions/Recommendations: This analysis finds that John and Alice Dewey were very
loving and attentive parents who endured many struggles due to their child’s disability. They
worried about their son’s health, and they capably navigated the available medical options.
They were troubled by their son’s suffering and pain, and they worked together with great
consistency to comfort and support him. Further, they directly confronted disability prejudice,
including educational segregation, and worked assiduously against the powerful cultural
assumption that their disabled son should lead a life of anything less than full participation
in the community. The article concludes with a preliminary examination of how these experiences influenced John Dewey’s political writings and activities.
Teachers College Record Volume 120, 020302, February 2018, 30 pages
Copyright © by Teachers College, Columbia University
0161-4681
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RAISING SABINO
When John and Alice Dewey first spied Sabino, an eight-year-old boy, in
Piazza San Marco in Venice, there is no doubt that they viewed him though
eyes of deep sadness. Yet their hearts lifted at the sight of the boy. It was
August 1905. The Deweys had recently endured a succession of painful
emotional losses, and this boy appeared as a spark of hope on an otherwise bleak horizon.
Alice had been forced out of her position as principal of the Laboratory
School at the University of Chicago, losing a prized professional outlet
for her talents and social action energies. Her abrupt dismissal served
as the coup de grâce for John after many administrative squabbles with
University President William Rainey Harper. John resigned, bitterly leaving the University where he had spent 10 years establishing himself as a
leading voice in the fields of education, psychology, and philosophy.
A family trip to Europe in the summer of 1904 was arranged as a respite, a way for the family to share a deep breath and an enjoyable adventure as they transitioned from Chicago to a new home in New York.
John had accepted a position on the philosophy faculty of Columbia
University to start in September. The plan was for John to attend the
Science Association conference in Cambridge, England, and then return
to New York for his fall semester teaching obligations while Alice would
stay on in Europe with the five Dewey children. Evelyn and Fred, the
eldest, would spend the year focused on studying French and German,
and Alice intended to conduct a thorough survey of the education of
girls and women in Europe.
But the plan was disrupted by tragedy. For the second time in a decade,
the Deweys experienced the death of a son. Eight-year-old son Gordon
contracted typhoid on the ocean passage, and he passed away in Ireland
after a short hospitalization. Gordon’s death undoubtedly brought back
distressing memories of losing their son Morris on a previous Atlantic
crossing. Two-year-old Morris had succumbed to diphtheria in Milan in
March 1895.
After Gordon’s death, the Dewey family mourned without the comfort
of unity. John returned to New York alone. Alice and the children stayed
on for the school year in Europe as originally planned. Professor Dewey
spent his first year at Columbia wallowing in the depths of loneliness, living by himself in a dormitory room. He was a solitary figure walking along
the Hudson River each evening at sunset. Alice abandoned her plan to
write a book about the education of women. By some accounts, she was
never the same after the loss of a second child. Anxiety and depression
burdened her for the rest of her life.1
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By the following March, the grief and loneliness had reduced John to
desperation.HewrotetoAlice,“WhenIthinkthatitisonlysixmonths
next Saturday, since our light went out & how much harder and emptier
thing it gets all the time, I don’t know how much longer I’m going to
be able to hold out.” He sought and received special permission from
President Nicholas Murray Butler to leave Columbia before the end of the
semester. He couldn’t wait any longer to see his family. He rushed across
the Atlantic to rejoin his wife and children in Italy.2
In the Piazza San Marco in Venice, John and Alice saw a dark-haired
boy’s reflection in the window of a shop. The glistening visage brought
back memories of both Morris, the son who had died in Italy 10 years
earlier,andGordon,thesonJohnhadoncedescribedas“theonlyperson I have ever known . . . who was at once always serious & always playful
in his treatment of life.”3 The Deweys bought snacks at a nearby sidewalk café for Sabino and his younger brother. It was the first time that
the youngsters had ever tasted butter. The following day John and Alice
Dewey asked Sabino’s mother if they could take Sabino to New York. She
agreed,tellinghersonthathewould“eatbetterifyougotoAmerica.”
From that day forward, although he was never legally adopted, Sabino
was a Dewey.4
One factor in Sabino’s birth mother’s quick decision to allow him to
go to America with well-meaning strangers was the fact that he had a serious infection, bone tuberculosis of the knee. Perhaps the family was poor
and unable to arrange for proper medical care. Tuberculosis, most typically occurring in the lungs, was a relatively common bacterial infection
in the early 1900’s caused by the microorganism mycobacterium tuberculosis.
The less familiar form of the disease involved an infection located in a
bone, often the spine or a joint. Children with knee joint tuberculosis typically suffered from pain and limited flexibility of the joint. Swelling often
caused subluxation, a dislocation of the kneecap.
The Deweys immediately placed Sabino in the care of an English physician in Venice for two weeks. The garden sanitarium housing a small
number of patients probably provided a treatment that was more constitutional than medical. Since tuberculosis sufferers often wasted away, losing
weight, and taking on a pale cast to their skin, sanitaria typically stuffed
their patients with fattening diets of milk and eggs accompanied with extended rest in the sunshine. Perhaps a few pounds heavier, Sabino then
accompanied his new family to Antwerp where he was seen by a German
physician who advised that amputation of the leg was the only realistic option for the severely infected knee. The prospect of losing a leg frightened
the boy. John and Alice decided to take their new son home to New York
to seek a more conservative treatment.5
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Disability historians have argued that disability is often an overlooked
political category of historical research. Just as disabled persons are often invisible in society, disability has been, in the words of Douglas C.
Baynton,“conspicuouslyabsentinthehistorieswewrite.”Whendisabled
persons do appear in historical narratives, researchers have tended to assume that disability is a personal tragedy, thereby failing to grant legitimacy to the lived experiences of disabled persons and to the oppressive
politics of disability.6
The intellectual and personal life of the great American philosopher
John Dewey has been carefully scrutinized and documented by multiple
biographers. John and his wife Alice’s decision to adopt a young Italian
boy is often described as part of the couple’s attempt to cope with the
tragic loss of two sons to childhood illnesses. Sabino served as a sort of
psychological replacement for the two deceased boys. Jay Martin’s account chiefly portrays John’s fatherhood experience of Sabino through
this compensatory narrative. It also interprets Sabino’s adoption as an act
that likely rescued the boy from poverty, an experience that gave John
Dewey“aspecialempathyforthesecond-best,thesecond-classcitizen,the
loser in society.” To some extent, this experience explains why Dewey’s
philosophical scholarship and political activism from that point forward
focused greatly on solving problems facing devalued social classes.
Overlooked in this interpretation is Dewey’s experience of raising a boy
with a disability in the first two decades of the American 20th century.
AlthoughhistorianshavebrielynotedthatSabino“limped”orwas“crippled,” no serious attention has been paid to Sabino as a person with a disability or to the parental experience of raising a disabled child. The thesis
that John and Alice Dewey rescued Sabino from economic disadvantage is
uncertain.Whatisclearisthatthekindof“second-classcitizen”adopted
and raised by John and Alice Dewey was a boy with a physical disability during a historical time when disabilities were highly stigmatized.7
The purpose of this historical study is to supplement the current understanding of John Dewey fathering an adopted son with an account that
attends to the fact that young Sabino had a physical disability. Further,
John Dewey’s son lived with a physical disability in a specific historical
context, New York City at the early surge of eugenics thought in American
popular life. This study details the medical and educational challenges
faced by Sabino and his family. Further, this study follows the lead of disability studies scholars who focus analyses on both impairment and disability, the physiological and the political, the individual and the social.
Working in that tradition of scholarship, this analysis explores both how
the Deweys contended with Sabino’s bone tuberculosis as an illness requiring medical treatment and how they navigated the complex political
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context of deeply discriminatory attitudes surrounding disabled persons.
The conclusion of this article initiates a discussion of the larger questions
concerning how the experiences of fathering a boy impacted directly by
disability oppression might have influenced John Dewey’s political activity
and scholarship.8
LIVING WITH TUBERCULOSIS IN
EARLY-TWENTIETH-CENTURY AMERICA
Tuberculosis of the knee was a relatively uncommon illness in the United
States at the turn of the century, occurring less often than tubercular bone
infections of the spine or hip joint. A 1915 analysis by James Warren Sever
and Eben W. Fiske, two orthopedic physicians, counted 638 cases of knee
tuberculosis at Boston’s Children’s Hospital between 1880 and 1910. The
disease was more common among boys than girls. Initial diagnosis most
often occurred between two and three years of age. While infections could
involvebone—“femur,tibia,patella,oribula”—itcouldalsoiniltratethe
softsynovialmembrane.Almostonethirdofthecasesresultedin“bony
destruction,” and 55 percent “showed deinite bone deformity.” Thirtyfive percent of the children with tubercular knees underwent surgery.
Themostcommonsurgerywas“forciblecorrectionoflexionandsubluxation,” an attempt to improve range of motion. Second most common was
incision to drain an abscess in the knee cavity.9
Sever and Fiske described four basic categories of knee tuberculosis
symptomatology:“swelling...limitationofmotion...lexion...heat.”
Edward A. Tracy of Boston, in his lecture at the 1900 American Medical
AssociationConference,describedtheprimarysymptomsas“limitation
of motion, causing lameness . . . enlargement of the joint measurements,
in some cases caused by fluid distending the joint capsule, in other cases caused by thickening of the synovial membrane.” These were often
accompanied by tenderness on pressure, fixation of the joint, muscle
spasms,“heatinthejoint,”and“whitenessoftheskin”causedby“swollen tissues underneath.”10
In early October 1905, Sabino underwent surgery at St. Luke’s Hospital
in Manhattan. Although no specific details are available about the nature
of the procedure, the very fact that surgery was performed speaks to the
severity of the infection. Most physicians at the time viewed surgical intervention for knee tuberculosis as the last line of defense against a disease process actively deteriorating bone or threatening the patient’s life.
A Boston surgeon wrote in 1907:
In such an operation, while as much of the diseased tissue should
be removed as possible, it must always be borne in mind, and it is
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for this reason that such operations are resorted to only as extreme
measures, that no matter how thoroughly performed the operation, it is absolutely impossible to entirely remove the disease.11
The surgery likely resulted in damage to the femur or other bones of the
knee joint without fully eradicating the infection.
After surgery the leg was placed in a plaster cast, a common immobilizationmeasuretakento“irmlyholdthekneeandpreventlexion.”As
Sabino convalesced at home, his attentive father was a steady source of
comfort and consolation. Sabino suffered from pain, swelling, and difficulty sleeping. For months after the knee surgery, John Dewey slept with
his son each night, providing tender consolation as the child cried. Until
Sabino was about 11, when the most pronounced symptoms of the bone
infection finally waned, his parents often brought him into their bed at
night. They told him stories in an effort to distract his thoughts from pain
in his knee.12
The plaster cast served as a very temporary way to splint the joint. Seven
months later, Sabino was fitted with a steel leg brace to provide a more lasting and secure form of support to his weak knee. Often physicians utilized
a Thomas splint running from thigh to shoe on both sides of the leg to immobilize and keep weight off the knee. The steel brace was adjustable, allowing for refitting as the boy grew, an indication that the physician knew
that this medical condition would continue through much of the patient’s
childhood.Sabinowrotetohismother,“Ildottorehaprovatoilferro(The
doctor has tried the iron).” In the optimistic, jovial tone typical of his father’sattitudeabouthisson’scondition,JohnwrotetoAlice,“Sabinostays
more cheerful than I anticipated. His brace fitted him well.”13
By October 1906, young Sabino was bouncing about the house with
vigor. He was a cheerful and energetic child, undeterred by the lingering
ailment. A full year after the surgery, however, his knee was not much improved.AliceDeweywrotetoJohn,“Heseemsstrongerstandsupagood
deal and steps from one chair to another but doesn’t like the crutches
much—The bad leg seems just the same as ever.”14 The active symptoms
and painful suffering persisted until at least summer 1908. A 1915 medical study of the duration of active illness for children with bone tuberculosis found that most cases required treatment for four or five years.
Cases involving surgery often lasted over five years of active infection and
medical treatment.15
Although the infection concluded and the most painful symptoms of the
disease subsided, Sabino lived the rest of his life with an impaired knee.
The functioning of the joint was compromised. A decade later, as a young
man registering for the draft during World War I, he was categorized by
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an Army doctor as capable of limited duty. His sister Jane observed that
“the amount he could bend his knee disqualiied him” for most forms
of military service. Despite this fact, he was a very active young man. In
his early 20s, Sabino enjoyed many physical activities and sports. While
his father taught for a year at Stanford and the University of California
in Berkeley in 1918, Sabino spent many hours playing handball with San
Francisco Call columnist John D. Barry. The following spring, he worked
long, strenuous hours on a dairy farm at the College of Hawaii and spent
his free time swimming.16
DOUBLE STIGMA
As they attended to the medical aspects of Sabino’s condition, the Dewey
family confronted a harsh array of intractable cultural beliefs concerning both tuberculosis and physical disability. Phil Ferguson has observedthat“afamily’sinterpretationofthemeaningofdisabilitycannot
help but reflect to some degree the larger context of social attitudes
and historical realities within which that interpretation emerges.” At
the very least, highly independent-thinking parents such as the Deweys
contended with the dominant cultural politics surrounding their son’s
physical condition. Young Sabino was, in the words of Sir Henry Gavain,
superintendent and surgeon at Lord Mayor Treloar’s Cripples Hospital
inHampshire,England,a“tuberculouscripple.”Hissocialidentityinvolved a double stigma, mingling elements of the popular understanding of tuberculosis patient and an invalid or cripple. Sabino was subject
to a complex of powerful social stigmatizations at the confluence of two
concurrent strands of cultural belief and sensibility, the rise of eugenics
thought in relation to disability and the anxious popular orientation to
the deadly scourge of tuberculosis.17
GROWTH OF AMERICAN EUGENICS
DouglasC.BayntonandPaulLongmorehavedocumentedhow“socialattitudes toward disabled people became dramatically more negative around
the turn of the twentieth century.”18 Undoubtedly, the growing popularity
of eugenics among intellectuals, policymakers, and the public played a central role in the increasingly stigmatized interpretations of human biological and cultural variation. In an era marked by a series of dramatic cultural
shifts, including industrialization, immigration, urbanization, and changing understandings of gender roles and sexuality, eugenics seemed to supply much-needed answers. Eugenics distilled complex social problems and
a range of popular culture anxieties into an efficient, scientific rhetoric
of ostensibly unbiased neutrality, successfully dressing racist assumptions
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about human diversity in rational discursive garb that appealed to multiple
constituencies. Frank Dikötter observes that eugenics was “(w)idely seen
to be a morally and scientifically viable way of improving human heredity
. . . embraced by social reformers, established intellectuals, and medical
authorities from one end of the political spectrum to the other.”19
The scientific research arm of the American eugenics movement was
launched in 1903 when Charles Benedict Davenport secured Carnegie
Institution funds to found the Station for the Experimental Study of
Evolution in Cold Spring Harbor, New York. Davenport devoted his career
tothedevelopmentofeugenicsasabranchofbiologicalresearch,“the
science of the improvement of the human race.” A short four miles up the
road from the Long Island farm that became the Dewey family home in
1910, he built the Station into the prestigious research home of Eugenics
Record Office.20
In 1906, the American Breeders’ Association formed a Committee on
Eugenics to expand research, publications, and educational programs related to human heredity. Well-known committee members included educator of the deaf Alexander Graham Bell, Stanford University President
David Starr Jordan, and Stanford entomologist Vernon Kellogg. In the
same year, physician and cereal manufacturer J. H. Kellogg founded the
Race Betterment Foundation in Battle Creek, Michigan. The Foundation
organized important international conferences in 1914 and 1915 that coalesced and encouraged eugenics research and policy development. The
Galton Society, named after the founder of eugenics, was initiated in New
York City in 1918 with Charles Benedict Davenport as the first director.21
A number of popular books also propelled the field of eugenics into the
public mind. Sociologist Richard Dugdale’s The Jukes (1877) and Oscar
McCulloch’s The Tribe of Ishmael (1888) fueled eugenics thought with sordid tales of generations of familial degeneracy. Each traced a genealogy of
inherited pauperism and criminality to the largely genetic roots, positioning poor people as biological generators of their own poverty and creating
a standard family tree template for future eugenics studies.22
The most influential genealogy of familial defect was written by Henry
H. Goddard of the Vineland (New Jersey) Training School. In 1912, he
published The Kallikak Family: A Study of the Heredity of Feeblemindedness, a
widely read examination of how intellectual and moral inferiority were
inherited over multiple generations. A leading figure in early intelligence
testing and special education teacher training, Goddard convinced many
that a host of social problems could be traced to inherent deficiencies
within disabled persons. His endorsed solutions were the institutional segregation and surgical sterilization of the disabled populations, eugenics
strategies that found widespread support.23
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Education was also an important tool in the promotion of eugenics.
In April 1914, The Journal of Heredity proudly announced that 44 universities, including Harvard, Dartmouth, and Cornell, offered courses on eugenics. One of the most popular college texts on the topic was authored
by Paul Popenoe, a leading advocate for the sterilization of the feebleminded and mentally ill. Applied Eugenics taught university students that
eugenic practices would lead to the dramatic reduction of incompetent
and nonproductive people in the United States, thereby erasing unrelenting social ills. Specific groups of identifiable, inferior strands of humanity
wouldbesystematicallyexpunged.These“dysgenicclasses”includedthe
“feebleminded,insane,epileptic,delinquents”aswellasother“defectives
embracingverydiversecharacteristics”suchas“physicalweaklingsordeformed, those born with a hereditary diathesis or predisposition toward
some serious disease (e.g., Huntington’s Chorea), and those with some
gross defect of the organs of special sense.” A wide range of disabled persons, including people who were deaf and people who were blind, fell
into this defective group. If“thetaskofeugenicsweretoestablishanew
aristocracy of inborn ability,” as University of Chicago professor James A.
Field claimed, then persons with disabilities or chronic health conditions
were subject to strategic biological deletion.24
A central policy proposal of eugenics was the isolation of disabled persons in residential facilities or special schools. In the first two decades of
the 1900s, as urban school districts around the country began developing
special education programs, children who were physically disabled, deaf,
and blind were often excluded from public education. A boy with a physical disability, if accepted by the public schools, was segregated in a special
education classroom or school. Beginning in 1899, under the leadership
of Elizabeth Farrell, the public schools of New York City enrolled students
with a variety of mental and physical disabilities in segregated special education classes and schools. In New York, as in other urban districts, these
“ungraded”classroomswerelargelyilledwithboyswhowererecentimmigrants living in impoverished neighborhoods.25
TUBERCULOSIS, INFERIORITY, AND ANXIETY
Tuberculosis was often viewed as not just a deadly disease but also an
overt demonstration of underlying biological inferiority. Prior to German
physician Robert Koch’s discovery of the bacterial cause of the disease in
1882, it was widely held that tuberculosis was, at least in part, an inherited condition. Many physicians observed that the illness seemed to run
in families. Even after Koch’s scientific finding was common knowledge
among American physicians, many within the medical and public health
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establishment clung to a modified heritability thesis in the form of a theory of tubercular diathesis, an inherited predisposition to having the disease. Well-known scientists such as medical text author William Osler and
noted statistician Karl Pearson supported and propagated the notion that
tuberculosis patients had a congenitally inferior biological constitution.26
For example, Dr. Ernest Laplace, in a lecture at Philadelphia Hospital,
explained how a child with a diathesis inherited from his parents might be
“waitingfortheoccasiontodeveloptuberculosis.”Hegavetheexampleof
two children who experience a fall, one healthy and one with a diathesis.
The healthy child will develop a contusion of his knee which will
be well in two or three days. Not so with the other child. The contusion is followed by a swelling of the knee-joint, and the child develops a ‘white swelling’ or tuberculosis disease of the knee joint.27
To Laplace and many other physicians, the difference between the two
children was like the difference between fertile and infertile soil. A child
with a diathesis either had a receptive propensity or lacked a chemical
resistance to the tubercle bacteria.28
Immigration laws in the early 1900s reflected the growing public fear
that the social fabric of American society might be harmed by the influx of
what Harry H. Laughlin, Superintendent of the Eugenics Records Office,
calledthe“sociallyunitclasses...whocarrydefectivegerm-plasm.”29
New federal immigration laws passed between in 1882 and 1907 increasingly targeted immigrants with physical and mental disabilities and chronic
health conditions as subject to deportation. Inspectors at Ellis Island were
specifically instructed by New York Port Commissioner William Williams
toscreenoutnewimmigrantswhowere“likelytobecomepubliccharges
and who are suffering from physical defects which may affect their ability
to earn a living.” Further, the port excluded those of inferior genetics who
would“startaviciousstrainthatwillleadtomiseryandlossinfuturegenerations and influence unfavorably the characters and lives of hundreds
of persons.”30
Beginning in 1904, public health officers and physicians conducting
bodily inspections of incoming immigrants were instructed to identify immigrants not only with evident physical, sensory, or mental disorders but
alsothosenewcomerswitha“poorphysique.”CommissionerGeneralof
Immigration Robert Watchorn defined this broad new category of deficiency as including all those “poorly able to withstand the onslaught of
disease . . . (the) undersized, poorly developed, with feeble heart action,
arteries below the standard size . . . physically degenerate.” Such an immigrantwas“notonlyunlikelytobecomeadesirablecitizen,butalsovery
likely to transmit his undesirable qualities to his offspring.” Newcomers
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could be deported for any indication of biological inferiority, including
weak general health, deicient bodily form, and infection with “dangerous, contagious, or loathsome diseases.”31
Tuberculosis in the early 20th century involved a distinct array of cultural understandings and fears. Popular response to persons with bone tuberculosiswasinfusedwith“phthisis-phobia,”awidespreadfearofthemore
common pulmonary form of the disease, typically called consumption or
phthisis. Between 1800 and 1870, the “white plague” caused about one
of every five deaths in the United States. Afflicted persons often suffered
with the incapacitating lung infection for decades, coughing up bloody
sputum, their bodies wasting in sick beds, hospital wards, and sanitaria
cottages. Families of all classes and races were haunted by images of loved
ones gradually dissipating into bony skeletons with translucent white skin,
awaiting a sure but often slow death.
The epidemiological trajectory of pulmonary tuberculosis had greatly
turned before the 20th century. Due primarily to general improvements in
public health and hygiene, the overall incidence and morbidity declined
from 1870 on. By 1900, it was primarily a disease of the poor, of immigrants, African Americans, and Native Americans. Tuberculosis patients
were frequently portrayed as morally suspect members of the dangerous
classes at the lower rungs of the social ladder.32
Although Koch’s germ theory did not yield an effective pharmacological
treatment until the discovery of streptomycin in the 1940s, the concept
of bacterial contagion fed the common view of tuberculosis patients as
dangerous purveyors requiring isolation and social control. Dr. Herman
M. Biggs, the Director of the Department of Health in New York City, focusedpublichealtheffortsonthe“sanitarysurveillanceofthetubercular
diseases.”33 Based on compulsory disease report data provided by hospitals
and physicians, the department identified high incidence neighborhoods
and dispatched visiting nurses to educate, monitor cases, and prevent contagion. Biggs produced maps displaying high rates of infection in the close
quarters of poor neighborhoods, providing data that further fueled the
public’s fearful perception of the lower classes.34
Consumptivesofsuficientmeansoftensoughtan“openair”cure,relocating to healthy air climates of the Adirondack Mountains of New York or
the Rocky Mountains of Colorado and New Mexico. Sanitaria in Saranac
Lake, New York, Rutland, Massachusetts, and White Haven, Pennsylvania,
served the hygienic function of segregating patients safely away from the
uninfected while providing access to the three ingredients of tubercular health: fresh air, rest, and a plumpening diet rich in milk and eggs.
Patients rested and slept outdoors, even in frigid climates, soaking in the
therapeutic value of clean air and bright sunshine. This constitutional
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treatment, believed to fortify the body against the infection, was initially
developed for use with pulmonary tuberculosis. But it was also adopted by
physicians treating children with bone infections.35
As doctors and public health officers integrated germ theory into their
understanding of the disease, the contagion concept tended to reemphasize the need to isolate tuberculosis patients in hospitals and sanitaria.
While 19nth century consumptives needed the quiescent remoteness of
rural (often mountainous or seaside) climates to strengthen their bodily
constitution, 20th century urban communities required the secure segregation of pestilential tuberculosis.
Tuberculous children, in particular, were often educated in special day
schools or residential sanitaria designed for them. In 1904, the Association
for Improving the Condition of the Poor opened Sea Breeze, a residential treatment colony for children with tuberculosis located on the beach
in Coney Island, New York. The following year, the New York City Public
Schools initiated ungraded special education classrooms for students with
mental and physical disabilities, including children with tuberculosis. The
irst“openair”publicschoolforchildrenwithtuberculosiswasopenedin
Providence, Rhode Island, in January, 1908. Nine months later, the Boston
School Board launched an open-air school. Within the next two years,
Hartford, Rochester, Chicago, Pawtucket, and New York each developed
similar programs. Educators and physicians clearly believed that young
people with tuberculosis should be segregated in special education classrooms. It was believed that tubercular children benefited from unique
treatment programs while the healthy children profited from hygienic isolation from the minacious contagion.36
Driving the popular desire to quarantine was a panicky mass fear of the
disease that often interpreted bone and pulmonary tuberculosis patients
as dangerous public menaces. Even educated professionals and health
care workers often embraced and perpetuated the public’s attitude of
exaggerated anxiety. William Sands Mills, Chief of Tuberculosis Clinic at
New York Homeopathic Medical College, astutely observed,
This idea of the contagiousness of pulmonary tuberculosis has
been instilled in the public mind in season and out of season for
the past four or five years to such an extent that pthisis-phobia has
become a common disease, not only with laymen, but with physicians. In consequence, in many communities, the consumptive
has become a pariah, shunned like the pestilence.37
New York physician Ernest V. Hubbard noted that the first words typically spoken by his patients upon receiving the news of the tuberculosis
diagnosiswasanappealthat“noonebenotiied.”Thelawrequiredthat
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doctors and hospital register all tuberculosis patients with the City health
department. Patients sought privacy for fear of losing employment, housing, and, indeed, one’s moral reputation.38
One Worcester, Massachusetts, doctor complained that the public had
gone much too far in their fearful response to contagion of the tubercle
bacillus. He criticized his medical colleagues for playing an unfortunate
inluentialrole.“Alreadywehavecreatedagenuinephthisis-phobia,and
whole communities will rise in arms when talk of establishing a tubercular
hospital in their midst is made.”39 Later in the same essay, however, he reluctantly admitted that he, too, was caught in the grip of phthisis phobia:
“Ishouldnotliketohaveaconsumptiveforanearneighbormyself.”40
“APLACEForSuCHACHILD”
Contrary to the dominant view that disabled children required isolation
in special education classrooms and schools, John and Alice Dewey sought
a general school for their son. The dominant early 20th century narrative of the lives of parents of disabled children, filled with what Lalvani
andPolveredescribeas“chronicsorrow,helplessness,guilt,psychological
distress, and a persistent state of ‘mourning’” was far from the parenting
experience of the Deweys. They embraced and supported Sabino without reservation and without the common preoccupation with pity and remorse attached to a medicalized orientation to disability. They approached
Sabino’s education with a philosophy that foreshadowed the concept of
normalization espoused by 1970s deinstitutionalization advocates, a belief
that disabled persons should inhabit conventional social roles of dignity
and value in society. At every step of Sabino’s academic career, the Deweys
viewed him as capable of learning with nondisabled peers and succeeding
in regular schools.41
Given Sabino’s disability, arranging for admission to general education schools was no easy task. The work of pursuing school admission for
their disabled son was a near-constant undertaking throughout Sabino’s
childhood years. The challenge of educating their son in schools that
were unaccustomed to a boy with a disability required strong, persuasive
parental advocacy. Due to John Dewey’s status as a philosopher and educator, they had a host of prominent social contacts that they employed
regularly to seek Sabino’s school placements. Alice typically took the
lead in these efforts. Despite the social capital enjoyed by the Deweys,
she experienced tremendous frustration in her many negotiations with
local school leaders, prompting her exasperated lament, “The search
for a place for such a child as he shows to me how much we still demand
beyond what exists.”42
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For example, disappointed in the rather traditional approach taken by
the Horace Mann Laboratory School at Columbia University, the Deweys
moved their daughters Lucy and Jane to Felix Adler’s Ethical Culture School
for the fall semester, 1906. The curriculum of the Ethical Culture School
was undoubtedly more in line with the progressive program of study John
had developed at the University of Chicago Lab School. Sabino had just
completed kindergarten at Horace Mann. When they attempted to enroll
him in the first grade at the Ethical Culture School, the school headmaster
balked. He would not accept Sabino due to his disability. After the initial
rebuff, Alice Dewey appealed to Ethical Culture School Superintendent
Frank A. Manny, an old friend who had once worked closely with John on
teacher education at the University of Chicago. She gently but persistently
lobbied Mr. Manny, “We have been disappointed that Mr. Lewis (school
principal) was not ready to take in our little lame boy but we still hope he
may later.” Her optimistic phrasing framed the issue of Sabino’s acceptance
to the school not as a matter of school policy but of timing, providing the
unsubtle hint that the boy’s enrollment would occur in the near future. By
the following February, their advocacy efforts to have Sabino admitted to
the Ethical Culture School succeeded. Unfortunately, the chronic pain in
Sabino’s knee was too severe for him to go to school that spring.43
The challenge of arranging for Sabino’s education involved multiple
factors. A native Italian speaker, he entered kindergarten in New York with
virtually no oral or written English language skills. By his own recollection,
he was bewildered throughout much of that first year of English instruction. Secondly, school leaders, even when pressured by socially prominent
figures like Alice and John Dewey, often hesitated to enroll a crippled
boy with tuberculosis. It was highly unconventional to educate a disabled
boy in a regular school. Third, when Sabino was enrolled in school, the
chronic pain he experienced during the primary grade years frequently
interrupted his attendance for weeks at a time.
It is not surprising, given the language acquisition challenge as well as
the prolonged periods of absence in the primary grades, that Sabino experienced learning struggles. Unlike the other Dewey children who prospered in academic settings, Sabino excelled in activities more mechanical
than scholastic. When the Deweys purchased a car, neither Alice nor John
were particularly capable drivers. Young Sabino became the family chauffeur and the mechanic who maintained the 1908 Ford. During his teen
years, he was also the main maintenance and repair worker on the family’s
Long Island farm. While attending the seventh grade at Horace Mann
School, his father convinced the school principal to place him in high
school level technical courses such as electronics to take advantage of his
interests and skills. He excelled.
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Sabino once described himself as a living example of his father’s philosophy of education because he was a learner who greatly preferred active,
interested engagement in real projects over the decontextualized abstractions of traditional academic tasks. When Dewey wrote in 1896 that the
educational“thingtodoistogetattheconditionsthatliebackofand
compel interest—the child’s own powers and needs,” employing instruction that builds forward from a child’s own desires and skills, he unknowingly forecast what would become his own son’s stringent requirements
for school success. Unfortunately, rare was the school that applied Dewey’s
educationalthoughtinwaysthatmetSabino’sneeds.“IwishBinowereas
happy in his school as Lucy is in hers,” Alice bemoaned her son’s burdensomesituation,“butheisnotandhisclassesarenotsuitedtohim.”44
The Dewey’s considered sending Sabino away to private boarding
schools that offered a progressive learning-by-doing program of study
that included mechanical or vocational training to match his talents. The
Sanford School in Redding, Connecticut, had a strong academic reputation. Noted graduates included liberal theologian Charles Augustus Briggs
and Colorado Governor and Senator Charles S. Thomas. But the tuition
was too high and the social environment, like many East Coast boarding
schools,Alicethought,was“perhapstooaristocratic.”45
The Interlaken School for Boys in LaPorte, Indiana, was more closely attuned to the Dewey philosophy of progressive education. Founder
Dr. Edward A. Rumely created a curriculum founded on the basic principle“handandmuscleworkaswellasbrainworkanddevelopmentof
the mind.” In additional to standard academic subjects, the boys were
taught “to grow their own food, spin and weave their own cloth, make
their own soap, dip their own candles.” One mother, based on her own
son’sexperience,pronouncedjoyfully,“HereareDr.Dewey’sandColonel
Parker’s ideas practically carried out.” In 1915, John and his daughter
Evelyn Dewey’s Schools of To-Morrow, a guide to progressive schooling in the
unitedStates,boastedthattheInterlakenSchoolbuildings“werebuiltby
the pupils, including four or five big log structures, the plans being drawn,
the foundations dug and laid, and the carpentry and the painting on the
building done by boy labor.”46
This was certainly the kind of school that would nurture Sabino’s interestsandcapacities.“TheoneatLaPorteoffersonpaperthebestofwhat
he needs,” Alice told confidant Frank Manny. She was concerned, though,
that the faculty might not have the necessary supportive attitude toward
their disabled son. She directly references his past difficulties dealing with
teasingandunkindnessduetohisdisability,“Sabinoissensitiveandeasily
harried and he is equally easily managed. But without a certain assurance
of sympathy I shouldn’t care to think of the La Porte school.” The Dewey’s
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decided not to send Sabino to Interlaken due in part to the mistaken impression that Dr. Rumely was no longer directing the school. Given their
many concerns, it is probable that they felt uncomfortable sending their
beloved son off to live far away in Indiana. After briefly attending a private school in Tarrytown, New York, Sabino ultimately graduated from a
vocational program at Stuyvesant Technical High School, the only public
school that he attended.47
Sabino’s experiences with university education continued the familiar
pattern. His mother and father took great and worried interest in finding
him a college where he might succeed. Sabino generally preferred working in a technical or industrial field over pursuing a scholastic program.
But, at the repeated urging of his parents, he made multiple attempts
at college matriculation. Often John took the lead, using his many university contacts to search out an appropriate program of study and seek
admission for his son. He arranged for Sabino’s enrollment in a veterinary
school program at McGill University in Canada. Sabino almost completed
a two-year degree, falling just two final exams short before he left to work
as a machine operator in a foundry outside Montreal.48
As Sabino approached 21, the age at which he would become eligible
for the World War I draft, he was working a manufacturing line job at
the Lincoln Motor Works in Detroit. His parents repeatedly urged and
begged him to return to college in order to avoid conscription. John took
a visiting faculty position for the 1918–1919 school year at the University
of California, Berkeley, and Stanford University. He spent much of the fall
semester trying to convince either Berkeley or Stanford to grant admission to Sabino so that he might serve his military duty under the safety of
a campus-based Student Army Training Corps (SATC).
Although Alice and John succeeded in convincing Sabino to leave
Detroit to join them on the West Coast, the parents and son often seemed
tobeworkingatcross-purposes.InAugust,Sabinotoldhismother,“About
entering a university I do’nt remember that rash promis (sic) . . . as for attempting college after all my successive failures is more than have nerve to
try again for a while any way.” Despite Sabino’s expressed reluctance, his
father continued negotiating with a variety of senior university administrators. He succeeded in obtaining admission to the engineering program at
Stanford University only to discover that Sabino did not meet the physical
requirements for acceptance in the SATC. His disability precluded participation in the campus military program.
Meanwhile, Sabino had secretly enlisted in the Army, seeking a job as
a mechanic in the aviation corps. Fearful of their son going off to war,
the Deweys made arrangements through a series of influential contacts to
have Sabino’s enlistment papers quietly destroyed. Sabino didn’t attend
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a university in California, and war ended before he could be drafted. In
1921, John Dewey made one last attempt at helping Sabino to complete
college. He negotiated Sabino’s admission at Antioch College in Ohio,
a school with an innovative work-study approach to higher education.
Apparently, he thought that his son would excel in a program that connected academics directly to work experiences. By his second semester,
however, Sabino was expelled for poor academic performance.49
FATHER OF A CHILD WITH A DISABILITY
As a father adopting and raising a son with a physical disability in the early
decades of the 20th century, John Dewey undoubtedly went through what
many parents of disabled children endured. He and Alice worried about
their son’s health, and they did what they could to navigate the various
medical options available to them. They were troubled by their son’s suffering and pain, and they worked together with great consistency to comfort and support their boy as much as possible. Sabino’s parents loved him
dearly and devoted themselves, often through extreme and perhaps overbearing effort, to carve a path of dignity and opportunity for their boy.
Many of the challenges they confronted arose from the troubling cultural terrain of stigmatized and oppressive meanings of disability and disabled persons. The growing prominence of eugenic thought in the early
1900s contributed to a common belief that disabled children required
treatment, educational and medical, that involved geographic isolation
from the general public.
Segregation, whether in institutions, hospitals, or special education programs, achieved two goals simultaneously. Persons in need of medical care
could receive what physicians, special educators, and other professional
caregivers had to offer in institutions and locations devoted specifically
to healing. The Deweys were highly involved in this effort. They donated
frequently to the New York State Hospital for the Care of Crippled and
Deformed Children in West Haverstraw, New York, an institution that
treated orthopedic impairments, mostly bone tuberculosis, for poor children. Beginning in 1908, Alice Dewey served on the Board of Managers
of the Hospital.50
But segregation of disabled persons served an additional purpose. It
offered the general public the comfort of a form of sociological hygiene
through the expulsion and control of persons viewed as morally suspect,
as lacking the characterological strength and goodness of normality.
The commonplace cultural belief in the safety and decency of the community depended, in part, on measures of social control that identified
and isolated persons who were viewed as embodying moral compromise
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and weakness. As a crippled boy with tuberculosis, Sabino’s identity was
doubly colored by the symbolic cultural force of both inferior statuses.
Tuberculosis was the frightening menace that very slowly and mysteriously reduced millions of Americans to ghostly images of approaching
death. Cripples were the unfortunate carriers of society’s evils, the lesser
bodies demonstrating the beliefs and social improvement strategies of
eugenics thought.
While Sabino Dewey’s parents certainly supported the development and
utilization of the best medical science possible to treat orthopedic impairments, they worked assiduously to resist the powerful cultural assumption
that their disabled son should lead a life of anything less than full participation in the community. What made them unique in comparison to most
parents of disabled children living in New York City in the early 1900s was
both their knowledge of teaching and learning as well as their social prominence due to John’s fame. They had substantial social capital and connections—privilege involving dimensions of race and social class as well as the
appurtenances of Professor Dewey’s fame—that they employed when necessary to help their son.51 Drawing from their experiences with the Chicago
Lab School and their disappointment in the pedagogy of the public schools,
they sought a progressive form of education for all of their children. This
effort was redoubled in the case of Sabino, a boy whose interests and talents diverged sharply from the standard academic program. This led John
and Alice Dewey to seek out liberal, humanistic (mainly) private schools for
Sabino. Yet even within the progressive cultural circles where the liberal intelligentsia and elites educated their children, the Deweys still encountered
the rarely questioned belief that disabled children do not attend regular
schools. Even the scholar viewed widely by progressive educators as the father of their school philosophy had limited influence in persuading school
leaders to open the doors of their school to a disabled student. Parents of
students with disabilities today who experience frustration with the rigidity
of educational systems that seem to be designed for someone else’s child
would easily relate to the Dewey’s struggles.
How the intimate, personal experience of watching his son be rejected
and misunderstood due to his disability affected the philosophy and social
activism of John Dewey is an obvious but complex question that deserves
attention. Contemporary scholars understandably wonder how Dewey’s
thinking about disability aligns with or perhaps supports current scholarship on the “medical model” or “social model” of disability. It is hoped
that this historical study supplies the impetus to ask new questions about
how John Dewey’s life as a husband and father influenced his beliefs about
power and diversity in democratic society. Although answering these questions in a satisfactory and complete way is beyond the scope of this study, a
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few final observations are offered as a way of launching the dialogue about
how Dewey’s experiences raising Sabino might have impacted his thinking
on disability and education.
It is likely that the empathy that John Dewey developed for the oppressed classes, a sensibility that contributed to his democratic writings
and political activities, benefitted from his experiences raising and struggling on behalf of his disabled son. We know that he and his wife Alice
experienced the full, harsh slap of disability discrimination that rejected
and reduced their son. If experiences of witnessing and examining social
prejudice and political oppression powerfully affected this great scholar’s
philosophy, then the intimate, personal experiences he endured with his
son and wife must count as contributing in some substantive way to his
scholarship and action.
A number of scholars have observed that John Dewey became more active in civil rights activities in the years after the Dewey family—including
the newest member Sabino—relocated to New York City. Dewey’s political
writings, speeches, and public activism during these Columbia University
years focused mainly on achieving equality for African Americans and
women. A highlight of his racial justice work was his address at the 1909
National Negro Conference when he asserted that, on a scientific basis,
“thereisno‘inferiorrace.”WhatheldAfricanAmericansdown,hestated,
was not an innate lack of ability but a variety of societal obstacles including
insufficient educational and employment opportunities. This Conference
became the birthplace of the National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People (NAACP), with John Dewey as one of the founding members. An active contributor to the organization and the cause for many
years, Dewey helped found the American Federation of Negro College
students in the 1940s and convinced Eleanor Roosevelt to lead its Advisory
Council. On Dewey’s 90th birthday, NAACP Secretary Roy Wilkins celebrated the philosopher’s “immeasureable contribution to the struggle
against racial discrimination.”52
In 1922, speaking to an audience of Chinese scholars, Dewey presented his most thorough analysis of the psychology and sociology of racism.
“raceprejudice,”heproclaimed,“isadeep-seatedandwidespreadsocial
disease.” He theorized racial discrimination as one form of the broader
social problem of multiform prejudice through which human judgment is
subverted and distorted. In his description of multiple types of prejudice,
Dewey cited bias against women but did not mention disability. Although
individuals can be freed from racial prejudice as a belief system, he theorized, the larger task of healing society required more profound and lastingculturalreform,“achangenotonlyineducation...butalsopolitical
and industrial organization.”53
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Dewey was also very active in the early women’s movement. His understanding of the politics of gender was influenced greatly by feminists such as Jane Addams and Julia Lathrop of Chicago’s Hull House,
author Charlotte Perkins Gilman, educator Elsie Ripley Clapp, and his
wife Alice, a local leader of the Women’s Suffrage Party. During the
decade leading up to passage of the 19th Amendment, Dewey was a
frequent speaker in support of women’s suffrage and political equality. He joined Upton Sinclair and other prominent intellectuals in a
public symposium on the topic sponsored by the literary journal, the
International. He marched with Alice through the streets of New York
in suffrage movement protest parades. He gave frequent speeches on
the Columbia University campus expressing the need to grant women
“fullcitizenship,theoutwardandvisiblesignoftheinwardandspiritual grace which is liberty.” One presentation Dewey made to summer
school students in 1912 gained such attention that the eager audience
overflowed the auditorium into the hallways.54
In contrast to Dewey’s vigorous written and spoken support for the
causes of political equality for women and African Americans, it would
appear that his record on disability issues is remarkably slim. As public
school special education systems developed in many American cities during the first two decades of the 20th century, Dewey offered little direct
comment. His only published references to the education of students with
disabilities occurred in brief passing as he publically defended Depression
Era public schools against budget cuts. In magazine articles and radio addresses for lay audiences, he warned that cutting important school programs such as health care, kindergarten, vocational education, and special
education would be unwise.55
Despite his lack of substantive analysis of disability issues in the schools,
it would be an error to think that Dewey did not write about special education. In response to the rapid growth of special education programs,
he targeted the growing administrative system of psychometric assessment
that framed the intellectual capacity of students along a hierarchy of ability and value. World War I greatly boosted the development and acceptance of psychological measures of mental functioning. The U.S. Army
commissioned 40 leading psychologists, including Robert M. Yerkes of
Harvard, Henry H. Goddard of the Vineland Training School, and Lewis
M. Terman of Stanford University, to develop tests of intellectual capacity. After the war, many school districts turned to the new psychology of
mental measurement for a more precise way of making special education
diagnoses and placements. Quickly, intelligence tests became the authoritative tool at the hub of the administrative process of sorting normality
and abnormality, regular and segregated instruction.56
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Disappointed both in the direction taken by the young field of American
psychology and public education, Dewey responded in 1922 with a harsh
critique of intelligence testing in two articles in the New Republic. Together
they comprise a fierce, multifaceted critique of the use of the new intelligence testing in education. Dewey argued that democracy, and education
within a democracy, should encourage and nurture persons in the growth
oftheirindividuality,promotingthedevelopmentof“uniquenessofquality . . . a freedom . . . which is intrinsic and constructive.” The goal of education should be the appreciation and cultivation of the interests, talents,
and fruitful tendencies of each student. Intelligence testing (operating
only “under the title of science”) diverts the educators’ attention away
from the unique, creative, and potentially useful capacities of an individual child in favor of universal schemes of classification and hierarchy. The
social and economic inequalities of society are reinforced by intelligence
tests as inevitable demonstrations of natural differences in mental ability, a
conclusion that harms both democracy and the educational appreciation
of the complex array of skills and capacities present in individuals.57
Disability studies scholars will note that Dewey was a strident critic of the
psychological testing that later became a central plank in the ideological
platform of the special education system, the cornerstone of the medical
model of disability in the public schools. He fiercely opposed the sorting
of students based on notions of superior and inferior ability as well as the
political hierarchies of human value that later became known as fundamental features of the medical model.
But it would be an overstatement to argue that Dewey espoused an early
concept of disabled persons as a political minority, as an oppressed group
having similar social status to women or African Americans. Among many
who embrace Dewey as the forefather of modern liberalism, it would be
tempting to view him as a scholar who knew that disabled persons shared
a common political identity and cause. It would tempting to think that the
great philosopher who inspired much of the current progressive school of
democratic thought came to the conclusion that disabled citizens constituted an oppressed political minority whose situation would only be improved through concerted political action. Nothing in his writings or the
historical evidence available indicates that Dewey made the leap from his
own experience with this son to such a political articulation of disability.
Such a political understanding of disability did not even exist in
American society or academic circles during Dewey’s lifetime. The first,
very brief appearance of a public conceptualization of disability even remotely similar to the social model employed by contemporary disability
activists and disability studies scholars arose when a small group called
the League of the Physically Handicapped protested Franklin Delano
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Roosevelt’s Works Progress Administration policy of not employing disabled persons in May 1935. That short-lived burst of disability activism during the Great Depression, unnoticed until Longmore and Goldberger’s
more recent historical research, did not inform the work of the leaders
of the disability rights movement during the 1960s and 1970s. The politicized view of disability—the conceptual shift from a notion of private tragedy to one of systemic and structural oppression—was primarily created
and developed by disabled persons seeking unity with one another and
freedom from social oppression, not by philosophers or even the parents
of disabled young people.58
As John Dewey worked toward the goals of political equality for women and African Americans, he learned from conceptual frameworks of
the civil rights activists that he read, conversed with, and befriended.
Although his critique of the use of intelligence measures in the public
schools demonstrated his fear that administrative processes ranking students’ abilities could produce social inequality, there is no evidence that
he went on to theorize disabled Americans as a disadvantaged political
minority. His experiences witnessing the disability oppression of his son,
while undoubtedly impactful to this thinking about classes of persons
poorly served by democracy, did not lead him to view disability as impetus for civil rights activity.
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Race Betterment Foundation, 1915).
22. Oscar C. McCulloch, The Tribe of Ishmael: A Study in Social Degradation
(Indianapolis: Charity Organization Society, 1888). Richard L. Dugdale,
The Jukes: A Study in Crime, Pauperism, Disease, and Heredity (New York: G.
P. Putnam’s Sons, 1877). Brian Siegel, “Tales of the Tribe of Ishmael A
Research Note,” Indiana Magazine of History, 106, 2 (2010): 189–196.
23. Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. Committee
on Protection of the Feeble-minded. The Menace of the Feeble Minded: In
Massachusetts the Need of a Program (Boston, MA: Griffith-Stillings Press,
1913). James W. Trent, Jr., Inventing the Feeble Mind: A History of Mental
Retardation in the United States (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press,
1994). Leila Zenderland, Measuring Minds: Henry Herbert Goddard and the
Origins of American Intelligence Testing (New York, 1998). Henry Herbert
Goddard, The Kallikak Family: A Study in the Heredity of Feeblemindedness (New
York, 1912).
24. Paul Popenoe and Roswell Hill Johnson, Applied Eugenics (New York: The
MacMillanCompany,1918),176–180.“EugenicsinColleges,”The Journal
of Heredity 5, no. 4 (1914): 186. Leland L. Glenna, Margaret A. Gollnick,
andStephenS.Jones,“EugenicopportunityStructures:TeachingGenetic
Engineering at US Land-Grant Universities since 1911,” Social Studies of
Science37,no.2(2007):281–296.JamesA.Field,“TheProgressofEugenics,”
The Quarterly Journal of Economics 26, no. 1 (1911): 63.
25. ElizabethE.Farrell,“AtypicalChildren.”New York Times, November 5, 1909:
8. Marvin Lazerson, “origins of Special Education,” in Special Education
Policies: Their History, Implementation, and Finance, ed. J. G. Chambers & W.
T. Hartman (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1983), 15–44. Margret
A. Winzer, The History of Special Education: From Isolation to Integration
(Washington, DC: Gallaudet University Press, 1993). Irving G. Hendrick
and Donald L. MacMillan, “Selecting Children for Special Education in
New York City William Maxwell, Elizabeth Farrell, and the Development of
Ungraded Class, 1900-1920,” Journal of Special Education 22, no. 4 (1989):
395–417.
26. Phillip K. Wilson, “Confronting ‘Hereditary’ Disease: Eugenic Attempts
to Eliminate Tuberculosis in Progressive Era America,” Journal of Medical
Humanities 27, no. 1 (2006): 19–37. William Osler, The Principles and Practice
of Medicine (New York: D. Appleton and Co., 1909). Karl Pearson, Statistics
of Pulmonary Tuberculosis (London: Dulan and Co., 1907).
25
Teachers College Record, 120, 020302 (2018)
27. Ernest Laplace, “Diathesis as Applied to Surgery, Gangrene in Various
Forms, Removal of a Gangrenous Cancer,” The Medical News 57, no. 5
(1890): 97–98.
28. MargaretP.Forcee,“PathologyofTuberculosis,”The Pennsylvania Medical
Journal,3(1900):357–361.CharlesE.DeM.Sajous,“TheAnti-tuberculosis
Campaign,” New York Medical Journal, August 24, 1912: 387–8.
29. H.H.Laughlin,“CalculationsontheWorkingoutofaProposedProgram
of Eugenics,” in Proceedings of the First National Conference on Race Betterment
(Battle Creek, MI: Race Betterment Foundation, 1914): 478.
30. William Williams, Annual Report of the Commissioner of Immigration to the Port
of New York With Reference to the Ellis Island Affairs For the Year Ended June 30,
1911 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1911): 6–7. Douglas
C.Baynton,“DefectivesintheLand:DisabilityandAmericanImmigration
Policy, 1882-1924.” Journal of American Ethnic History 24, no. 3 (2005): 31–44.
31. Robert Watchorn, Annual Report of the Commissioner General of Immigration
to the Secretary of Commerce and Labor for the Fiscal Year ended June 30, 1906
(Washington, DC. Government Printing Office, 1906): 111. Jay Dolmage,
“DisableduponArrival:TherhetoricalConstructionofDisabilityandrace
at Ellis Island,” Cultural Critique 77 (2011): 24–69.
32. Barbara Bates, Bargaining for Life: A Social History of Tuberculosis, 1876-1938
(Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1992). Katherine Ott,
Fevered Lives: Tuberculosis in American Culture since 1870 (Cambridge: Harvard
University Press, 1996). Sheila M. Rothman, Living in the Shadow of Death:
Tuberculosis and the Social Experience of Illness in American History (New York:
Basic Books, 1994).
33. Herman M. Biggs, A Brief History of the Campaign Against Tuberculosis in New
York City (New York: City of New York, 1908), 3.
34. Biggs, A Brief History of the Campaign Against Tuberculosis in New York City, 7–8.
35. JohnCarling,“openAirTreatmentofTuberculousBoneandJointDisease.”
New York Medical Journal,no.85(1907):1070–1072.Townsend,“Treatment
ofTuberculosisoftheKneeJoint.”Tracy,“TubercularDiseaseoftheKnee
Joint and Hip Joint in Children: Diagnosis and Treatment.” Leonard W.
Ely,“TheTreatmentofJointTuberculosisinChildren,”Medical Record 72
(1907): 941–943.
36. Irving G. Hendrick and Donald L. MacMillan, “Selecting Children for
Special Education in New York City: William Maxwell, Elizabeth Farrell,
and the Development of Ungraded Classes, 1900-1920,” Journal of Special
Education 22, no. 4 (1989): 395–417. Meghan Crnic and Cynthia Connolly,
“‘They Can’t Help Getting Well Here’: Seaside Hospitals for Children in
the United States: 1872-1917.” Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth
2,no.2(2009):220–233.richardA.Meckel,“CombatingTuberculosisin
Schoolchildren: Providence’s Open Air Schools.” Rhode Island History 53,
no.3(1995):90–100.PatriciaSchaelchlin,“‘WorkingFortheGoodofthe
Community’: Rest Haven Preventorium for Children.” Journal of San Diego
History, 29, no. 2 (1983), 96–114.
26
TCR, 120, 020302 Disability in the Family: John and Alice Dewey Raising Their Son, Sabino
37. William Sands Mills, “Etiology and underlying Causes of Pulmonary
Tuberculosis”, 94, Transactions (New Haven: Connecticut Homeopathic
Medical Society, 1909).
38. Ernest V. Hubbard, “The reporting of Tuberculosis.” New York Times,
January 9, 1905: 6.
39. John Prentice rand, “The Prevention of Tuberculosis from the Medical,
Economic and Social Standpoints.” New England Medical Gazette, 46 (1911):
1097–1102.
40. rand,“ThePreventionofTuberculosisfromtheMedical,Economicand
Social Standpoints,” 1099.
41. Priya Lalvani and Lauren Polvere, “Historical Perspectives on Studying
Families of Children with Disabilities: A Case for Critical Research.” Disability
Studies Quarterly, 33, 3 (2013), n.p. Wolf Wolfensberger, The Principle of
Normalization in Human Services (Toronto: National Institute on Mental
Retardation, 1972). Alice Dewey to Mary Bloom Manny or Annette Sawyer
Manny (Mrs. Frank A.), February 27, 1907. Sabino L. Dewey, interview, 29.
42. Alice Dewey to Frank A. Manny, August 26, 1908.
43. Biography, Frank Addison Manny, Bentley Historical Library, Michigan
Historical Collections, University of Michigan. http://quod.lib.umich.
edu/b/bhlead/umich-bhl-852267?view=text. Alice Dewey to Frank A.
Manny, November 26, 1906. Alice Dewey to Mary Bloom Manny or Annette
Sawyer Manny (Mrs. Frank A.), February 27, 1907.
44. SabinoL.Dewey,interview,42.JohnDewey,“InterestinrelationtoTraining
of the Will,” in John Dewey: The Early Works, 1882-1898, Volume 5, ed. Jo Ann
Boydston (Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press, 1896/1967):
146. Alice Dewey to Jane, Lucy, & Evelyn Dewey, September 1913.
45. “Notes and Queries: A once Famous School to be revived,” The Journal
of Education 62, no. 16 (1905): 451–452 Alice Dewey to Frank A. Manny,
August 3, 1908.
46. Philip Morehouse McGarr and Fanny Scott, “The Autobiography of Dr.
Edward A. Rumely: The La Porte Years, 1906-1914.” Indiana Magazine of
History67,no.1(1971):1-–44.MarionFosterWashburn,“A‘NewSchool’in
America,” The Elementary School Teacher 9, no. 2 (1908): 102. John Dewey and
Evelyn Dewey, Schools of To-Morrow (New York: E. P. Dutton, 1915): 87–88.
47. Alice Dewey to Frank A. Manny, July 1908. Sabino L. Dewey, interview, 42.
48. John Dewey to Alice Dewey, July 6, 1918. Sabino L. Dewey, interview, 38–39.
49. Sabino Dewey to Alice Dewey, June 4, 1918. John Dewey to Alice Dewey, July
6, 1918. Sabino Dewey to Alice Dewey, July 12, 1918. Sabino Dewey to Alice
Dewey, August 10, 1918. John Dewey to Evelyn & Lucy Dewey, October 1,
1918. Alice Dewey to Evelyn Dewey, September 21, 1918. Sabino L. Dewey,
interview, 35. Stephen R. Herr, Connected Thoughts: A Reinterpretation of the
Reorganization of Antioch College in the 1920’s (Lanham, MD: University Press
of America), 111–112.
50. Ninth Annual Report of the New York State Hospital for the Care of Crippled and
Deformed Children (West Haverstraw, New York, 1909). Tenth Annual Report of
27
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51.
52.
53.
54.
55.
56.
the New York State Hospital for the Care of Crippled and Deformed Children (West
Haverstraw, New York, 1910).
The Dewey family racial and social class privilege undoubtedly offered
Sabino opportunities unavailable to, for example, students from African
American or low income families.
Martin, The Education of John Dewey, 248. Thomas D. Fallace, “Was John
Dewey Ethnocentric? Reevaluating the Philosopher’s Early Views on
Culture and Race,” Educational Researcher 39, no. 6 (2010): 471–477. John
Dewey,“AddresstotheNationalNegroCongress,”inJohn Dewey: The Middle
Works, 1899-1924, Volume 4, ed. Jo Ann Boydston (Carbondale, IL: Southern
Illinois University Press, 1909/1976): 157.
John Dewey, “A Symposium on Woman’s Suffrage,” in John Dewey: The
Middle Works, 1899-1924, Volume 6, ed. Jo Ann Boydston (Carbondale, IL:
Southern Illinois University Press, 1911/1976): 153–154. John Dewey,
“racial Prejudice and Friction,” in John Dewey: The Middle Works, 18991924, Volume 13, ed. Jo Ann Boydston (Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois
University Press, 1922/1976): 243, 252–253.
JohnDewey,“ProfessorforSuffrage,”inJohn Dewey: The Middle Works, 18991924, Volume 7, ed. Jo Ann Boydston (Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois
University Press, 1912/1976): 409. George Dykhuizen, The Life and Mind
of John Dewey. (Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press, 1973).
Martin, The Education of John Dewey.MichaelS.Kimmel,“Men’sresponses
to Feminism at the Turn of the Century.” Gender and Society 1, no. 3 (1987):
261–283.ErinMcKenna,“PragmatismandFeminism:EngagedPhilosophy.”
American Journal of Theology & Philosophy 24, no. 1 (2003): 3–21.
Katherine Glover, “Tomorrow May Be Too Late: Save the Schools Now.”
Good Housekeeping, 98 (March, 1934): 20–21, 222–227. John Dewey,
“AmericanEducationPastandFuture,”inJohn Dewey: The Later Works, 19251953, Volume 6, ed. Jo Ann Boydston (Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois
universityPress,1931/1981):90–99.JohnDewey,“ShallWeAbolishSchool
‘Frills’? No,” in John Dewey: The Later Works, 1925-1953, Volume 9, ed. Jo Ann
Boydston (Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press, 1933/1981):
141–146.JohnDewey,“TeacherandthePublic,”Vital Speeches of the Day 1,
no. 9 (1935): 278–279.
Paul D. Chapman, Schools as Sorters: Lewis M. Terman, Applied Psychology,
and the Intelligence Testing Movement, 1890–1930 (New York, 1988). Brian
Evans and Bernard Waites, IQ and Mental Testing: An Unnatural Science and
Its Social History (AtlanticHighlands,NJ,1981).DanielJ.Kevles,“Testing
the Army’s Intelligence: Psychologists and the Military in World War I,”
The Journal of American History 55, no. 3 (1968), 565–581. Joel H. Spring,
“PsychologistsandtheWar:TheMeaningofIntelligenceintheAlphaand
Beta Tests,” History of Education Quarterly 12, no. 1 (1972), 3–15. Robert
Osgood, The History of Special Education: A Struggle for Equality in American
Public Education (Washington, DC: Gallaudet University Press, 2008). Philip
M.Ferguson,“CreatingtheContinuum:J.E.WallaceWallinandtheroleof
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TCR, 120, 020302 Disability in the Family: John and Alice Dewey Raising Their Son, Sabino
Clinical Psychology in the Emergence of Public School Special Education
in America.” International Journal of Inclusive Education 18, no. 1 (2014):
86–100.
57. John Dewey “Individuality, Equality, and Superiority,” in John Dewey: The
Middle Works, 1899-1924, Volume 13, ed. Jo Ann Boydston (Carbondale,
IL: Southern Illinois university Press, 1922/1976): 297. “Mediocrity and
Individuality,” in John Dewey: The Middle Works, 1899-1924, Volume 13, ed.
Jo Ann Boydston (Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press,
1922/1976): 289.
58. Paul K. Longmore and David Goldberger, “The League of the Physically
Handicapped and the Great Depression: A Case Study and the New
Disability History.” Journal of American History (2000): 888–922. Doris Zames
Fleischer and Freida Zames. The Disability Rights Movement: From Charity to
Confrontation (2nd ed.). (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2011).
Fred Pelka, The ABC-CLIO Companion to the Disability Rights Movement. Santa
Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO.
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Teachers College Record, 120, 020302 (2018)
SCOT DANFORTH is Professor of Disability Studies and Inclusive
Education, College of Educational Studies, Chapman University. He is a
disability studies scholar who focuses primarily on the history and philosophy of childhood disability in the United States. His recent books include
Foundations of Inclusive Education Research (Emerald Publishing: co-edited
with Phyllis Jones) and Vital Questions Facing Disability Studies in Education,
2nd edition (Peter Lang Publishing: co-edited with Susan L. Gabel).
30