- Source: Connecticut Society of Social Hygiene
The Connecticut Society of Social Hygiene was founded in 1911 to "limit the spread of social disease." Through public education efforts, legislative reform, and other methods, the Society attempted to use eugenics to raise public awareness and influence public policy. Losing influence during World War I, in 1920 they reincorporated as the Connecticut Social Hygiene Association, Inc., a branch of the American Social Hygiene Association.
Dr. Thomas N. Hepburn, father of actress Katharine Hepburn, was among the prominent Connecticut residents to co-found the society. Along with his wife, Katharine Martha Houghton Hepburn, and other members, they advocated for age-appropriate sex education and worked to ebb the spread of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) or sexually transmitted disease (STD).
Founding
The Society resulted from a petition signed by 110 Hartford, Connecticut residents in 1910. The petition read in part "We, the undersigned, realizing the serious menace to humanity – moral, physical, and financial, – of the diseases which have their origin in the social evil, agree to organize ourselves into a body for the purpose of studying the means, – moral sanitary, and administrative, - which may seem to us best suited to limit the spread of these diseases."
References
External links
"Guest Post: Eugenics and "Social Hygiene" in Hartford, CT". Haunted Files | A/P/A | NYU
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Rasisme
- Logam berat
- Connecticut Society of Social Hygiene
- Valeria H. Parker
- American Sexual Health Association
- Peter Hotez
- Clifford Whittingham Beers
- Social democracy
- Period poverty
- Geza von Hoffmann
- Sylvester Graham
- John D. Rockefeller III