University of Minnesota. Dight Institute
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University of Minnesota. Dight Institute
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University of Minnesota. Dight Institute
University of Minnesota. Dight Institute for Human Genetics
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University of Minnesota. Dight Institute for Human Genetics
Dight Institute for Human Genetics
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Dight Institute for Human Genetics
Minnesota. Charles Fremont Dight Institute for the Promotion of Human Genetics
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Minnesota. Charles Fremont Dight Institute for the Promotion of Human Genetics
Charles Fremont Dight Institute for the Promotion of Human Genetics
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Charles Fremont Dight Institute for the Promotion of Human Genetics
Dight Institute of the University of Minnesota
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Dight Institute of the University of Minnesota
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Biographical History
The Charles Fremont Dight Institute for the Promotion of Human Genetics was established in 1941 to support the study and promulgation of human genetics, to provide instruction in human genetics, and to establish a resource center for persons who desire counseling on these questions. The institute has studied a variety of genetically linked disorders, including albinism, Down's syndrome, impacted teeth, muscular dystrophy, cleft palate, asthma, harelip, hay fever, hemophilia, and Huntington's disease. The Institute's first director,Dr. Clarence P. Oliver was succeeded in 1947, by Sheldon C. Reed, author of Counseling in Medical Genetics, and Mental Retardation: A Family Study, by Reed and his wife, Dr.Elizabeth Wagner Reed. Reed also directed Minnesota Planned Parenthood from 1948-1965, and worked for the Minnesota Association for Retarded Children. Reed retired as Director in 1978, and was succeeded by Dr. Elving Anderson.
In the summer of 1941, the University of Minnesota established The Charles Fremont Dight Institute for the Promotion of Human Genetics. Its mission was to support the study and promulgation of human genetics, provide instruction in human genetics, and establish a resource center for persons who desire counseling on such questions. The Dight Institute did not perpetuate the more outrageous beliefs of its benefactor; beliefs that were later found to be naive and based upon inadequate scientific information. Since its inception, the Institute has studied a variety of genetically linked disorders including albinism, Down's syndrome, impacted teeth, muscular dystrophy, cleft palate, asthma, harelip, hay fever, hemophilia, and Huntington's disease. Dr. Clarence P. Oliver was the Institute's first director. He resigned in 1946 to establish a center of human genetics at the University of Texas at Austin. In 1947, Sheldon C. Reed, then Assistant Professor of Biology at Harvard University was selected as the new director. Reed, a distinguished scientist in the field of genetics, introduced the now commonly used term "genetic counseling." He is well-known for his landmark book Counseling in Medical Genetics (a.k.a. Parenthood and Heredity) and Mental Retardation: A Family Study, a large scale study done by he and his wife, Dr. Elizabeth Wagner Reed. In addition to his research, teaching, and administrative duties, Dr. Reed personally handled over 4,000 cases of genetic counseling at the Dight Institute. He also was Director of Minnesota Planned Parenthood from 1948-1965, and closely connected with the Minnesota Association for Retarded Children. Reed retired as director in 1978, and Dr. Elving Anderson, longtime assistant to Reed became the new director. Over the years, the Dight Institute has made significant contributions in the areas of cancer, mental disabilities, psychotic disorders, and epilepsy. In 1984, it was renamed the In.
In the summer of 1941, the University of Minnesota established The Charles Fremont Dight Institute for the Promotion of Human Genetics. Its mission was to support the study and promulgation of human genetics, provide instruction in human genetics, and establish a resource center for persons who desire counseling on such questions.
The Dight Institute did not perpetuate the more outrageous beliefs of its benefactor; beliefs that were later found to be naive and based upon inadequate scientific information. Since its inception, the Institute has studied a variety of genetically linked disorders including albinism, Down's syndrome, impacted teeth, muscular dystrophy, cleft palate, asthma, harelip, hay fever, hemophilia, and Huntington's disease.
Dr. Clarence P. Oliver was the Institute's first director. He resigned in 1946 to establish a center of human genetics at the University of Texas at Austin. In 1947, Sheldon C. Reed, then Assistant Professor of Biology at Harvard University was selected as the new director. Reed, a distinguished scientist in the field of genetics, introduced the now commonly used term "genetic counseling." He is well-known for his landmark book Counseling in Medical Genetics (a.k.a. Parenthood and Heredity) and Mental Retardation: A Family Study, a large scale study done by he and his wife, Dr. Elizabeth Wagner Reed. In addition to his research, teaching, and administrative duties, Dr. Reed personally handled over 4,000 cases of genetic counseling at the Dight Institute. He also was Director of Minnesota Planned Parenthood from 1948-1965, and closely connected with the Minnesota Association for Retarded Children. Reed retired as director in 1978, and Dr. Elving Anderson, longtime assistant to Reed became the new director.
Over the years, the Dight Institute has made significant contributions in the areas of cancer, mental disabilities, psychotic disorders, and epilepsy. In 1984, it was renamed the Institute for Human Genetics.
Charles Dight, M.D. (1879) University of Michigan. Medical doctor and researcher in the field of eugenics, donor to the University of Minnesota for establishment of the Dight Institute (1941).
Charles Fremont Dight was born in Mercer, Pennsylvania, in 1856. He graduated with a medical degree from the University of Michigan in 1879 and served as a health officer in Holton, Michigan from 1879-1881. From 1883-1889 he was a professor of anatomy and physiology at the American Medical College in Beirut, Syria (now Lebanon). He came to Minnesota in 1890, and was a resident physician at Shattuck School until 1892. He married Dr. Mary A. Crawford in 1892; they were divorced in 1899. During the 1890s, he practiced medicine in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, taught for two years as professor at the medical school of New Orleans University, and spent four years studying and traveling New York, Chicago, Ann Arbor, and then the University of Minnesota. He taught at Hamline University's medical school until 1907, when it was assimilated into the University of Minnesota, and then continued to teach at the University of Minnesota until 1913.
From 1914-1918, he served as an alderman on the Minneapolis City Council (12th ward). Social justice was his first passion; as a member of the Socialist Party until 1917, Dight ran for Congress in 1906 as a member of the Public Ownership Party. Among other things, he was active in getting an ordinance passed requiring milk pasteurization.
He was also an advocate for sterilization of the "unfit" (anyone deemed a criminal or mentally handicapped). In 1925, a sterilization law did go into effect in Minnesota, the 17th state to pass such a law; it was to remain on the books until 1975. This sterilization law was intended to delay marriages of the feeble-minded, epileptic, and insane, until they could be sterilized, was "voluntary," and applied only to institutionalized individuals. By 1930, Minnesota ranked fourth out of 24 states with legalized sterilization, with 388 operations. The law, however, was not stringent enough to satisfy Dr. Dight; he wanted it to be mandatory, and applied to those "unfit" still in society. He even championed creating a position called "State Eugenist" whose job description included recommendations as to who was to be sterilized. This idea never became a reality.
Dight's furor in support of the eugenics of the 1920s and 1930s included possible support of Hitler's eugenics program, honoring Lindbergh for his "hereditary endowment," and advocating the selective breeding of humans. Underlying this early eugenics, enthusiastically supported by many prominent people, including scientists and ministers, was a reflection of the racism always present within the society. "People who supported eugenics had good motives in many respects. They were naive, though, and didn't see the many-sidedness of things." (Milford Q. Sibley, Professor Emeritus of Political Science, University of Minnesota, Dight Institute information file.)
Considered by many to be an eccentric - he lived very frugally in a "tree house," a house placed on stilts because he was afraid of grass fires, he embraced both eugenics and socialism, and found neither contradictory. On June 20, 1938, Dr. Charles Fremont Dight, died at the age of 80. His will left the balance of his estate, approximately $75,000, to the University of Minnesota "to promote biological race betterment, better human brain structure and mental endowment by spreading abroad the knowledge of the laws of heredity and the principles of eugenics."
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/230926300
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n84124616
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n84124616
https://viaf.org/viaf/130236698
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n84124619
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n84124619
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Genetic Counseling
Genetics
Genetics
Genetics, Medical
Human genetics
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Minnesota
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Minnesota
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