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In reply to the discussion: Helen Keller: [View all]

wnylib

(25,795 posts)
6. Helen Keller was a strong supporter of the
Sun Mar 15, 2026, 06:41 PM
Yesterday

eugenics movement to sterilize people "unfit" to reproduce. The goal was to improve society by eliminating the reproduction of people with limited intelligence and heritable disorders.

She did not consider herself in that category because her blindness and inability to hear were the result of a childhood illness, not a genetic disorder.

I think I read that she later changed her mind and withdrew support for eugenics.

At the time of eugenics popularity in the Progressive movement of the early 1900s, too little was known about what was genetically inherited to even decide which people to sterilize. Race, ethnicity and poverty were regarded as traits to eliminate through sterilization.

Clinics on Native American reservations began routinely sterilizing Native women regardless of what they came in to be treated for, but especially if they sought gynecological care. They were not informed or asked for consent. They were told bogus diagnoses that could be "cured" with surgery. The same treatment was used on people of Asian and African descent. Children placed in homes due to parental poverty or neglect were sterilized when they reached puberty. Immigrants who could not speak English and came from peasant backgrounds were deemed too intellectually inferior to reproduce.

It's been a while since I read about Helen Keller's involvement in and later detachment from eugenics promotion. I think it was when she learned how the eugenics idea was being applied that she changed her mind. Not sure.

EDIT TO ADD:

https://helenjournal.org/march-2024/once-again








Recommendations

3 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Helen Keller: [View all] applegrove Yesterday OP
I have gained a new respect for Ms. Keller--- lastlib Yesterday #1
One of the first books I read as a child was about Kelller applegrove Yesterday #2
I remember reading one too.... lastlib Yesterday #7
Yes, me too senseandsensibility Yesterday #8
That is so cool. I just remember the spelling of wa-t-t-er. applegrove 21 hrs ago #14
I had that book too! PCIntern 12 hrs ago #16
I can't picture my book. I think it was blue but I'm not sure. We did not applegrove 7 hrs ago #17
Did you also get Weekly Reader Children's Book Club? PCIntern 6 hrs ago #21
Nope. No book clubs. applegrove 6 hrs ago #22
Understood. PCIntern 5 hrs ago #23
I just got Amelia Bedelia for my great niece. My grandmother applegrove 5 hrs ago #24
Never read it but distinctly recall PCIntern 4 hrs ago #25
I also had one about Ben Franklin senseandsensibility 6 hrs ago #20
Helen Keller was a strong supporter of the wnylib Yesterday #6
I think sometimes it's unfair for us to judge people of that time MadameButterfly Yesterday #11
My post was not a judgment of Keller. wnylib Yesterday #12
i thought your description of Keller's position MadameButterfly Yesterday #13
Canada's favourite person was Tommy Douglas who introduced applegrove 7 hrs ago #18
Yup. The application of the faulty scientific reasoning wnylib 7 hrs ago #19
"Then Nazis showed up on the world stage, did the holocaust, and that was the end of eugenics." TheProle 3 hrs ago #26
End of the progressive fad of eugenics. The right wing applegrove 3 hrs ago #27
Careful there. Helen Keller was a radical leftist. DJ Synikus Makisimus Yesterday #3
I didn't know that but samplegirl 12 hrs ago #15
Helen Keller was amazing.. whathehell Yesterday #4
The movie "The Miracle Worker" is so good. twodogsbarking Yesterday #5
His6ory books never seem to mention Warpy Yesterday #9
i was at helen kellers home. i didn't take time to go in to her house but i did walk thru the displays in her garden. dawn5651 Yesterday #10
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